Africa:
Oil, al-Qaeda and the US military
By Ritt Goldstein
Africa's Maghreb and Sahel regions recently exploded into world view with
allegations that the Madrid bombers were tied to those areas' "al Qaeda"
groups. And while United States concerns about
terrorism in the region have been increasingly voiced, critics of the
administration of President George W Bush say that the ongoing US pursuit of
energy resources lies behind them. As early as the fall of 2002, Britain's
Economist magazine charged that oil "is the only American interest in Africa".
In a fall 2003 interview with Asia Times Online, noted US security analyst
Michael Klare, author of Resource Wars, had warned of America's
potential African involvement. When queried as to where the next oil flash
point might be after Iraq, Klare replied: "I've been looking at Africa. It's
heating up over there."
Illustrating the basis for such statements, in 2001 Vice President Dick
Cheney's report on a US National Energy Policy declared Africa to be one of
America's "fastest-growing sources of oil and gas". By February 1, 2002, the
assistant secretary of state for African affairs, Walter Kansteiner, declared:
"This [African oil] has become of national strategic interest to us." And a
December 2001 report by the US National Intelligence Council, Global Trends
2015, forecast that by 2015 a full quarter of US oil imports would come from
Africa.
During this past February, a handful of top US generals visited Africa in
separate and far from usual trips. They included the US's European commander,
Marine General James L Jones, as well as the European deputy commander, Air
Force, General Charles Wald. And excluding the region known as the Horn of
Africa, the US European Command oversees the US's African actions.
The trips occurred against a widely reported backdrop of increasing pressures
from US industry and conservative policy groups to secure energy sources
outside the Middle East.
Over the past several months, the US has been in the process of dispatching
Special Forces troops to the countries of Africa's Sahel - Mauritania, Chad,
Mali and Niger. The effort is part of a program dubbed the Pan Sahel
Initiative, designed to provide anti-terrorism training to the region's
military. Others have termed it a program to train regional armies.
Involved US Special Forces groups are operating out of Germany, where an
investigation of the Madrid bombers is also ongoing. And military cooperation
with Morocco, Algeria and Tunisia has reportedly been increased as well. But it
is the fairly recent and substantial oil discoveries that are said to be
fueling this effort, and as the Washington Times declared in a headline on
February 26: "US eyes terrorism networks, oil in Africa."
In Colombia, similar US undertakings to train local forces have been previously
pursued to secure that country's oil infrastructure, particularly its
pipelines. There, the leftist group known by the Spanish acronym FARC has long
waged a guerilla campaign, pipeline sabotage being a favored tactic. Similarly,
ongoing pipeline sabotage in Iraq is reported as substantial. And in a
surprising revelation of US Defense Department candor, a December 2003 report
referred to the "open-ended imperial policing" that Iraqi involvement now
means.
Casting a new light on the Madrid bombing on March 11, the primary group
allegedly behind the attack, Salafia Jihadia, was said to have singled out
Spain in the May 16, 2003, Morocco bombings. A private Spanish club, Casa de
Espana, was the most severely damaged among the five targets in Morocco. The
other targets included: the Israeli Alliance club and a Jewish cemetery, the
Belgian consulate (Belgium's business community has been very active in
Morocco), and a hotel for business people. The Moroccan economy is in the
throes of "structural reforms", and increasing privatization is straining
relations within the country.
The May bombing followed a summer 2002 standoff between Spain and Morocco over
a disputed island, Spanish commandos eventually reclaiming it from Moroccan
control. A long-simmering dispute also exists between Spain and Morocco over
two remaining Spanish sovereignty enclaves in the country, Ceuta and Melilla.
Considerably more Spanish troops are said to garrison these enclaves than were
dispatched by Madrid to Iraq. And some speculate that beyond Islamist
objectives, the motivation behind Madrid's blasts may have included some very
traditional, anti-imperialist sentiment.
In a surprisingly timely commentary on the agenda of Salafia Jihadia, just two
days prior to the Madrid attacks, the director of the US Central Intelligence
Agency (CIA), George Tenet, testified before the Senate Committee on Armed
Services. He specifically cited Salafia, saying that it was among "small local
groups with limited domestic agendas". He added that these groups "have
autonomous leadership, they pick their own targets, they plan their own
attacks".
Yet according to Agence France-Presse, the Madrid attacks are now said to have
been planned at a "rear base" of al-Qaeda, located where Morocco borders Mali,
Mauritania and Algeria. An Algerian group, the Salafist Group for Preaching and
Combat (GSPC), was also allegedly involved. And as with every other major
bombing over the past several months, Jordanian-Palestinian militant Abu Musab
al-Zarqawi is alleged to have been the "mastermind", though some experts in the
intelligence community have expressed doubts.
In the case of the old anti-communist movement and mind set, all communists
were once lumped together, their many groups and factions considered
essentially as one led by the Soviet Union. A similar mind set is demonstrated
by many in the West regarding today's Islamic militants. Some analysts say this
as indeed the case, noting that while those who today are called "al-Qaeda"
share a certain commonality, the differences between groups is often great.
