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AFRICOM Watch Bulletin #46

AFRICOM Watch Bulletin #46

Libya, once a prosperous and peaceful country, has been ravaged by a war between armed factions backed by regional and global players ever since the 2011 NATO-led invasion. The war and destruction have significantly destabilized the country, and armed groups now openly operate.

Countries seeking regional influence and aspiring to control Libyan oil have been exploiting political and ideological differences among the ruling elite in Libya, sowing the seeds for further division and chaos. The NATO-led invasion opened up space for countries such as the United States, France, Turkey, Egypt, Russia, the United Arab Emirates and Qatar, among several others, to further their interests in the region through the Libyan conflict. However, this has come at the cost of common people.

To suppress dissent and to exploit vulnerable migrants, Libyan authorities have used various means, such as arbitrary detention, torture, rape, murder, enslavement, enforced disappearances and sexual slavery of women. The U.S./EU/NATO Axis of Domination has provided monetary and material aid to Libyan authorities and to armed militias, both of which have been responsible for widespread human-rights violations, including war crimes and crimes against humanity. This “new” scramble for Africa is causing widespread suffering for African people.

U.S. Out of Africa: Voices from the Struggle 

AFRICOM Watch Bulletin speaks with Essam Abdelrasul Bubaker Elkorghli, who is a Libyan Ph.D. student at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, where he researches Libya’s modern history, state ideology and contemporary imperialism in education. He is part of the Global Pan-African Movement

AFRICOM Watch Bulletin: How does the U.S./NATO impose the need for U.S. Africa Command (AFRICOM) to intervene, like it did in Libya?

Essam Elkorghli: Understanding AFRICOM’s recent activities in Libya must be integrated in a broader understanding of the history of Libya and how the aftermath of NATO’s intervention in Libya enabled AFRICOM to infiltrate the country’s security apparatus. Libya’s military was destroyed by NATO and its regional allies, laying the groundwork for a weakened state that is dependent on foreign actors to conduct its security operations in the country. The destruction of Libya and its military in 2011 manufactured the need for more Western intervention. This form of imperialism results in the forced integration of the South with the North based on a relationship of dependency, and in this case, it is security dependency.

AWB: Who are the Libyans that invited AFRICOM to start its mission in Libya and what role did they play in the toppling of Muammar Qaddafi?

Elkorghli: AFRICOM partook in the destruction of Libya under the guise of NATO’s 2011 mission. However, as Security Council Resolution 1973 ended by the elimination of the regime, their operations stopped. Nonetheless, when the groups armed by NATO in 2011 started to claim territories, declare affiliation to the Islamic State in Iraq and Syria (ISIS), and inflict endless terror on the population, calls by the newly parachuted UN authority in Libya (Government of National Accord) for another foreign intervention started. AFRICOM launched its mission in Libya in August 2016 in the city of Sirte to help the GNA’s fight against local Islamic State elements. The GNA was not elected by Libyans, but their composition includes a large proportion of the people who fought against the former regime and are predominantly [members of the right-wing political group] Muslim Brotherhood.

AWB: The explanation given for the recent visit by William Burns, CIA chief, was “security issues.” Is that merely coded pretext for the expansion of AFRICOM or are there legitimate security concerns? And, if not via AFRICOM, how do you envision those concerns being addressed? 

Elkorghli: UN estimates that there are 20,000 foreign mercenaries in Libya. These foreign groups are tied to nation states and are not clandestine militias, as the AFRICOM purports. The recent visit by the head of the CIA to Libya was largely driven by the fact that there is an adversarial group in Libya that must be combatted, which is the private [Russian] military, Wagner Group. The visit comes merely two days after that very group defeated NATO-backed troops in the strategic city of Soledar in Ukraine. The fact that a private military group defeated NATO and its allies in Ukraine is the security issue for the CIA because the group and its operations in the Sahel is materializing more fortuitous results than [the] French or AFRICOM presence in the region. In other words, wherever AFRICOM and French troops existed, there is an expansion of terror activities. The group’s presence is presumably a security issue for AFRICOM, especially following their role in the Ukraine war.

AWB: Regarding the airstrikes that killed 11 Libyan civilians, is it your sense that AFRICOM is indifferent or that it is actually intentional. And, if intentional, what would be their ultimate objective?

Elkorghli: AFRICOM’s operations did not end with the objective of eliminating terrorist elements in the city of Sirte in 2016. They continued their operations to our very day. This has had consequential reverberations on the social fabric of Libyan society. AFRICOM collaborates with GNA (and currently Government of National Unity, formed in 2021 with the aim of unifying the GNA with the rival Tobruk-based government) to target marginalized groups in the south, who have been deprived of social services and access to health care and education. The Tebu and Tuareg tribes in the south have been framed to aid in terror activities, which legitimizes the excessive use of violence against the civilian population. The killing of 11 civilians under the pretext of terrorism shows the level of impunity these military operations enjoy, especially when the local government lacks popular legitimacy and their reign is largely guarded by how the West grants them legitimacy. These airstrikes should be viewed from the forced integration of Libya with AFRICOM’s security apparatus, which renders Libya a security dependent state.

