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Africa Is a Jihadist Playground for the Resurgent Islamic State and al-Qaeda

Terrorist networks are exploiting under-governed regions, disenfranchised populations, and porous borders
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The Sahel Region map
The Sahel Region. (Voice of America) The Sahel is an area between the Atlantic Ocean in the west and the Red Sea in the east and between the Sahara desert in the north and savannas to the south.

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In an unprecedented public warning in early February 2021, Bernard Emie, head of France’s Directorate-General for External Security, reported, “From Mali, [Islamist] terrorists have worked on attacks against us, against our partners, and they are thinking about attacks in the region and Europe.” Emie expressed concern that al-Qaeda is planning to expand its terrorist operations further across West Africa toward the Gulf of Guinea. “These countries are now targeted too,” he warned. “To spread southwards, the terrorists are already financing men who are entering  the Ivory Coast or Benin on the borders of Nigeria, Niger, and Chad.”1

A senior U.S. military official, General Stephen J. Townsend, reported to Congress last year, “Both al-Qaida and the Islamic State networks are working together to exploit under-governed regions, disenfranchised populations, and porous borders and threaten the security and stability of our African partners, our allies.”2 

According to the French intelligence head, Emie, chiefs of the jihadist organizations in the Sahel convened a year ago (in February 2020) in central Mali to discuss the preparation of large-scale operations directed against military bases in the region. According to French sources, attending the meeting were Abd el Malek Droukdel, the notorious chief of Al-Qaida in the Islamic Maghreb (AQMI), killed by the French troops in June 2020, Iyad Ag Ghaly,3 head of the GSIM (Groupe de Soutien a l’Islam et aux Musulmans), and his close assistant, Amadou Koufa, chief of the Macina Battalion (a jihadist group active in West Africa between Senegal and Nigeria).4 Since Droukdel’s death, Iyad Ag Ghaly has become the chief strategist of Al-Qaida in the Sahel. During this meeting, Emie reported, the jihadi leaders decided to expand their groups’ presence to the countries of the Gulf of Guinea. Fighters were also sent to the Ivory Coast, Benin, Nigeria, Niger, and Chad.5

Iyad Ag Ghaly alongside several jihadist leaders
A screenshot from the video, released by French Intelligence, was believed to have been shot in central Mali in February 2020. Iyad Ag Ghaly appears alongside several jihadist leaders. (French Ministry of Defense)

According to the French intelligence sources, the objective of these jihadists is to pursue al-Qaida’s goals to destabilize the targeted regimes by committing terrorist attacks, in general, and in Europe, in particular. The penetration of the violent extremist organizations (VEOs) into the Sahel area, combined with the presence of the Shabab jihadists in the eastern end of the African continent and the gradual takeover by jihadists and the Islamic State fighters of the oil and gas-rich Cabo Delgado area in northern Mozambique, have raised an alert among the Western and African intelligence agencies. The security officials follow closely and with great concern the continuous advance of the jihadists in those areas and their capture of huge swaths of land where the central governments were never present.

A Humanitarian Catastrophe

The widespread warfare and even massacres across Africa are creating a mammoth refugee and hunger calamity. Last year, the UN Secretary-General’s Special Representative to the region reported that “in Burkina Faso alone, as of June 2020, 921,000 people have been forced to flee… In Mali, nearly 240,000 people are internally displaced — 54 percent of them women — while in Niger, 489,000 people were forced to flee, including Nigerian and Malian refugees.”6 The situation in Nigeria is also critical, where ”8.7 million people will require urgent assistance,” according to the UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs.7

The jihadist presence in Africa is not a new phenomenon. Nigeria has been fighting Boko Haram (which expressed its allegiance to the Islamic State), since the 1990s.  However, the fact that neither Nigeria nor any other country targeted by the jihadists has succeeded in quashing their presence and neutralizing their influence, has encouraged the extremists to penetrate shaky and unstable regimes hit by internal strife, poverty, and ethnic confrontations.

Most of those jihadist groups are the offspring of either the Islamic State or of the al-Qaida organizations and have been active in the Sahel areas for many years: from the northern part of Mali, the eastern parts of Mauritania, Morocco, and the southern parts of Algeria, Tunisia, Libya, Chad. The VEOs have succeeded in creating a vast web, interconnecting with other jihadist organizations, and extending their presence and destructive activities to Burkina Faso, Benin, the Central African Republic, the Ivory Coast, and Senegal. They have now reached the eastern parts of Africa (Kenya, Uganda, Ethiopia, Somalia, and Mozambique), thus creating a jihadist belt that begins in the Atlantic Ocean shores and reaches the Red Sea and the Indian Ocean.

Map of west Africa
(Map courtesy of the Nations Online Project)

The presence of the extremist groups in the “jihadist belt” has destabilized the area and has had a crucial impact on the willingness of outside investors to risk huge sums in those regions at risk. The United States and France’s military presence, together with its local allies of the G5 (Mauritania, Mali, Niger, Burkina Faso, and Chad), has succeeded in limiting the damage perpetrated by the Jihadist organizations but has failed to eradicate the phenomenon.

Mozambique’s Cabo Delgado province on the east coast of Africa
Islamist insurgents recently attacked civilians in Mozambique’s Cabo Delgado province on the east coast of Africa. (VOA)8

“We also see a serious regional threat from violent extremist organizations emanating from the Sahel,” warned General Townsend, head of the U.S. Army’s AFRICOM. “Security is deteriorating rapidly, with a 250% increase in VEO violence since 2018 in Burkina Faso, Mali, and western Niger. Having quickly spread from northern Mali, al-Qaida’s JNIM, ISIS-aligned groups, and other VEOs are now operating throughout the Sahel region.”9  Nevertheless, France’s President Emmanuel Macron is considering a reduction of the French military force of 5,100 in the Sahel states.10

The involvement of Western powers in the fight against jihadism is meant primarily to fight the terrorists in their own territory in the hope that it will also thwart terrorism outside Africa. However, it is unclear if this method actually protects Europe, in particular, as many attacks have been carried out by home-grown jihadists affiliated with the Islamic State.

On the other hand, it is also clear that ending the West’s war carried out in Africa against jihadism would prove fatal to shaky regimes and open the doors to terrorist activities in Europe. The example of thousands of brain-washed Europeans who volunteered to join the ranks of the Islamic State in Iraq and Syria proves that there is fertile ground in Europe to sow jihadist activity exported from Africa.

Today, it is obvious that the declaration of victory against the Islamic State was erroneous. “The international community is not making durable progress in containing priority VEOs in Africa,” warned the American Army commander in Africa.11

Even though beaten and left without its territorial base following its defeat by the coalition forces in 2017, the Islamic State is still very much alive and, from time to time, reminds all concerned that it has not been vanquished.

* * *

Notes

Col. (ret.) Dr. Jacques Neriah

Col. (ret.) Dr. Jacques Neriah, a special analyst for the Middle East at the Jerusalem Center for Security and Foreign Affairs, was formerly Foreign Policy Advisor to Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin and Deputy Head for Assessment of Israeli Military Intelligence.
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