US
will provide France airlift help, 'training' for Mali operation -
reports
Washington
has agreed to provide France with airlifts to help move troops and
equipment in the country's operation in Mali, an official told
Reuters. Meanwhile, a group of US military trainers are expected to
arrive in the region by the weekend.
RT,
18
January, 2013
The
decision to boost Washington's contribution to the French-led
military operation against Islamist rebels in Mali comes after a
formal review of the French request by the Obama administration.
The
US Military’s plans include starting US Air Force cargo flights on
Friday. C-17 and larger C-5 aircraft will likely be used in the
operation. The US could also provide aerial refueling for French
aircraft, and deploy surveillance drones. However, the
timetable and details of the US deployment remain to be finalized,
Reuters reported.
Chair
of the US Joint Chiefs of Staff General Martin Dempsey pointed out
that France had not asked for US help in any lethal operations.
In
addition to reports that Washington will help French and Malian
forces by way of airlift support for getting troops and equipment to
the battlefield, CBS News correspondent Margaret Brennan reported
that Secretary of State Hillary Clinton said that US military
trainers “will
be on the ground by this weekend.”
Earlier,
the US Defense Secretary claimed that the United States would only
aid the combat mission with logistical support and
intelligence-gathering assistance – and that no American troops
will be put on the ground.
The
trainers are not expected to land in Mali itself, and will most
likely train troops in neighboring African countries included in the
UN-authorized ECOWAS intervention force.
The
EU has also approved sending a military training mission to Mali
during an emergency meeting in Brussels on Thursday.
The
West African bloc has already sent reinforcements to help Malian and
French troops battling the rebels. A contingent of 100 Togolese
soldiers was the first to arrive, followed by several hundred
Nigerian troops reinforced by war planes.
Germany
sent two military Transall transport airplanes from the 63rd
Luftwaffe squadron to join the mission in Mali. German crews are
expected to set up an aerial transport hub in nearby Senegal, and
help with logistics for both African and French troops.
France
at the moment has 1,400 troops of the ground in Mali, with 1,100 more
– including French Foreign Legionnaires – expected to be deployed
over the next few days.
As
France engages deeper in the Malian conflict, the only officially
confirmed casualty among the French contingent is the pilot of a
helicopter downed during the first day of Operation Serval. But
eventually, the conflict's fallout could cause French President
Francois Hollande to be forced out of office, historian Gerald Horne
told RT.
“What
Mr. Hollande is doing is enlarging and worsening the existing
problem,” Horne
said. “The
problem is that when the body bags return into Paris, the populace
will turn on Hollande with a vengeance – and he will be driven from
office just as surely as Sarkozy was driven from office.”
Nigerian soldiers arrive at the airport in Bamako on January 17, 2013. (AFP Photo/Issouf Sanogo)
The
French intervention in Mali “is
going to be a long, drawn out war,” UK-based
political analyst Dan Glazebrook told RT.
“This
is a ground invasion of Africa, and they’re hoping – France,
Britain and the US – are hoping to establish a permanent military
presence; an occupation of Africa. And this is one way they’re
going to be able to do it,” he
explained.
Glazebrook
said the hostage
crisis at an Algerian gas plant which
was sparked by France’s intervention in Mali is an intended
consequence of France’s ground invasion.
“Spillover
is part of the program…the aim of the strategy of intervention in
Mali. What happened since the execution of Gaddafi and the
destruction of Libya is that the West armed, funded and equipped
these death squads effectively in Libya. The flow of weapons and
fighters spread then across the region, which was again, playing into
the program of the West to destabilize the region, and they ended up
in Northern Mali,” Glazebrook
argues.
Glazebrook
says Algeria was intended to be the next domino to fall, but when the
insurgency began spreading to southern Mali, France kicked off its
campaign “to
bomb the rebels back into Algeria.”
Togolese soldiers arrive at the airport on January 17, 2013, in Bamako. (AFP Photo/Fred Dufour)

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