AWB: There are clearly multiple groups/factions on the ground in Libya, all with their own agendas. Is there a constructive role for the African Union (AU) to play in the process of rebuilding Libya?

Elkorghli: The AU’s involvement since 2011 has been circumscribed by NATO and its allies. In 2011, the AU was barred from traveling to Libya and was threatened by NATO that Libyan airspace should not be approached—ironic how African airspace is controlled by NATO. The AU also saw that successive Libyan governments parachuted by the UN were not interested in the former regime’s orientation of integrating Libya with Africa. This has resulted in limited engagement with the AU, which is reciprocated by the AU’s divided attention on Libya. However, given that the AU has not proliferated the destruction of Libya, always called for genuine peaceful solutions to conflicts between different groups, and consistently called for de-escalation, they do have a role in the reconstruction of Libya. If a group of influential African states (for example, South Africa, Nigeria, Tanzania, Algeria and Ghana, to name a few) could consolidate their efforts to conjure a plan for Libyan factions to meet in Libya for a Libyan-Libyan dialogue, this would sideline any efforts for the U.S./EU to select a few elites and reproduce the same results that the [United Nations Support Mission in Libya] UNSMIL has driven.

AWB: How can Africans worldwide, particularly those of us who espouse a Pan-Africanist perspective, best act in solidarity with the masses of Libyan people?

Elkorghli: There are a select few actors in Libya who have garnered international legitimacy by being subservient to the interests of the U.S./EU/NATO and transnational capital. These state actors do not represent the Libyan masses. The Libyans masses long for a dignified life, sovereign land and control of [their] resources. The history and fate of Libya is linked directly to the fate and history of the rest of Africa, whether through anti-colonial struggles or through the re-emergence of neocolonial interests, where the African continent has become NATO’s southern neighborhood. As Pan-Africanists, we should understand the malign and divisive interests of the West in further plundering Africa; we must act in unison against the neocolonial onslaught against Africa and its people; we must oppose the current trajectory of increased militarization (except in self-defense); silence the guns; and understand that our struggles are one—sovereignty over our lands, seas and air.

NEWS AND ANALYSIS

Gerald Horne on Sudan: Almost 100 Dead in Fighting Between Army and Paramilitary Forces & role of US

April 17, 2023 by The Critical Hour

Dr. Gerald Horne, Professor of History at the University of Houston, author, historian, and researcher, on The Critical Hour, discussing Sudan: Almost 100 Dead in Fighting Between Army and Paramilitary Forces & role of U.S.

As Army and Rapid Support Forces battle it out, Sudanese left calls for restoring the revolution

April 15, 2023 by Pavan Kulkarni of Peoples Dispatch

The Sudanese army and the paramilitary Rapid Support Forces have begun fighting each other. The root of the conflict lies in disagreements over integrating the paramilitary into the army. The Sudanese left has noted that both parties seek to escalate armed conflict, so that it can be used as a reason to not hand over power to civilian forces.

Life or Debt: The Stranglehold of Neocolonialism and Africa’s Search for Alternatives

April 11, 2023 by Tricontinental: Institute for Social Research

The International Finance Institutions—mainly the IMF—exacerbate the poverty brought on by colonialism and transform it into a permanent debt crisis. This dossier explores that topic and moves into a deeper assessment of the contradictions of sovereign debt on the African continent. 

Debunking the U.S.-led Hypocrisy Summit

April 11, 2023 by WPFW 89.3 FM - Voices With Vision

Imani Umoja of the African Party for the Independence of Guinea and Cape Verde (PAIGC) and the All-African People’s Revolutionary Party, as well as a member of the Steering Committee of BAP's U.S. Out of Africa Network, spoke about the U.S.-led Democracy Summit held in Zambia, March 28-30. The conversation was preceded by comments by Dr. Fred M’membe, president of the Socialist Party in Zambia, about that conference and U.S. imperialist arrogance.

AFRICOM: Securing African or U.S. interests?

April 5, 2023 by African Stream

The United States Africa Command—or AFRICOM—was founded in 2007. But it has failed to bring peace and security. Major failures in Somalia, Libya and elsewhere have left many Africans suspecting it exists only to serve U.S. interests.

The long arm of Washington extends into Africa’s Sahel

March 25, 2023 translation by Vijay Prashad

U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken’s visit to Niger and its offer of $150 million do not hide that its main interest lies in security cooperation.

