What s Next for Mali and Algeria?

Similar documents
After Mali Comes Niger

THE ISIS CHALLENGE IN LIBYA

African Caucus Topic A: Combatting the Rise of Terrorism in Africa. Chairs: Mariana Araujo, Shalom Rubino

In Aménas Hostage Crisis Jan 13

Al-Qaeda in the Islamic Maghreb (AQIM)

The Algerian interior ministry reported the recovery of:

Le Campement Kangaba Attack. Mali. 18 June 2017

TERRORISM IN SUB-SAHARAN AFRICA: CAUSES AND POSSIBLE SOLUTIONS

In Aménas Hostage Crisis Jan 13

Assessing ISIS one Year Later

Global View Assessments Fall 2013

How the Shift in VEOs Activities Affect the Military Situation in Mali

JUNIOR MODEL UNITED NATIONS Confronting Extremism. Political Committee The situation in Mali. Recommended by: RESEARCH REPORT.

Policy Workshop of the EU-Middle East Forum (EUMEF) Middle East and North Africa Program. Deconstructing Islamist Terrorism in Tunisia

Yemen. The conflict in Yemen is defined by the struggles between the Sunni-led government and

The Crisis of North Mali and Possible Outcomes

Tiguentourine Gas Site Attack

Regional Issues. Conflicts in the Middle East. Importance of Oil. Growth of Islamism. Oil as source of conflict in Middle East

Understanding the Malian Crisis from a Euro-Atlantic Perspective. Halt the progression of the terrorist groups;

ACCORD, WHERE ARE WE TODAY?

The Terrorism Threat In 2012: Global Perspective Terrorism Risk And Insurance Markets In 2012 OECD Headquarters Paris, France 5 December 2012

Executive Summary. by its continued expansion worldwide. Its barbaric imposition of shariah law has:

British fanatics heading to Iraq to join ISIS militants in their HUNDREDS amid fears 'they could bring terror to UK'

THE IRAQI KURDISTAN REGION S ROLE IN DEFEATING ISIL

Terrorism and Violent Extremism in North Africa

«Violent Islamist Extremism : The European Experience» Committee on Homeland Security and Government Affairs U.S. Senate Washington, June 27, 2007

Al-Qaeda in Yemen: A Return to Hit-and-Run Tactics

SECURITY IN THE SAHEL: Part II Militarisation of the Sahel Richard Reeve

THE ANDREW MARR SHOW INTERVIEW: TONY BLAIR FORMER PRIME MINISTER JUNE 14 th 2014

Northern Mali Clashes Pose Threatof Regional Conflict

International Terrorism and ISIS

THE UNITED STATES NAVAL WAR COLLEGE. National Security Affairs Department

The U.S. Withdrawal and Limited Options

ENKA INTERNATIONAL MODEL UNITED NATIONS World in Crisis

JANUARY 2014 COUNTRY CHAPTER. Mali

Issue Overview: Jihad

Copyright 2017 Arab Center for Research and Policy Studies. All Rights Reserved.

Realpolitiks and the Deceptive Use of Islamist Narratives in Armed Struggles: the Case of Northern Mali Conflict

Remarks of Stuart E. Eizenstat

Morocco. Hundreds of returned jihadists across the Strait of Gibraltar who intelligence officials fear pose a large, residual threat on Europe s

Syria: to end a never-ending war. Michel Duclos

Syria's Civil War Explained

Overview 1. On June 29, 2014, ISIS leader Abu Bakr al-baghdadi declared the establishment of the

The impact of the withdrawal of the American troops from Syria on the campaign against ISIS (Initial Assessment) Overview

Recently, the group released videos showing the killing of two American journalists in Syria.

War in Afghanistan War in Iraq Arab Spring War in Syria North Korea 1950-

Horn of A rica (HOA)

THE ANDREW MARR SHOW INTERVIEW: MICHAEL FALLON, MP DEFENCE SECRETARY NOVEMBER 29 th 2015

Oil in the Middle East

Why The U.S. Must Stop Supporting Kurdish Forces In Syria BY POLITICAL INSIGHTSApril 3, 2018

Supporting the Syrian Opposition

U.S. Admits Airstrike in Syria, Meant to Hit ISIS, Killed Syrian Troops

Major implications of the Libyan crisis

II. From civil war to regional confrontation

A traditional approach to IS based on maintaining a unified Iraq, while building up the Iraqi Government, the Kurdistan Regional Government

Mali, Destruction of World Cultural Heritage. A. ICC, Situation in Mali, Article 53(1) Report

replaced by another Crown Prince who is a more serious ally to Washington? To answer this question, there are 3 main scenarios:

The jihadist threat to France and its interests abroad. Philippe Migaux Researcher on Asymmetric conflicts, Sciences Po, Paris.