Notably, there existed such differences between communist groups and nations
that they occasionally led to armed confrontation, warfare and splits, as in
the case of China vs Vietnam and Sino-Soviet tensions and split.
But in mid-March the GSPC reportedly did fight a running battle with forces
from Niger and then Chad, with the US reported to have flown food, blankets and
medical supplies from Germany to aid Chad's forces. And with the basing of US
military efforts in Germany, one explanation for Germany's ongoing terror
investigations becomes apparent.
Subsequent to the Niger and Chad GSPC battles, US concerns about the GSPC
attempting to topple the governments of Mauritania and Algeria were reported.
But, in the recent debate over so-called "intelligence failures", a pattern of
wildly "exaggerating" known threats has also been reported. And it is now also
widely accepted that such exaggerations provided the basis for the US's
military involvement in Iraq.
The GSPC has been long fighting to topple the Algerian government and install
an Islamic state. But this resistance arose after the Algerian government
canceled the 1992 election in order to "keep an Islamic party from coming to
power", according to the Toronto Star. And while the pro-US Mauritania
government of Maaouyah Ould Sid Ahmed Taya fought off a June 2003 coup attempt,
it was widely reported as by Islamists from within that country's own military,
not the GSPC.
Taya himself came to power in a 1984 coup and elections in that country are
broadly described as "suspect". Mauritania is also widely acknowledged as a
country where slavery still exists, and the Washington Times reported in July
2003 that "Mr Taya, like other pro-American leaders in the Arab world, has
cracked down on political and religious opposition".
Paradoxically, if US National Security Adviser Condoleezza Rice's so-called
"democratic wave" were to actually engulf the region, it appears that hardest
hit would be the bulk of US allies. But Mauritania and Algeria both have oil.
In a perspective of the oil industry shared by many in the non-governmental
organization community, in a January interview with Asia Times Online, Jim
Paul, executive director of the New York-based Global Policy Forum, observed:
"The oil industry is all about super-profits. Since everyone is pursuing this,
and the marketplace doesn't effectively regulate it, there's been war, bribery
and corruption virtually wherever the oil industry goes."
In 2002, Rice's old firm, Chevron Texaco (she was a director), had said that
while it invested US$5 billion in Africa over the previous five years, it would
invest $20 billion over the next five.
Given such US energy investment, it's no surprise that a 2002 edition of
Alexander's Gas & Oil Connections, a highly respected industry newsletter,
said in a headline: "US moves to protect interest in African oil." And while
several authorities were quoted as emphasizing that Africa's oil supplies were
free from any major threats, the piece added that the Bush administration was
determined to "ensure that they remain so".
But a steady evolution - and deterioration - of the African security
environment has been reported to the media by US officials. Whereas in 2002 the
continent offered apparently stable oil field conditions, that assessment was
changed almost simultaneously with the level of domestic US pressures to
acquire African oil; a substantive al-Qaeda threat materializing proportionate
to the need for oil. And some believe that Secretary of State Colin Powell best
illustrated a methodology that explained such circumstances last summer.
At a July 10 press conference in South Africa, Powell was asked how he would
respond to critics who charged that the US's new focus on Africa was really
about African oil. Powell replied that "we are not here for any other purpose
than to demonstrate our friendship, to demonstrate our commitment, and to see
if we can help people in need".
Recent questions have been raised in the US Congress regarding the
administration's apparent pursuit of cynical ploys and misleading verbiage in
its pronouncements.
As regards help for those in need, the tiny West African island-state of Sao
Tome has been rumored since 2002 as the site for a potential US naval base. Sao
Tome's strategic position in the Gulf of Guinea, where recent deep-water oil
finds have been made, led to a meeting between Bush and Sao Tome's
then-president Fradique de Menezes in 2002.
The US allies in the area have virtually no blue-water navy, and Sao Tome holds
jointly with Nigeria an area with a reported potential of 11 billion barrels of
oil. Many of the other newly discovered African reserves are located offshore
as well.
While a July 2003 military coup - which shortly followed Powell's African trip
- ousted president de Menezes, within the past two weeks (this March) said "US
experts" began training the island's security apparatus, voicing concerns about
al-Qaeda operating in the West African region.
As a US Defense Department document this winter by Dr Jeffrey Record said: "The
contemporary language on terrorism has become, as Conor Gearty puts it, 'the
rhetorical servant of the established order'." It emphasized that almost
nothing matters "a jot against the contemporary power of the terrorist label".
Ritt Goldstein is an American investigative political journalist based in
Stockholm. His work has appeared in broad sheets such as Australia's Sydney
Morning Herald, Spain's El Mundo and Denmark's Politiken, as well as with the
Inter Press Service (IPS), a global news agency.
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Mar 30, 2004
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