Israel’s Humiliating Expulsion from AU Summit Exposes Its Failed Diplomacy in Africa

March 22, 2023 by Ramzy Baroud 

The removal of Israel’s Observer Status in the African Union reflects the broader trend of geopolitical spaces opening up for countries in the Global South and the increasing challenge to the hegemony of former colonial powers.

Libya Hearing: International People's Tribunal on US Imperialism

March 10, 2023 by 

The sanctions as one of the key tools of U.S. imperialism. In order to uncover the depth and breadth of U.S. imperialism, we will determine the impact of sanctions on various aspects of life, with a focus on social, political, economic, and ecological issues.

If you are interested in getting more directly involved in the fight to liberate Africa, please consider joining the U.S. Out of Africa Network

No compromise, no retreat,

BAP’s U.S. Out of Africa Network


P.S. Freedom isn’t free. We are doing this work with no full-time staff and no big foundation support. Consider giving today.

Banner photo: Libyan security forces affiliated with Tripoli-based interim Prime Minister Abdul Hamid Dbeibah in the northwestern city of Misrata (Courtesy AFP)

AFRICOM Watch Bulletin #45

AFRICOM Watch Bulletin #45

Nigeria has imperial and neocolonial trappings it must acknowledge and vehemently reject. This includes surrendering decision making about financial and credit facilities or political organization to the West, which has a significant impact on the actions of those who take political office in the country. The United States is an imperial power that operates through its neo-colonial subjects and its control over imperialist structures, such as the World Bank and the International Monetary Fund, as well as through its control over the politicians in office.

Nigerian sovereignty is reduced to mere “flag independence” because of U.S. external-policy interference and economic control. This allows the space for Nigerian elites to engage in wrongdoing—whether by corruption, nepotism or human-rights abuses. We must contextualize these instances in terms of how Western corporations and governments often enable (and encourage) such actions to preserve lucrative economic arrangements.

General elections will be held in Nigeria on February 25 to elect the president and vice president, as well as members of the Senate and House of Representatives. These elections will take place amid an unprecedented state of general crisis. Any politician or party coming into power will have to contend with an ongoing capitalist crisis. The response of any neo-colonial government is likely to  be to tighten fiscal consolidation on behalf of big business. The Black Alliance for Peace (BAP) and its U.S. Out of Africa Network (USOAN) must support the antithesis of neo-colonial governance, which are self-determination and bottom-up, participatory democratic processes.

NEWS AND ANALYSIS

Africans’ Message to Imperialism: “We Are Not Your Flunkies!”

March 1, 2023 by Mark P. Fancher

South Africa's participation in military drills with Russia and China is an indication that the global south are not taking orders from Washington. African nations should continue their tradition as non-aligned states.

The international politics of observing elections, By Owei Lakemfa

March 4, 2023 by Owei Lakemfa

Why would numerous observers travel from across the world to observe Nigeria elections - as guardians of democracy?

Uncertainty in Nigeria as Cash, Fuel Shortages Bite Ahead of Vote

February 10, 2023 by AFP

With under three weeks to go until Nigeria's presidential elections, major shortages of cash and fuel have plunged Africa's most populous country into crisis. As well as provoking outrage among ordinary people, the shortages threaten to upend the February 25 presidential poll, while throwing its organization into doubt.

United States’ Pursuit of Imperial Military Base in Northern Somalia Fuels Brutal War

February 8, 2023 by Jamal Abdulahi 

The history of European colonialism and the endless U.S. desire for a military presence strengthen a Somalia secessionist movement and warfare that most people in that country do not want.

“Whoever wins we must continue to fight”—Nigeria’s coming election

February 7, 2023 by ROAPE (Review of African Political Economy)

ROAPE speaks to Nigerian socialist and activist, Alex Batubo, about the elections this month, and the political and economic situation in the country. Batubo focuses on the struggle of labor, and the possibilities of a radical alternative emerging from the challenges (and opportunities) of the present.

The US Seeks Libyan Elections that Will Enshrine the Fait Accompli

February 7, 2023 translation by Internationalist 360°

US Secretary of State Antony Blinken joined the chorus of delusionists who believe that there is indeed a possibility of organizing an electoral entitlement in light of current contradictions that dominate the scene.

The US is trying to expel Russian mercenaries from Sudan and Libya

February 3, 2023 by The Bharat Express News

The Biden administration has been working for months with regional powers Egypt and the United Arab Emirates to pressure military leaders in Sudan and Libya to end their ties with the Wagner Group.

Nigerian Politics: Past, Present, and Future

November 14, 2022 by Forward Ever Podcast

In this episode, the podcast interviews an activist in Nigeria about the political history that continues to shape what is referred to as Naija, the vernacular term for Nigeria. Some parts of the interview contain low or unclear audio because of poor connection. “[These are] some of the issues when interviewing others on the ground in developing nations, but we hope the overall interview can shed light on contemporary and historical Nigerian politics.”