Saudi-Iranian Confrontation in the Horn of Africa:

United Nations Security Council (CRISIS) BACKGROUND GUIDE

Turkish Offensive on Islamic State in Syria Caught U.S. Off Gua...

The Role of Islam and Natural Resources in Current Mali Political Turmoil

Is Enforced Displacement the New Reality in Syria? Radwan Ziadeh

fragility and crisis

Ungoverned Spaces and Regional Insecurity: The Case of Mali


Syria's Civil War Explained

Iran Hostage Crisis

Receive Electronic Bulletin

The Proxy War for and Against ISIS

PERSONAL INTRODUCTION

Dhirubhai Ambani International Model United Nations th November rd November 2015

Stanley Foundation Analysis of PIPA Poll on Iraqi Attitudes

Preparation Paper. Counter Terrorism Committee (CTC)

Post 1968 World. Islam, the Middle East and the West: Clash of Civilizations?

Comment - The Damascus December 2009 Bus Explosion December 7, 2009 Alessandro Bacci reports from Damascus, Syria

To: Date: :15 Subject: Congrats!

THE LINKS BETWEEN JIHADI ORGANIZATIONS AND ILLEGAL TRAFFICKING IN THE SAHEL

STRATEGIC CONSIDERATIONS FOLLOWING THE CRISIS IN MALI

Global Affairs May 13, :00 GMT Print Text Size. Despite a rich body of work on the subject of militant Islam, there is a distinct lack of

Terrorism And Counter-Terrorism In Africa: Fighting Insurgency From Al Shabab, Ansar Dine And Boko Haram (New Security Challenges) By Hussein Solomon

Name: Advisory: Period: Introduction to Muhammad & Islam Reading & Questions Monday, May 8

SIMULATION : The Middle East after the territorial elimination of the Islamic state in Iraq and Syria

Playing With Fire: Pitfalls of Egypt s Security Tactics

The Islamic State's Fallback

Position Papers. Implications of Downed Russian Jet on Turkey-Russia Relations

EU Global Strategy Conference organised by EUISS and Real Institute Elcano, Barcelona

Al Qaeda in Transition: Dangers and Opportunities

MEMORANDUM. President Obama. Michael Doran and Salman Sheikh. DATE: January 17, BIG BET: The Road Beyond Damascus

WHAT SECURITY THREATS IN CHAD? Roland Marchal CNRS/CERI/Sciences Po, Paris.

November Guidelines for the demilitarization of Gaza and a long-term arrangement in the South. MK Omer Barlev

Syria Alert. Issue II, 24 October How can a war be prevented? The gates of hell are wide open and the fire is approaching. 1

Boko Haram is so diffuse that fighters associated with it don't necessarily follow Salafi doctrine.

Disintegrating Iraq: Implications for Saudi National Security

I. CASE BACKGROUND. 1. Abstract

The Relevance of Culture in Politics: The Application of Cultural Studies Using the Strategic Culture Method

Congressional Testimony

Civil Wars, Violence, and International Responses project The Evolution of Armed Groups: Crafting Effective Responses Workshop 7 November 2017

Terrorism And Counter-Terrorism In Africa: Fighting Insurgency From Al Shabab, Ansar Dine And Boko Haram (New Security Challenges) By Hussein Solomon

Beyond Iraq and Afghanistan

Transcription:

