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TERROR WARS
Africa fears al-Qaida push after Libya war
by Staff Writers
Algiers, Algeria (UPI) Sep 8, 2011

What they really mean is that they fear the rest of Africa might rise up and kick their own despotic failed governments out.

Al-Qaida in the Islamic Maghreb has stepped up attacks in Algeria amid growing fears that a surge of jihadists and plundered weapons from Libya threatens North African countries.

AQIM, composed mainly of hardened Algerian fighters who have fought the government since 1992, has increased the range and tempo of its attacks in Algeria's north in recent weeks.

Eighteen people, 16 of them army officers, were killed in a suicide bombing Aug. 26 on a military academy at Cherchell, 110 miles west of Algiers.

It was the third such attack since mid-July. The last suicide attack in Algeria was July 25, 2010. Other clashes have been reported in Mali and Mauritania.

The collapse of Moammar Gadhafi's regime in Libya, Algeria's eastern neighbor, has rung alarm bells in Algiers and other North African capitals across the Sahara and the semi-arid Sahel region to the south.

The rebel victory has triggered an influx of hundreds of Gadhafi fighters into neighboring states, such as Algeria, that are already grappling with armed militants and smugglers.

The return of heavily armed Tuareg tribesmen from Mali and Niger who fought for Gadhafi until his forces were routed by NATO-backed rebels in Libya's six-month civil war threatens to destabilize impoverished states like Mali and Niger.

Both countries have battled Tuareg insurgencies over the last two decades, with many militants finding sanctuary and military employment in Libya under Gadhafi.

Officials fear that the return of these battle-hardened mercenaries, who have historically roamed across the vast wastes of the southern Sahara, could benefit AQIM.

"The repercussions of the Libyan crisis on the Sahel region have become palpable, particularly with the arrival of large amounts of weapons and four-wheel drive vehicles and the return of armed individuals involved in the Libyan crisis," Mohamed Bazoum, foreign minister of Niger, told a terrorism conference in Algiers this week.

He called on Algeria, the major military power in the region, along with Niger, Mali and Mauritania, to deploy military forces into the desert to counter the heavily armed groups.

The two-day conference was attended by high-level delegations from France, which has Special Forces teams in the region conducting covert operations, and the United States, which is quietly boosting its presence in the region.

The U.S. Air Force is reported to be expanding an airfield at Guelmim in the southern desert of Morocco, a longtime U.S. ally, from which to operate Predator unmanned aerial vehicles to gather intelligence on AQIM movements.

"The United States is intent on making Morocco an operational springboard in the fight against terrorism in the region," observed the Paris Web site African Intelligence.

The regional states' efforts to counter the jihadist threat have been stymied in the past by traditional rivalries, particularly between Algeria and Morocco.

But in recent months, as AQIM has expanded its operation southward, these states have had little choice but to band together. They set up a joint operations center at Algeria's Tamanrasset air base deep in the Sahara in September 2010.

Mali and Mauritania, aided by the French, have been particularly effective. Mali's government has set up as many as military bases in the barren north to counter the jihadist threat and this seems to have curbed AQIM activities, for now at least.

Mali and Mauritania are mounting joint operations against AQIM. In the last six weeks they claim to have killed dozens of militants in raids.

"These fierce battles have been closely watched by political and military leaders in the fragile Sahelian states most threatened by AQIM's destabilizing activities and by their backers in the West, especially the United States and France," the Jamestown Foundation, a Washington think tank, observed.

"The military encounters also provided an opportunity to observe AQIM's capabilities and how they were affected by the group's alleged supply of weapons smuggled from Libya."

The European Union's counter-terrorism coordinator, Gilles de Kerchove, says AQIM has "gained access to weapons, either small arms or machineguns or certain surface-to-air missiles which are extremely dangerous."

Thousands of shoulder-fired, Soviet-designed Sa-24 anti-aircraft are unaccounted for and feared plundered by fleeing Gadhafi fighters. If only a few fall into AQIM's hands, it gives the jihadists a powerful new weapon.

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Libya's new rulers should control arms: US
Algiers (AFP) Sept 8, 2011 - The United States and the international community believe Libya's new rulers are responsible for preventing weapons proliferation in a region battling terrorism, the top US general in Africa said Thursday.

He said there was a risk of proliferation of weaponry after the battles in Libya in which rebels have toppled long-time ruler Moamer Kadhafi.

"I agree that there is a threat of the proliferation of the weapons from Libya and we are greatly concerned -- all the nations are very concerned -- about small weapons, rifles and weapons similar to that, but also explosives and shoulder-fired air defence systems," General Carter Ham, the head of the Africa command, Africom, told a press conference on Algiers.

Ham was taking part in a conference organised by Algeria in the name of four countries held to be in the front line of terrorist activity which might be increased by arms trafficking: Algeria, Mali, Mauritania and Niger.

All these large but mainly poor countries are prey to attacks by Al-Qaeda in the Islamic Maghreb, a loose terrorist movement that emerged in 2007 from Algeria's Islamic extremist Salafist Group for Preaching and Combat. Al-Qaeda has battled the military in the Sahel nations, taken Western hostages and is held to be engaged in arms trafficking.

"The US and most other nations have been very clear that the control of weapons is the entire responsibility of the NTC," Libya's ruling National Transitional Council, he said.

"All of the nations of the sub region and indeed the international community are seeking ways to help the NTC control those weapons," he added.

"As with all matters, regional security therefore requires the best efforts not only of the countries of the region but of the international community as well to control this problem.".

The Algiers conference was expected to end later Thursday on a note of warning about the new risks presented across the region by the Libyan conflict, on the terrorist front and in contraband.

The return of mercenaries, including thousands of Tuareg fighters who have in the past rebelled against the regimes in Mali and Niger and traditionally supported Kadhafi, is further cause for concern.





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