If you are interested in getting more directly involved in the fight to liberate Africa, please consider joining the U.S. Out of Africa Network

No compromise, no retreat,

BAP’s U.S. Out of Africa Network


P.S. Freedom isn’t free. We are doing this work with no full-time staff and no big-foundation support. Consider giving today.

Banner photo: African troops in a boat of the coast of West Africa participating in Obangame Express 2023 exercises (courtesy AFRICOM Twitter.)

AFRICOM Watch Bulletin #44

AFRICOM Watch Bulletin #44

The United Nations recently held the first session of the Permanent Forum on People of African Descent in Geneva, Switzerland. From December 5-8, more than 600 delegates from UN member states, UN structures, and civil society took the floor to call for global recourse and the institutional protection of human rights for Africans all over the world.

Established in August 2021, during the 7th year of the UN International Decade for People of African Descent—spanning 2015 to 2024—the Permanent Forum will act as an advisory body to the UN Human Rights Council. The UN General Assembly declared the Forum also will serve as “a consultative mechanism for people of African descent and other relevant stakeholders” and “platform for improving the safety and quality of life and livelihoods of people of African descent.”

The convening consisted of international and virtual pre-events and side events that discussed the human rights situation of Africans on the continent, as well as Africans in Europe, and what we call “Nuestra América,” the landmass encompassing what is now known as Canada to the tip of Chile. Representatives from the Black Alliance for Peace (BAP) and BAP’s U.S. Out of Africa Network (USOAN) attended the December convening to:

  • engage in political struggles around the establishment of this forum—which are discussed in this month’s interview;

  • reach out to and build international structures (significant numbers of folks from the global South were in attendance); and 

  • focus on issues of militarization and its impact on African people.

BAP and the USOAN emphasize the increased militarization of the African continent and Nuestra América, as well as its implications for resistance efforts by local communities and activists, as a key part of the war on African people. We seek to build the mass movement necessary to defeat it.

U.S. Out of Africa: Voices from the Struggle 

AFRICOM Watch Bulletin speaks with Mama Efia Nwangaza, who is the Founder/Director of the Malcolm X Center for Self Determination, member of the Black Belt Human Rights Coalition Criminal Punishment System Sub-Committee as well as the Black Alliance for Peace, and a veteran of the Student Non-Violent Coordinating Committee (SNCC):

AFRICOM Watch Bulletin: What are your thoughts on the Permanent Forum?

Efia Nwangaza: The Permanent Forum on People of African Descent, December 5-8, 2022, Geneva, is the United States’ and other European countries’—former colonizers and enslavers—effort to control today's Bandung-like global reparations-centered freedom movement, as evidenced by the Durban Declaration and Programme of Action (DDPA). The Forum, as presently constituted, is a mechanism designed to waylay, blunt and bury the DDPA with hand-picked gatekeepers and the racist slur of “anti-semitism.”

In Durban, South Africa, the world—meaning governments and civil society—reached a consensus and issued the Durban Declaration and Programme of Action (DDPA). The world declared colonialism, slavery, apartheid, and genocide crimes against humanity, without statute of limitations and [with] a basis for reparations.

In 2001, the United States, led by then-Secretary of State Colin Powell, walked out of the Durban World Conference Against Racism. The U.S. and other European countries—former colonizers—worked to prevent the global consensus that was reached and, having failed, continue to work to undermine and bury it.

AWB: Who are the main players in the Permanent Forum?

EN: The Forum is composed of 10 members; five nominated by states and five by the president of the Human Rights Council, “in consultation with civil society.” Here, “civil society” is not limited to people of African descent, as is the case with the members of the [United Nations Permanent Forum on Indigenous Issues].

While the U.S. described how it pressured governments to vote for its pick, Justin Hanford, little or nothing else is known about the rest's appointment. It is located in Geneva, in the Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights (OHCHR), instead of  the more accessible New York, under the more appropriate Economic and Social Council.

The chair, Epsy Campbell-Barr, is a former vice president of Costa Rica, one of the world's smallest countries and [containing] an even smaller number of people of African descent; little more than 400,000. The vice chair is Alice Ange'le Nkom of Cameroon. She is the first woman admitted to practice law in Cameroon and is president of the Cameroonian Association for Defence of Homosexuality, co-chairperson of the Central Africa Human Rights Defenders Network, and a member of the National Democratic Institute International Working Group. The rapporteur [an independent human rights expert whose expertise is called upon by the United Nations to report or advise on human rights from a thematic or country-specific perspective] is Michael McEachrane, of Sweden, who calls himself a “mixed race, academic and activist.” As of 2016, there were 110,758 citizens of African nations residing in Sweden.  

Justin Hansford, U.S. member/Pan-Euro representative is director of the Howard University Thurgood Marshall Civil Rights Center. He, like Clarence Thomas, enjoys the good will that comes from the use of Thurgood Marshall's name. Hansford, presenting himself as a Black “liberator,” dismissed the DDPA saying, “I was 16 years old when it was written.” He reportedly “believes he can get a better deal;” apparently under the ruse of “Sustainable Development Goals.”