Page 1 of 6 Please note... You are leaving the website for the Carnegie-Tsinghua Center for Global Policy and entering a website for another of Carnegie's global centers. 请注意... 你将离开清华 卡内基中心网站, 进入卡内基其他全球中心的网站 What s Next for Mali and Algeria? Anouar Boukhars ARTICLE JANUARY 23, 2013 Summary The unrest in Mali and the siege of Algeria s gas field demonstrate that violent militancy is bound to grow and expand if left unchecked. In Algeria, old habits die hard. The country is classically conditioned to act automatically and secretively when it comes to issues of sovereignty and national security. Such a reflex-like reaction was on plain display on January 17 when Algeria s security forces launched an assault on militants who had taken hostages and were in control of the In Amenas natural gas field in eastern Algeria, near Libya. The risks might have been too high, but the payoff was never in doubt. Holding its fire would have violated the military s creed of never blinking first in showdowns with its enemies. It would also have invited Western involvement something Algeria has been keen to avoid. The mastermind behind the hostage siege was none other than the one-eyed Mokhtar Belmokhtar, who at forty years old is an Algerian veteran of violent Islamism. In 2007, he swore allegiance to al-qaeda in the Islamic Maghreb (AQIM). In December 2012, Belmokhtar left AQIM to form his own group called Signatories in Blood an outgrowth of the deep rivalry that exists within AQIM s top ranks. The dramatic attack on Algeria s gas industry was possibly an attempt by Belmokhtar to brandish his reputation as the region s foremost jihadi warlord. But it was also driven by Belmokhtar s desire to strike back following France s intervention in Mali. France began airstrikes on January 11 to stop the advance of insurgents led by the powerful AQIM-backed Islamist group Ansar Dine from northern Mali further into the country.

Page 2 of 6 Ansar Dine operates solely in northern Mali while AQIM is based in both northern Mali and Algeria. AQIM was born in Algeria, and most of its leadership is Algerian radical Islamist groups know no borders in this part of the world. There is no better way to both bolster a reputation and exact revenge than by striking at the economic lifeline of the Algerian regime, which Belmokhtar has been harassing for the last two decades. After the tragedy in Algeria, world leaders are pledging once again to respond strongly to armed militant groups roaming the Sahara Desert of northern and western Africa. If left unchecked, violent militancy is bound to grow and expand. The first place to take a stand is in Mali, but the effort cannot be limited to antiterrorism measures alone. In an environment of political and economic instability, organized crime, and corruption, the focus of the international community must be on institutional capacity building and strengthening regional cooperation. There is hope that after the attack on In Amenas, Algeria will put its secretive and insular tendencies to the side and work with other states to help Mali tackle the political and security problems it faces. Algeria s Flawed Approach to Fighting Militancy The message of In Amenas was clear: those who doubt Algeria s firmness are bound to lose their wager. But Algeria s counterterrorism units are not trained for rescue missions that require precision and utmost care to minimize civilian casualties. The whole hostage crisis has demonstrated the limits of Algeria s approach to fighting violent extremism. Algeria s hard-line position dates to the 1990s, when the country s military intelligence waged a brutal and unrelenting campaign against violent Islamist insurgents. It has never wavered in its hard-line eradication efforts nor has it ceded to international pressure to negotiate or compromise. Since the end of the 1990s, Algerians have wanted to give the impression that they have settled their Islamist problem. Yet, despite its hard-line policy of eradication and cooptation, the state failed to stamp out residual militancy within its own territory. In reality, Algeria has only succeeded in internationalizing its war with disgruntled Islamists. The transformation of Algerian violent Islamist groups into a regional franchise for terror began over a decade ago when Algerian forces chased Islamist combatants into the southern part of the country. By 2003, the Islamists had spread into Mali and other neighboring countries. These violent extremists gradually embedded themselves into Malian society, patiently building and expanding a network structure of family ties, social support, political relations, and economic exchange. They established close links with Arab communities, rebels of the Tuareg ethnic group who are spread across national borders, and networks for smuggling fuel, drugs, and arms. By the late 2000s, they had successfully built a terrorist-criminal sanctuary in northern Mali. AQIM has become the best-funded terrorist and criminal organization thanks to the toll it imposes on the transborder smuggling of drugs and the large number of ransoms it extorts from Western governments to save the lives of their kidnapped countrymen. And by June 2012, AQIM, in collaboration with the

