France girds for long fight against Islamists in Africa’s Sahel

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PARIS, July 6, 2018 (BSS/AFP) – Days before French President Emmanuel
Macron visited West and Central African leaders this week to talk security,
Islamist fighters sent a defiant message — a suicide attack on the
headquarters of a five-nation force that is supposed to take the lead in
fighting terrorism in the region.

Last year Burkina Faso, Chad, Mali, Mauritania and Niger agreed to set up
the 5,000-member force dubbed the “G5 Sahel”, urged along by pledges of
training and support from France.

The countries have been hit by jihadist attacks that have steadily worsened
in the past two years, claiming hundreds of lives and displacing hundreds of
thousands of people — prompting many to seek refuge in Europe.

Macron’s trip was aimed at bolstering the fledgling multinational effort in
order to reduce the role played by French troops in fighting jihadists and
criminal smuggling groups in the vast and arid Sahel region.

Around 4,000 French troops, known as the Barkhane deployment, have been
pursuing insurgents since 2014 across the desert expanse, an area half the
size of the United States.

The G5 Sahel force is also expected to eventually replace the UN’s MINSUMA
peacekeeping mission in Mali, which has deployed 15,000 military personnel
and police since 2013.

Although French officials avoid any mention of a quagmire, analysts say the
increase of deadly and more elaborate strikes has cooled any hopes of a quick
return for the French soldiers.

“It’s a reconstruction effort of their armies, but getting there is going
to take a long time, at a time when the security situation is getting worse,”
said Alain Antil, head of the African Studies Centre at the French Institute
for International Relations (IFRI).

But the few missions carried out by the G5 Sahel so far have not been
encouraging, not least because of real-time communication problems between
the multiple forces.

Its full operational launch has also suffered several delays due to
financial problems: little of the nearly 420 million euros ($490 million) of
promised funding has been received.

In the meantime, the French troops based mainly in Mali carry out
relatively short operations from bases which regularly come under attack,
their convoys at risk of landmines hidden along their routes.

Despite successes in neutralising small groups of jihadists and taking back
control of some areas, they have so far been unable to curtail the threat of
Islamist violence.

And French officials are well aware that the longer their soldiers stay in
the countries, the risk that locals will begin to resent their presence will
grow.

“The United States tried this all-security approach in Afghanistan, and the
Taliban are now stronger than ever,” said Bakary Sambe, a researcher at the
Timbuktu Institute in Dakar.

“The French are doing the same in northern Mali, and the jihadists have not
disappeared but are multiplying,” he said.

– ‘Hardly satisfactory’ –

G5 Sahal leaders have vowed to press ahead after last Friday’s attack on
the force’s base in Sevare, central Mali, where a suicide bomber used a
vehicle painted in UN colours to strike the building’s entrance, killing
three including two soldiers.

It was one of five separate attacks in Mali and neighbouring Niger which
have killed 25 people in a week, as Macron was meeting with the leaders of
the G5 nations in Nouakchott, Mauritania, on the sidelines of an African
Union summit.

“They don’t have the capabilities to take control of territory, but they
are able to inflict damage,” Antil said of the jihadists.

The French army’s chief of staff, Francois Lecointre, had already warned in
February that it would require at least 10 to 15 years to rebuild the Malian
army alone.

“The situation developing in Mali is hardly satisfactory and we won’t be
leaving tomorrow, though that doesn’t mean we’re in a quagmire,” he said.

Yet without sustained funding, even G5 leaders say the force will struggle
to become an effective element in ridding the region of jihadists as well as
the violent gangs of drugs and people-smugglers.

Major contributions have been pledged by the European Union and Saudi
Arabia (100 million euros each), the United States ($60 million) and the
United Arab Emirates (30 million euros).

The G5 countries themselves are paying 10 million euros each.

Over the past year its soldiers have carried out just three missions with
heavy logistical support from France, which some critics have derided as
media operations.

The force may also struggle to win over the hearts and minds of locals —
last week the UN said Malian soldiers in the force “summarily” executed 12
civilians at a cattle market in central Mali in May in retaliation for the
death of a soldier.

“The G5 force was seen by some as a possibility for France to disengage
from the region, but I don’t see it happening,” said Sambe.