AWB: What were your contributions to the convening?

EN: I publicly reprimanded Justin Hansford for trying to gaslight me and others when the chair attempted to refuse to take floor responses to McEachrane's attempt to limit DDPA relevance in his “interim” summary of the Forum's future work. “The DDPA will be applied to the extent it applies to people of African descent,” he said. His opening statement is attached.

I challenged Forum participants—in-person and virtually,—to read the DDPA.  Admonished them to not let fancy, obscure language, lack of information, age, experience, and a short-term promise (Sustainable Development Goals [SDG]) of an immediate bowl of porridge cause us to betray our peoples. All were challenged to fully claim, affirm, and assert the Durban Declaration and Programme of Action as our human right of self-determination.

I reminded them, “The Durban Declaration and Programme of Action is the heart and soul of this Forum, without the DDPA this is nothing more than a free trip and a talk fest. The Durban Declaration and Programme of Action is our lifeline and that of generations unborn. HOLD ON TO IT—BLACK POWER! BLACK IS BEAUTIFUL! BLACK POWER! BLACK POWER to BLACK PEOPLE!!! ALL POWER TO THE PEOPLE!!!” The crowd roared and gave two standing ovations. Black Power and the call for fidelity to the DDPA rang out throughout the remaining days.

AWB: Thank you for your insights and analysis!

You can hear more about the Permanent Forum from Mama Efia and other advocates who attended the first session in Geneva during a webinar titled, The African Diaspora Convenes on the World Stage & Calls for Reparatory Justice, hosted by The Human Rights Cities Alliance, on Thursday, January 19 at 6:30 p.m. (EST) / 3:30 p.m. (Pacific).

News and Analysis

White House Summit With African Leaders Results in Empty Promises

December 20, 2022 by Abayomi Azikiwe

A $55 billion package from the United States cannot regain ground lost to China and Russia on the continent and criticisms among the people and those in government are growing over the role of AFRICOM and occupying French military forces.

Episode 178: Onwards to Multipolarity

January 11, 2023 by CODEPINK Radio

From our unipolar world under U.S. hegemony, transition to multipolarity is inevitable and ensures the greatest chance for peace. In this episode, we hear about the U.S. Africa Command (AFRICOM) from Sylvie Ndongmo, Brother Imani Umoja, Dr. Gnaka Lagoke, and Colonel Ann Wright.

U.S. Airstrikes in Somalia Increased By 30% in 2022

January 8, 2023 by Dave DeCamp

In 2022, Biden ordered the deployment of up to 500 troops in Somalia and stepped up airstrikes as the U.S.-backed Mogadishu-based government began an offensive against al-Shabaab.

The Hope of a Pan-African-Owned and Controlled Electric Car Project Is Buried for Generations to Come: The Fifty-Second Newsletter 

December 29, 2022 by Vijay Prashad

The United States government held the US-Africa Leaders Summit in mid-December, prompted in large part by its fears about Chinese and Russian influence on the African continent.

The Hidden Truth Behind AFRICOM – US Africa Command 

December 22, 2022 by Lee Camp

Under AFRICOM—a program that the Pentagon will barely even admit exists—the U.S. military is involved in assassinations, bombings, torture, surveillance, the killing of civilians, blowback deaths of U.S. soldiers and—of course—cover-ups.

Why One Organization Dubbed the U.S.-Africa Summit the ‘Meeting of Uncle Tom and Uncle Sam’

December 20, 2022 by Julie Varughese

The U.S.-Africa Leaders Summit was clearly set up to obscure the real U.S. role in Africa and give legitimacy to the continuing U.S. plunder of African resources, exploitation of African people and military domination of the African continent.

U.S. & Europe Want to Make Africa Cold War Battleground Against Russia & China w/ Mikaela Nhondo Erskog 

November 30, 2022 by Rania Khalek’s Dispatches

The United States and Europe have labeled Africa as NATO’s “Southern Neighborhood” and are using AFRICOM as a mechanism to control the continent under the guise of protecting it from “malign” Chinese and Russian influence.


If you are interested in getting more directly involved in the fight to liberate Africa, please consider joining the U.S. Out of Africa Network

No compromise, no retreat,

BAP’s U.S. Out of Africa Network


P.S. Freedom isn’t free. We are doing this work with no full time staff and no big foundation support. Consider giving today.

Banner photo: Jan. 8, 2023 ceremony where U.S. presented $9 million in military supplies to the Somali National Army (courtesy AFRICOM Facebook page.)

