STRATFOR.COM Global Intelligence Update July 27, 1999
U.S. Attempts to Contain and Segment African Conflicts
Summary:
The United States is reportedly stepping up military relations with Angola and Botswana. This, combined with an apparent U.S. initiative to repair relations with Sudan, as well as a series of less substantial developments across Africa, suggests not only a greater U.S. commitment to Africa, but a coherent strategy as well. It appears that the U.S. has set about first containing, then segmenting the spreading and interwoven web of African conflicts -- a noble, but extremely risky, endeavor.
Analysis:
The Angolan newspaper Angolense reported in its July 17-24 edition that the United States has agreed to resume military cooperation with Angola, which was suspended following Angola's involvement in attempts to topple the government of Pascal Lissouba in Congo. According to the newspaper, representatives of the two governments reached agreements under which the U.S. would provide airspace control equipment to Angola, approve the training of Angolan troops by a private U.S. contractor, and help draft an overall political, military, and social development plan for Angola. In what we believe is related news, South Africa's SAPA news agency reported that the U.S. would take part in military exercises involving the Botswanan and South African armed forces in late July and early August.
On one level, if true, the Angola report is interesting as it implies the U.S. is now willing to actively support the MPLA government in Luanda, abandoning the UNITA rebels it supported in the Cold War. Luanda still receives aid from Russia, Cuba, and Libya, making it all the more an unlikely partner for the United States. However, engagement with the Angolan government is a necessary component of what appears to be a developing U.S. strategy in Africa -- contain and segment.
Africa's wars have blurred together into a nearly continental conflict. Initially, there was the Sudan People's Liberation Army (SPLA), backed by the United States, launching attacks on the Islamic government in Khartoum from bases in Eritrea, Ethiopia, and Uganda, with political offices in Egypt. In return, Sudan backed Ugandan guerrilla armies. Sudan also supported Saudi terrorist Osama bin Laden, whose terrorist network has been blamed for the bombings of U.S. embassies in Kenya and Tanzania. The battle against the Sudanese government was overshadowed by Ethiopia's attack on Eritrea, and the ensuing war that has spread via proxy through Somalia. Kenya recently became more involved in that conflict, assisting Ethiopia against Eritrean-backed rebels in Somalia.
There was also the civil war in the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC), formerly Zaire until rebel forces under Laurent Kabila overthrew Mobutu Sese Seko. Kabila's allies quickly turned enemy, and his regime was challenged by Ugandan and Rwandan backed Tutsi rebels. From there the battle only spread. Angola's UNITA rebels, which had long maintained bases and transport operations in Zaire, sided with the Tutsi rebels against Kabila, while Angola, Namibia, and Zimbabwe supported Kabila. Angola's involvement in the DRC and Congo was primarily counter-UNITA, a pattern followed by Sudan when it provided support to Kabila as a means of outflanking Uganda.
Angola has accused Zambia of backing UNITA, and South Africa is maintaining a semi-hidden hand in all the conflicts. Russian and Ukrainian mercenary pilots are peppered about the continent, and the armories of China and the old East Bloc are supplying the region by the boatload -- reportedly paid for by Middle Eastern interests. Libya, too, joined in the fun, sending Chadian troops to support Kabila, as well as attempting to mediate both the Sudanese and Ethiopian-Eritrean conflicts and reportedly backing Somali warlord Hussein Mohamed Aideed.
So now Africa has a web of war stretching from Mogadishu, through Khartoum and Kinshasa, to Luanda, with filaments reaching out to Tripoli, Harare, and beyond. Only the relatively uncontested military of Nigeria has served as a bulwark between the central and western African conflicts, and Nigeria is now facing its own growing internal ethnic conflict. None of the conflicts are soluble, since all are meshed.
It is in this context that the motives behind U.S. moves in Angola and Botswana become clear. The U.S. appears to be pursuing a policy of contain and segment in Africa. Containment begins in Angola, Botswana, and no doubt Namibia. Africa's continental conflict can not be allowed to spread further south. In the north, Kenya is making sure the Ethiopian-Eritrean conflict does not turn another corner, while negotiations continue to settle that dispute. In Sudan, the U.S. is taking a more positive approach to Khartoum, while Khartoum appears ready to reach a compromise with the rebels. And the U.S. has suggested the possibility of contributing troops to the peacekeeping effort in the DRC, should a stable peace treaty be signed. Britain, meanwhile, is improving relations with Libya, while relations between the U.S. and Egypt -- soured during the Netanyahu government in Israel -- are again improving.
If Nigeria doesn't go to pieces, the U.S. may have succeeded in containing the web of conflict in the south, northwest, and northeast -- the Sahara makes a great container to the north. Its hope is to segment off at least the Sudanese and Ethiopian- Eritrean conflicts from the wider conflict, allowing each to be, if not resolved, at least contained individually. It's a great idea, if it works. But webs have an incredible and unexpected redundancy, and a timid web-cutter can quickly find himself trapped.
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