Page 3 of 6 armed Islamist forces of Ansar Dine and the Movement for Tawhid and Jihad in West Africa (often referred to by its acronym, MUJAO) a splinter offshoot of AQIM had complete control of Mali s north. Algeria watched these developments with great concern, but its reaction was tepid. The resources it has applied to fighting AQIM outside its territory have not matched its capabilities. In Mali, Algeria had hoped to stay on the sidelines during the country s latest cycle of insurrections. It focused on securing its own borders and containing the terrorist threat within the confines of Mali, Niger, and Mauritania, which neighbor Algeria to the south. Until the sudden French military intervention in Mali, Algeria was attempting to negotiate a political solution to the conflict by nudging the armed actors with whom it has connections. Algiers has been a perennial mediator of conflicts between Mali s government and the Malian Tuareg Algeria itself has a small Tuareg population. Algeria was especially focused on Ansar Dine, which does not seek the partition of Mali but the implementation of sharia law throughout the country. The group s Machiavellian leader, Iyad ag Ghali, is a known quantity in Algiers, which banked on getting ag Ghali and his group to loosen their ties with AQIM and negotiate a peace deal with Bamako. Ag Ghali withdrew from the negotiation process with Bamako on January 7, 2013, putting a stop to Algeria s efforts to secure a diplomatic solution to the conflict in Mali. There have been encouraging signs that Algeria is progressively becoming more practical and pragmatic in its approach to the conflict in Mali as it loses control of Ansar Dine. Algeria opened its airspace to French military jet fighters and closed its southern border with Mali when the French intervention began. In fact, since the 2011 Libyan conflict to Algeria s east, the country has become slightly more responsive to problems on its periphery. It significantly beefed up its troop presence on its eastern and southern flanks and increased the number of checkpoints and surveillance flights to track the movement of drug dealers, arms traders, and terrorists that could carry conflicts across a range of territories. Border crossings were also tightened and the transport of goods controlled and monitored. In January 2013, the prime ministers of Algeria, Libya, and Tunisia met in the western Libyan border town of Ghadames, where they agreed to form joint teams to better coordinate security along their porous borders and stem the flow of drugs, arms, and fuel. The interdiction of the latter is critical as it allows militants mobility. For years now, senior European and American counterterrorism officials have complained that Algeria was not doing enough to monitor its southern border and control resources that help various armed groups flourish. Controlling this border is necessary to weaken AQIM s capabilities and disrupt its logistics operations. In the current conflict, if AQIM and its allies are cut off from the amenities they get from Algeria, they will have difficulty prolonging their fight. It is therefore not surprising to see French counterterrorism officials who only few months ago suspected Algeria of playing a double game in Mali applauding its decision to seal off its long border

Page 4 of 6 with Mali. President François Hollande s vociferous defense of Algeria s deadly hostage raid stems from this necessity to enlist Algeria s help in controlling the border. Hollande s reaction was in stark contrast to that of officials in the United States and Britain, who barely hid their frustration with being kept in the dark by Algeria before the raid. The British wanted the rescue to be tough but intelligent ; the Americans wanted it to be precise and driven by detailed surveillance. The Algerians preferred the sledgehammer approach. For France, however, the hostage ordeal is an opportunity to mobilize Algerian and international help for its military campaign in Mali. Since the Islamist takeover of northern Mali, France has incessantly pushed for a military option. The French fear that the takeover of northern Mali by armed Islamist groups will threaten their economic interests in the region and destabilize their far more important allies in North Africa. The attack on the gas field in Algeria was hatched in northern Mali and executed by a multinational group of militants who crossed through Niger and Libya. This concern over transborder militancy is exacerbated by the difficult democratic transitions in North Africa. Regional Unrest The risks of contagion and spillover from the conflict in Mali are real. In interviews, senior officials from Tunisia s ruling Ennahda Party, for instance, expressed their grave concern that Tunisia is quickly becoming a smuggling corridor for arms dealers operating between Libya and Mali. Seizures of large arms caches are becoming frequent, as was the case on January 17 when Tunisian security forces arrested members of a militant group and confiscated rocket-propelled grenades and Kalashnikov rifles. And Tunisia could become more than just a transit route as Tunisians fighting alongside AQIM return home from Mali and elsewhere. Privately, Ennhada members are concerned that protracted French involvement in Mali might become a potent recruitment magnet for disgruntled Tunisian Islamists and hard-core Salafists. There is also genuine concern of backlash against countries supportive of the French incursion. Morocco, for one, has supported the French from the beginning. And the Islamist government in Tunisia has offered tepid support for the French mission, declaring that it understands the reasons behind the intervention. So far, cross-border links between militants have been tenuous, based more on greed and criminality than ideology. But the fear is that widespread jihadi gangsters, militant Salafists, and rebels might join forces, destabilizing countries that are transitioning from authoritarian rule and that have weak security institutions. Tunisian authorities, for instance, are struggling to reform their dysfunctional security services and develop the capacities of the police and gendarme to counter the threats. Even in countries with strong security forces, danger looms. Since the launch of France s intervention in Mali, Morocco has been on high alert. Several Moroccans are known to have joined militant groups in Mali. The country is also worried about stability in the huge swath of the desert in the Western Sahara. Now What? After he was informed of the French incursion into Mali on January 11, General Carter Ham, the head of U.S. Africa Command, asked, Now what? In Mali, the real test, of course, is preventing a reenactment