AFRICOM Watch Bulletin #43

AFRICOM Watch Bulletin #43

The U.S./EU/NATO Axis of Domination that props up the white supremacist, colonial/capitalist project that began in 1492 is a primary enemy of African people. Effective opposition to the Axis of Domination requires bold, independent, and revolutionary action on the part of African people, the other oppressed nations in the U.S., and the working class as a whole. The organization of the workers and oppressed in the U.S. must be carried out in conjunction with the revolutionary and national democratic forces in operation around the globe. Also, Africa is central to the struggle against imperialism since its origins stem from the advent of the Atlantic slave trade, colonialism, and neo-colonialism.

What is needed are bottom-up, popular struggles which programmatically target neocolonial leadership that allow the U.S./EU/NATO Axis of Domination to oppress our people. In the U.S., for example, this leadership has consistently backed the white ruling class agenda of subversion and military intervention, from its support for the U.S. Africa Command (AFRICOM) to its failure to oppose the Department of Defense’s 1033 program, responsible for transferring millions of dollars-worth of military equipment to local police forces that are then deployed against poor working class Black and Brown communities.

The Black Alliance for Peace and the U.S. Out of Africa Network organized a Month of Action Against AFRICOM to support the development of a mass movement to oppose the U.S./EU/NATO Axis of Domination. We must join with other genuinely progressive and revolutionary forces throughout the world to proclaim that Pan-Africanism and Proletarian Internationalism is the only real solution to the monumental social and economic problems engendered by capitalism and imperialism. Contribute to BAP’s Fall Fundraising Drive or become a monthly sustainer—because freedom isn’t free and the oppressors won’t fund our liberation. We must rely on you, the people. 

U.S. Out of Africa: Voices from the Struggle 

AFRICOM Watch Bulletin speaks with Ezra Otieno, who is a revolutionary organizer and a member of the Central Committee of the Revolutionary Socialist League in Kenya.

AFRICOM Watch Bulletin: What is the impact of AFRICOM on the security situation on the African continent and Kenya in particular?

Ezra Otieno: Insecurity on the African continent has increased exponentially during the years that the U.S. has been building its network of bases through AFRICOM. Billions of dollars in security assistance are being used to do so. For example, the Kenyan army is being funded by the U.S. Army to wage war in Somalia as a proxy. The majority of the people in the country do not even want the army there. But the army is there because they are being supported by imperialist U.S. power. A lot of soldiers are dying in a war that is not theirs.

In 2017, there was an attack on a Kenyan base which killed over 100 soldiers. Many Somali civilians are being killed by the army there which is being funded by the U.S. There are at least 25 military Islamist groups that have been recorded on the continent, which is up from around 5 before AFRICOM was formed. This is a very significant increase that has resulted in violence against African people. Three thousand violent events are recorded each year, and it's on the increase. For example, in Kenya, since AFRICOM was formed, there have been a lot of attacks by these militant extremist groups. In Nairobi, there was the Westgate attack, which killed, reportedly at least over 70 people. There was an attack at Garissa University which killed over 150 students. There was an attack on DusitD2 Hotel, which killed dozens of people. There are attacks on buses where people are traveling. And I'm talking of Kenya alone. The atrocities that are being committed here are very, very bad, and we cannot allow this to continue.

AWB: How does AFRICOM impact people’s struggles and the goal of African unity?

Otieno: Many people on the African continent are not informed regarding AFRICOM. The people are being kept in the dark because the details of the deals that are signed by the government with the United States are being kept away from the people. People do not know what is going on. They just have a vague idea.

Neo-colonialism seeks to fragment Africa and weaken the African state institutions, and prevent African unity and the sovereignty of the people. They want us to be their subordinates. With Pan-Africanism, we are seeking the political unity and territorial sovereignty of the African people. The enduring presence of foreign military bases, not only symbolizes the lack of unity and sovereignty, it equally enforces the fragmentation and subordination of the African people and governments.

It is our duty as progressive people, wherever we are across the world, to use Pan-Africanism as an ideology to unify Black people all over, because we believe that we can achieve this by coming together as a people, having one system of government that works for the people, and one army for the African people, an All-African People's Revolutionary Army, that will protect the interests of the African people. We cannot have foreign powers dictating to us and having military bases on the African continent. There's no African state that has a military base outside of Africa.

We should push for African unity all over the world, and we should push to shut down AFRICOM, because if we don't do that, even the Pan-African unity that we seek will just be a mirage.

AWB: Thank you for your insights and analysis!



News and Analysis

AFRICOM Says 17 al-Shabaab Killed in Latest US Airstrike in Somalia

November 13, 2022 by Dave DeCamp

The strike was the second of the month in Somalia reported by AFRICOM. There’s little accountability for US operations in Somalia since the airstrikes receive little coverage in the Western press despite the high casualty rates being reported by AFRICOM.

Who’s really behind Burkina Faso’s coup?

November 8, 2022 by TJ Coles

Western media fixates on coup supporters waving Russian flags in Burkina Faso’s capital while overlooking the long history of US and French control over the country – and its destabilizing consequences.

