This is beginning to look like the Roman Empire: the Empire's army can't be in all places at the same time.
Pentagon prepares military operation in Mali
RT,
8
December, 2012
It’s
only December, but it looks like the Pentagon has all planned out how
they’ll spend a good part of 2013. US officials now claim that the
Defense Department is busy preparing a military operation in the
nation of Mali.
United
States officials with knowledge of the matter tell the Washington
Post that the Department of Defense and the US State Department will
assist next year in a mission to overthrow Islamic extremists with
ties to al-Qaeda who took under control a significant part of Mali, a
small West African country that is still picking itself up after a
coup this past March.
Earlier
this year, military officers displaced the administration of
then-President Amandou Toumani Toure, claiming that he was reluctant
in addressing the extremist issue himself. However since then the
military junta failed to improve security in the country and retake
control of the northern part of Mali captured by the Islamists.Now
the US is claiming that it’s ready to help the military rulers,
even though it may be a clear violation of American laws: the
Pentagon cannot assist first-hand with people responsible for ousting
a democratically elected leader. That doesn’t mean, however, that
Washington won’t find a way to send support overseas.
According
to testimonies from officials speaking to the Post, both the Pentagon
and State Department will assist opposition to the terrorists by
training, equipping and transporting troops to tackle what Sen.
Christopher A. Coons (D-Delaware) has called “the
largest territory controlled by Islamic extremists in the world.”
Speaking
on the record, though, the Pentagon’s deputy assistant secretary
for Africa tells the paper that US influence might not end there.
“There’s
plenty of other forms of information and intelligence that are
circulating that give us enough insight for planning purposes,” the
Defense Department’s Amanda J. Dory tells the Post this week.
According to the paper, Dory also floated the possibility of US
warplanes being deployed to North Arica to provide troops there with
aerial protection.
“We
definitely don’t know how that would work out,” Dory
says.
In
advance of next year’s expected war, the State Department and the
Treasury announced this week that they have blacklisted two Mali
extremist groups, the Movement for Unity and Jihad in West Africa, as
terrorists officially in the eyes of Uncle Sam. The Associated Press
reports that doing such will make any of those groups’ members
ineligible to receive assistance from the US or conduct business, the
start of crippling sanctions expected to continue until eventual
military intervention.
Meanwhile,
though, the wheels are indeed in motion in terms of starting to send
US support towards Mali. On Wednesday, Johnnie Carson, assistant
secretary for African Affairs under US President Barack Obama, said
"We
have sent military planners to [the Economic Community of West
African States] to assist with the continued development and
refinement of the plans for international intervention.”
Carson
acknowledged that US assistance will be needed in order to overthrow
al-Qaeda in Islamic Maghreb, or AQIM, but added, “it
must be African-led; it must be Malian-led.”
Testifying
to Congress, Rep. Dory adds that AQIM and its affiliates “took
over administration of northern cities and began imposing a harsh
version of Sharia law” in
Mali.
“This expanded safe haven and control of territory allows al-Qaeda
and affiliates to recruit supporters more easily and to export
extremism."
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