Page 5 of 6 of the errors that followed the NATO s operation in Libya, as well as the invasions of Afghanistan in 2001 and Iraq in 2003. But military responses alone will not defeat terrorist groups or eradicate violent ideologies. Armed militant groups might resemble each other, but the local circumstances (political, economic, and security) that drive their actions differ and need to be examined meticulously. The goal set by Paris is ambitious: reconquer the north, defeat armed groups, and restore national unity to Mali. To quiet any accusation of neocolonialism, the French are scrambling to give an African face to their intervention by helping ready the local Malian army and an African-led International Support Mission to Mali. The Malian and African troops are the weakest link in the plan to retake a territory twice the size of France. Poorly trained, ill equipped, and disorganized, they will not be fully operational for months. Their level of professionalism also constitutes a problem. Nigeria, for instance, has committed troops to the effort. But in Nigeria, the behavior of these forces and the collateral damage they cause actually fuels the country s insurgency and increases popular sympathy and support for Boko Haram, Nigeria s homegrown Islamist organization. The French intervention will likely drive radical Islamist combatants out of Mali s main cities and urban centers and into the massive desert mountains near the Algerian border. Algeria s cooperation is crucial here, as border interdiction and sanctuary denial is essential to the success of the French mission in Mali. The incursion might also exacerbate intercommunal tensions and inflame ethnic relations. There is a risk that the Malian army or vigilante militias will exact revenge on Tuareg and other light-skinned Arabs who participated in the rebellion that chased Malian troops out of the north. Clashes between the army and Tuareg in three prior rebellions resulted in horrific abuse of civilians. The overlapping of ethnic communities and armed groups in West Africa also increases the possibility of a spillover into neighboring countries and an escalation of militancy and terrorist attacks. To mitigate the risks, the intervention must be accompanied by a sound political strategy that manages disparate group interests and integrates a coalition of key elites from all communities of northern Mali, including Tuareg and Arabs. It is urgent that Malian authorities and their Western allies analyze carefully who supports militant organizations and why. AQIM has developed impressive networks in northern Mali, though the group s presence rests on unstable foundations. The vicissitudes of tribal allegiances, clan loyalties, and nomadic alliances make for an ephemeral existence, as does the unstable equilibrium within and between the different communities that populate the north. In a complex social environment where loyalties change constantly, several individuals will readily switch sides if they stand to benefit from the peace dividends. But without an understanding of the human terrain, it would be difficult to dry up the militants base of support. Even if AQIM is severely weakened, clan- or ethnicity-based militancy will continue.

Page 6 of 6 These political and human elements of the war effort in northern Mali are critical to the stabilization of the north. That will not happen, however, unless the Malian state resolves its crisis of legitimacy and opens sincere dialogue with the disenchanted populations in the north. The north has been a theater of environmental degradation, demographic change, and resource conflict between farmers and pastoralists. Weak governance and neglect of the vast area exacerbated ethnic and tribal tensions and left unattended the structural problems of underdevelopment and poverty that produced northern rebellions in 1963, the 1990s, and 2006 2009. So far, the ruling class in Bamako seems more interested in recapturing the north and restoring an intolerable status quo ante than in facilitating national reconciliation, recovery, and reconstruction. That has to change. Only a legitimate government can tackle the festering grievances in the north. The political leaders in Mali must rebuild a new sociopolitical order that grants real autonomy to the north and strike a proper balance between religion and state. But Mali cannot do this alone it will need help from the international community and its neighbors to tackle its socioeconomic and security problems. And Algeria in particular no longer has the luxury of staying out of what s unfolding in Mali nor can it afford to ignore the links between its domestic radical Islamists and those roaming the desert wastelands of the Sahel. After all, al-qaeda in the Islamic Maghreb is an Algerian phenomenon. Only time will tell if the country s shift toward a more pragmatic foreign policy will lead to a permanent change in approach. Source: