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Security12 May 20262:02

America Sounds Alarm Over ISIS-Linked Groups Regrouping in West Africa

The United States is warning of a renewed extremist threat across parts of Africa, particularly West Africa, as remnants of ISIS regroup following their defeat in Iraq and Syria. These groups, including Boko Haram and ISWAP, are exploiting weak governance structures to control territory and target civilians and military forces. The US aims to prevent these jihadist groups from launching attacks against American interests and to protect Christian communities, while encouraging African partners to shoulder more of the counterterrorism burden.

The United States says parts of Africa are facing renewed extremist threats as remnants of the Islamic State (ISIS) regroup on the continent after their defeat in Iraq and Syria. ISIS was declared defeated by the governments of Syria and Iraq in 2017 after years of military operations backed by US troops. By late 2014, cells of militants claiming to be affiliates or direct extensions of ISIS had emerged in a number of conflict zones in Africa, the Middle East, and Central Asia. In a new counterterrorism strategy, the US said the jihadist group was forced to splinter and relocate to Africa and Central Asia, exploiting the weak governance structures in the region. “As a result, today there are parts of Africa where a resurgent terror threat is the reality. These include in West Africa, the Sahel region, the Lake Chad Basin, Mozambique, Sudan, and of course Somalia, where parts of ISIS have re-established themselves and Al Shabaab maintains its tribal-based Islamist insurgency,” the document reads. In the Sahel and Lake Chad Basin, where parts of northern Nigeria fall under, the ISIS provinces operate as Boko Haram and Islamic State in West Africa Province (ISWAP), controlling territory and attacking military and civilian targets. “In Africa, we have two clear goals that depart from the nation-building and interventionist policies of the past. The first is to guarantee that none of the Jihadi groups can build a base of operations that allows them to plot and execute attacks against the United States and American interests around the world,” the US counterterrorism document reads. “The second is to protect Christians, who have been slaughtered at the hands of these Jihadi groups.” Nigerian authorities have been accused by some US lawmakers and groups of failing to adequately confront extremist violence targeting Christian communities. But the President Bola Tinubu-administration has maintained that Nigeria’s security challenges are beyond sectional interests. The US said President Donald Trump’s decision to bomb Islamist militants on Christmas Day demonstrated that attacks on Christian communities would not be ignored. Nigeria said it green-lit the operation. In its counterterrorism strategy, the US noted that while it planned to reduce its global military footprint, it would continue targeting extremist groups in Africa capable of carrying out external attacks against US interests. The US said it is rebuilding bilateral counterterrorism relations with African governments and will continue to work with governments threatened by groups like ISIS and al Qaeda affiliates, and assist them with actionable intelligence and counterterrorism partner-force development, until “our shared foes no longer pose a serious threat to either them or us”. “Wherever possible, we will marry such CT cooperation with the stabilizing effect of heightened trade and commercial relations, as witnessed by President Trump’s historic peace deal between Rwanda and the Democratic Republic of the Congo – an example of how security is a prerequisite for prosperity,” the US said. The US added that Africa has “almost limitless potential” but only if governments exercise sovereign control over their territories and close space to terrorists and violent extremists. The document added that the US will expect regional partners to accept a greater portion of the counterterrorism burden.
America Sounds Alarm Over ISIS-Linked Groups Regrouping in West Africa
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Editor's Take

The United States is warning of a renewed extremist threat across parts of Africa, particularly West Africa, as remnants of ISIS regroup following their defeat in Iraq and Syria. These groups, including Boko Haram and ISWAP, are exploiting weak governance structures to control territory and target civilians and military forces. The US aims to prevent these jihadist groups from launching attacks against American interests and to protect Christian communities, while encouraging African partners to shoulder more of the counterterrorism burden.

Source: thecable.ng

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