Can a rapidly-declining empire have its military forces spread over the globe – from the Middle East, to Africa, to the Pacific?
US deploying troops to 35 African countries
U.S.
Marines arrive with equipment at the United States embassy in
Monrovia, Liberia (Reuters / Luc Gnago)
The
United States Army will be deploying troops to nearly three-dozen
African nations in the coming year.
Soldiers
based out of Fort Riley, Kansas’ 2nd Brigade, 1st Infantry Division
will begin training in March 2013 in order to prepare for a project
that will send troops to as many as 35 African nations, the
Associated Press reports.
Citing
a growing threat from extremist groups, including those with ties to
al-Qaeda, the Department of Defense is hoping to install American
soldiers overseas in order to prepare local troops there for any
future crises as tensions escalate.
Earlier
this month, DoD sources with insider knowledge told the Washington
Post that US troops will soon be en route to the nation of Mali in
order to thwart the emerging threat of Islamic extremists, including
al-Qaeda aligned insurgents. With the latest news from the Pentagon,
though, Mali will be just one of many African nations hosting US
troops in the coming year.
According
to the AP’s update this week, soldiers will be sent overseas in the
new year to assist only with training and equipping efforts, and are
not necessarily permitted to participate in military operations.
Should the Pentagon ask the troops to engage in battle, however, the
secretary of defense could sign off on an order that would allow as
much.
"If
they want them for (military) operations, the brigade is our first
sourcing solution because they're prepared," Gen.
David Rodriguez, the head of U.S. Army Forces Command, tells the
AP. "But
that has to go back to the secretary of defense to get an execute
order."
Additionally,
the AP says that US troops will head specifically to Libya, Sudan,
Algeria and Niger in order to prepare for any advances from al-Qaeda
linked groups. Americans will also train and equip forces in Kenya
and Somalia, reportedly, in order to stand up to al-Shabab militants.
Despite the troops being deployed to more than half of the countries
in Africa, though, the AP reports that Uncle Sam will try to avoid
giving the impression that the United States is leaving a substantial
footprint across the continent.
"The
challenge we have is to always understand the system in their
country," explains
Rodriguez. "We're
not there to show them our system, we're there to make their system
work. Here is what their army looks like, and here is what we need to
prepare them to do."
Sources
speaking with the AP say that the United States has already prepared
nearly 100 different exercises and training programs to conduct with
African troops during the coming year.
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