New World Coming: Working-class Pan-Africanism

November 5, 2022 by The People’s Forum 

Mikaela Nhondo Erskog and James Counts Early discuss the historical legacy of African national liberation and socialist projects, how that legacy is relevant to struggles today, and how popular movements are rebuilding the capacity to fight for alternatives to neoliberal capitalism. 

Africa Does Not Want to Be a Breeding Ground for the New Cold War

November 3, 2022 by Tricontinental: Institute for Social Research

The African Union firmly rejected the coercive efforts of the US and Western countries to use the continent as a pawn in their geopolitical agenda.

Pantsula Podcast Ep. 88: AFRICOM & "U.S. Democracy"

October 31, 2022 by Kaji Circle A-APRP

On this episode of the Pantsula Podcast, All-African People's Revolutionary Party organizers Winfred and Sadiq discuss AFRICOM and misconceptions around "U.S. democracy."

Neo-Colonialism, International Finance Capital and the Necessity of Pan-African Sovereignty

October 28, 2022 by Abayomi Azikiwe

African Union member-states are facing a critical conjuncture as the looming threats of global conflict against imperialism threatens world peace.


If you are interested in getting more directly involved in the fight to liberate Africa, please consider joining the U.S. Out of Africa Network


P.S. Freedom isn’t free. We are doing this work with no full time staff and no big foundation support. Consider giving today.

Banner Photo: AFRICOM Commander Gen. Michael Langley, addressing African soldiers standing at attention in Air Base 201 in Niger (courtesy @USAfricaCommand)

AFRICOM Watch Bulletin #42

AFRICOM Watch Bulletin #42

The U.S. Africa Command (AFRICOM) has worsened the security situation in the Sahel through its many exploits on the African continent. During the dismembering of Libya, captured Libyan arms had been deployed to various armed groups including al-Qaeda in Islamic Maghreb. The result is enhanced military capacities of Boko Haram in Nigeria, civil war in Mali and destabilization and armed conflict in Burkina Faso, Central African Republic, Chad, Niger, as well as many coups by officers trained by AFRICOM.

The most recent coup took place on the night of September 29 to 30, 2022, when the populations of Ouagadougou, Burkina Faso were once again surprised by heavy and light weapon fire. Later, precisely at the end of the evening of Friday, September 30, a declaration was read on national television by young officers led by Captain Ibrahim Traore announcing the dismissal of President Paul Henri Sandaogo Damiba from the Presidency of the Patriotic Movement for the Safeguarding and Restoration (MPSR) and the Presidency of Burkina Faso. Just as in January 2022, the perpetrators of the new coup, also members of the MPSR of Damiba, justify their act by the failure in the fight against terrorism of their predecessor, his incompetence, the deviation from their initial objectives and the persistence of corruption.

As AFRICOM’s prescence and activity across the continent has grown, so has the terrorism it is meant to curb. Power vacuums caused by U.S. military intervention fortify the political will and strength of terrorist groups. Terrorist activity doubled from 2012 to 2018, and the number of countries experiencing attacks increased by 960 percent during that time period. Moreover, there was a ten-fold increase in violent events, jumping from 288 incidents in 2009 to 3,050 in 2018. By all metrics, the war on terror has been an abysmal failure in Africa. The one thing AFRICOM has dramatically succeeded at is boosting corporate profits associated with the lucrative counterterrorism industry that the war on terror has made possible.

In opposition to this criminal effort, the Black Alliance for Peace and U.S. Out of Africa Network has organized the ongoing International Month of Action Against AFRICOM to demand the complete withdrawal of U.S. forces from Africa and the closure of U.S. bases throughout the world. Please join us in this effort by taking action using this toolkit


U.S. Out of Africa: Voices from the Struggle

 

AFRICOM Watch Bulletin speaks with Ameth Lô, who is a member of the Group for Research and Initiatives for the Liberation of Africa in Toronto, Canada.

AFRICOM Watch Bulletin: What should we think about the recent coup in Burkina Faso?

Ameth Lô: This umpteenth coup d'etat is the result of the decay of the national army made up today of clans preoccupied with business and the management of power. On the strength of the observation of the numerous untimely interventions of the army in national political life, we believe that it must urgently return to the barracks and stick to its sovereign role of defense of the national territory, in a word, to be a republican army.

AWB: How does this coup relate to imperialist domination?

Lô: The coup of September 30, 2022, with the announcement of France's involvement to support the ousted president, enjoyed popular support. I salute the clear expression of the anti-imperialist sentiment of the Burkinabe people, in particular of its youth. However, on this question of imperialist domination, we believe that it is not a question of leaving a given imperialist bosom to put oneself under the thumb of another imperialism. That said, what matters is the diversification of partnerships, while respecting national sovereignty.

