THE "SPECTER" OF AL QAEDA IN AFRICA:
A Cover for Western Reconquest of the Continent
The "Al Qaeda Brand", a Lucrative “Investment”....
By Finian Cunningham
Global Research, April 5, 2012
URL of this article: www.globalresearch.ca/index.php?context=va&aid=30151
A
British foreign policy think tank has this week released a study
claiming that the terror group Al Qaeda is regrouping in Africa creating
“an arc of instability” from the Western Sahel to the Eastern Horn.
The Royal United Services Institute, based in
Whitehall, London, and closely aligned to official British foreign
policy, cites “disturbing new trends” across the continent that “Osama
bin Laden’s terror network” is seeking influence in Somalia, North
Africa and the Western Sahara-Sahel.
“If correct [sic], this assessment would raise the
worrying prospect of an arc of regional instability encompassing the
whole Sahara-Sahel strip and extending through to East Africa, which the
now weakened Al Qaeda-core could well exploit to regroup, reorganise
and reinvigorate its terrorist campaign against the West,” the report
said.
Meanwhile, in other media reports it is claimed that
Al Qaeda elements are joining forces with the Tuareg military rebels to
consolidate the latter’s coup in the West Africa country of Mali. The
alleged involvement of Al Qaeda in Mali has been cited by former
colonial power France in its pledge to crush the coup.
The purported Al Qaeda link in Mali appears
incongruous. The Tuareg rebels – a nomadic group inhabiting northern
Mali and Niger – were formerly fighting in Libya in support of the
Gaddafi government against Western-backed insurgents. The Western-backed
Libyan insurgents are known to have comprised Al Qaeda jihadists. Now
it is being claimed by France and media reports that Al Qaeda are in
league with their former enemies – the Tuareg – in the takeover of Mali.
What these various reports suggest is that Al Qaeda is being raised as a
“spectre” over Africa to justify increased intervention by Western
powers in that continent under the guise of “global security”.
The RUSI, with an old colonialist flourish, says Al
Qaeda “appears to be adopting a strategy of ‘going native’, which
implies seizing upon and exploiting local grievances with the ultimate
aim of securing a stable foothold in volatile countries”.
Significantly, that scary thought allows the RUSI
study to conclude: ““The focus of anti-jihadist counter-terrorism is
shifting to Africa.” In other words, the pretext of anti-jihadist
counter-terrorism by Western powers is shifting to Africa.
But in point of fact, the Western counter-terrorism
pretext is not shifting; it is more accurately being extended to Africa,
as NATO is continuing its illegal occupation and wars in Afghanistan,
Iraq and Pakistan.
This represents a strategic expansion of the global
war agenda that the Pentagon and its Western allies have been pursuing
in the Middle East and Central Asia incorporating a region for hegemonic
control stretching from the Mediterranean to the Caspian – a region
that compromises at least 60 per cent of the earth’s known oil and gas
reserves.
The seven-month aerial bombing campaign of Libya by
NATO during 2011 that led to the overthrow of the government in Tripoli
can be seen as serving as a beach-head for the US-led powers in North
Africa, and for their continued militarization across the East-West
continental belt, from the Atlantic to the Indian Ocean.
Already, the Western powers are engaged in a new
scramble for Africa that can be traced back to the setting up of the new
US military command of AFRICOM under the George W Bush administration.
Since then, and especially under the Obama administration, there has
been a scaling up low-intensity involvement of US, French and British
forces in Ivory Coast, Central African Republic, Democratic Republic of
Congo, Uganda and on the east in Somalia, Kenya and Djibouti. American
aerial drones and French naval forces have played a key role in
supporting the Kenyan and Ethiopian army campaigns against Al Shabab
militants in Somalia since October last year.
Other African countries where the Western powers are
believed to be running clandestine Special Forces include Senegal,
Sierra Leone, Nigeria and Sudan – all of them former British and French
colonial possessions. There have also been claims of US staging violence
in Nigeria to justify a state crackdown on popular protests against the
government of President Goodluck Jonathan.
Africa’s undeveloped but vast natural resources of
oil, metals, other minerals and agricultural potential is a bonanza that
the stagnant capitalist powers cannot afford to miss out on, especially
given China’s rise as a trading partner with many African states. The
irony is that while Western governments, their think-tanks and
mainstream media mouthpieces may talk up “an Al Qaeda arc of instability
across Africa”, the real source of instability and militarization from
the continent’s West to East is stemming from the neocolonialism of
Western powers. To this end, the “spectre” of Al Qaeda is serving as a
convenient pretext to justify further imperialist encroachment.
Expect more Western mainstream media reports of
mysterious Al Qaeda jihadists destabilizing poor, starving African
countries, thus requiring the noble dispatch of NATO forces to “save the
Dark Continent”.
Of course, the killer irony is that Al Qaeda is a
global terror network created by the CIA, MI6 and Saudi Arabia to do the
dirty work of Western powers, as Michel Chossudovsky, Peter Dale Scott
and other writers have carefully documented.
The Al Qaeda brand has proven to be a lucrative
“investment”. From 9/11, Afghanistan, Iraq to Libya and currently Syria.
And, now, the neocolonial reconquest of Africa. That’s what you call
“return on money”.
Finian Cunningham is Global Research’s Middle East and East Africa Correspondent cunninghamfinian@gmail.com
Finian Cunningham is Global Research’s Middle East and East Africa Correspondent cunninghamfinian@gmail.com