AWB: What do you think about the coup leader?

Lô: The declarations of Captain Ibrahim Traore speaking of "unfortunate political adventures,” of “the continuous deterioration of the security situation," of "restoration by forces of an old order," amply confirm his analyses on the governance of the MPSR under Lieutenant Colonel Paul Henry Sandaogo Damiba. You will remember that the latter, instead of the assessment of his action that he had promised for September 4, 2022, had indulged in insults uttered against the people of Burkina Faso.

AWB: How can we strengthen the class struggle on the African continent?

Lô: It is imperative for both socialists and pan-Africanists to reconnect with the traditions of radical struggle on a transnational level for the emergence of a new society. We need to reconnect with viable forms of transnational solidarity in order to promote the class struggle of oppressed layers of the population. This course requires that the Eurocentric Left recognize that deep-going shifts in the international relationship of forces will involve a lowering of the standard of living in the richest countries. These living conditions have been made possible only through the systematic pillage of resources from the countries of the South and from Africa in particular. Is the new Left prepared for such an eventuality? The future will tell.

AWB: Thank you for your insights and analysis!


News and Analysis

Demonstrations in Support of Recent Coup in Burkina Faso Highlighted Solidarity with Russia

October 16, 2022 by Abayomi Azikiwe

The West African state witnessed youth-led attacks on a French embassy and installations amid security challenges.


When Will the Stars Shine Again in Burkina Faso?: The Forty-First Newsletter (2022)

October 13, 2022 by Tricontinental: Institute for Social Research

On 30 September 2022, Captain Ibrahim Traoré led a section of the Burkina Faso military to depose Lieutenant Colonel Paul-Henri Sandaogo Damiba, who had seized power in a coup d’état in January. The second coup was swift, with brief clashes in Burkina Faso’s capital of Ouagadougou at the president’s residence, Kosyam Palace, and at Camp Baba Sy, the military administration’s headquarters.


Dissecting AFRICOM, and Environment, Oil, and the UN in the DRC

October 12, 2022 by AfricaNow!

The show begins with a discussion with Aziz Fall, Member of the Group for Research and Initiatives for the Liberation of Africa (GRILA) and Netfa Freeman of Black Alliance for Peace on the U.S. militarization of Africa through U.S. Africa Command (AFRICOM). Maurice Carney, Executive Director of Friends of the Congo provides an update on critical environmental issues and the role of the UN in the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC).


For peace in the Congo, Rwanda and Uganda must be brought to justice

October 11, 2022 by People’s Dispatch

Kambale Musavuli talks about the first installment of reparations that Uganda has paid to the Democratic Republic of Congo for war crimes and atrocities in the 90s. He also explains why the process of ensuring justice is far from complete.


Pentagon doesn’t know if it trained Burkina Faso coup leader

October 10. 2022 by Nick Turse

Capt. Ibrahim Traore deposed the last guy who overthrew the government — Lt. Col. Sandaogo Damiba — who did extensive training with the U.S. and AFRICOM.


Imperialist Militarism and the African Crisis

October 8, 2022 by Abayomi Azikiwe

The U.S. Africa Command (AFRICOM) and all iterations of foreign interference bring instability to the African continent. 


On the Coup D'etat in Burkina Faso: Declaration of the Trade Union Action Unit

October 5, 2022 by Trade Union Action Unit 

Following the recent coup where a disgruntled army captain ousted the sitting transitional military government (that came to power in a coup in January 2022), the trade union group released a statement containing a ten-point plan for dealing with the national crises.


A Guide to #ShutDownAFRICOM

October 4, 2022 by Ready for Revolution

On October 1st, the criminal and genocidal US military command, AFRICOM, will have been in existence for 14 years. In those 14 years, a sizable amount of awareness on the program has been raised by committed individuals and organizations who want to see our homeland released from the clutches of the US empire. But as that fourteenth year begins, the necessity of ending this initiative, once and for all, grows more and more dire. #ShutDownAFRICOM


Colonialism, Compradors & The Militarized Crisis of Capitalism in Africa

October 1, 2022 by Black Alliance for Peace

The Black Alliance for Peace organized this cutting edge webinar, “Colonialism, Compradors & The Militarized Crisis of Capitalism in Africa,” to kick off the 2022 International Month of Action Against AFRICOM. The online discussion featured analysis from organizers in hotspots on the ground in Africa and from others with uncompromising and lucid views on the state of affairs in Africa and strategies to get the “U.S. Out of Africa” and “Shut Down AFRICOM.”


If you are interested in getting more directly involved in the fight to liberate Africa, please consider joining the U.S. Out of Africa Network


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Banner Photo: Coup spokesman Capt. Kiswendsida Farouk Azaria Sorgho reads a statement in a studio in Ougadougou, Burkina Faso flanked by fellow soldiers (courtesy RTB via Associated Press)