Dressed in green military fatigues and a blue garrison cap, Colonel Major Amadou Abdramane, a spokesperson for Nigerâs ruling junta, took to local television last month to criticize the United States and sever the long-standing military partnership between the two countries. âThe government of Niger, taking into account the aspirations and interests of its people, revokes, with immediate effect, the agreement concerning the status of United States military personnel and civilian Defense Department employees,â he said, insisting that their 12-year-old security pact violated Nigerâs constitution.
Another sometime Nigerien spokesperson, Insa Garba Saidou, put it in blunter terms: âThe American bases and civilian personnel cannot stay on Nigerien soil any longer.â
The announcements came as terrorism in the West African Sahel has spiked and in the wake of a visit to Niger by a high-level American delegation, including Assistant Secretary of State for African Affairs Molly Phee and General Michael Langley, chief of U.S. Africa Command, or AFRICOM. Nigerâs repudiation of its ally is just the latest blow to Washingtonâs sputtering counterterrorism efforts in the region. In recent years, longstanding U.S. military partnerships with Burkina Faso and Mali have also been curtailed following coups by U.S.-trained officers. Niger was, in fact, the last major bastion of American military influence in the West African Sahel.
Nigerâs junta is pursuing another such path, attempting to end an American forever war in one small corner of the worldâdoing what President Biden pledged but failed to do.
Such setbacks there are just the latest in a series of stalemates, fiascos, or outright defeats that have come to typify Americaâs Global War on Terror. During 20-plus years of armed interventions, U.S. military missions have been repeatedly upended across Africa, the Middle East, and South Asia, including a sputtering stalemate in Somalia, an intervention-turned-blowback-engine in Libya, and outright implosions in Afghanistan and Iraq.
This maelstrom of U.S. defeat and retreat has left at least 4.5 million people dead, including an estimated 940,000 from direct violence, more than 432,000 of them civilians, according to Brown Universityâs Costs of War Project. As many as 60 million people have also been displaced due to the violence stoked by Americaâs âforever wars.â
President Joe Biden has both claimed that heâs ended those wars and that the United States will continue to fight them for the foreseeable futureâpossibly foreverââto protect the people and interests of the United States.â The toll has been devastating, particularly in the Sahel, but Washington has largely ignored the costs borne by the people most affected by its failing counterterrorism efforts.
âReducing Terrorismâ Leads to a 50,000% Increase in⦠Yes!⦠Terrorism
Roughly
1,000 U.S. military personnel and civilian contractors are deployed to Niger, most of them near the town of Agadez at Air Base 201 on the southern edge of the Sahara desert. Known to locals as âBase Americaine,â that outpost has been the cornerstone of an archipelago of U.S. military bases in the region and is the key to Americaâs military power projection and surveillance efforts in North and West Africa. Since the 2010s, the U.S. has sunk roughly a quarter-billion dollars into that outpost alone.
Washington has been focused on Niger and its neighbors since the opening days of the Global War on Terror, pouring military aid into the nations of West Africa through dozens of âsecurity cooperationâ efforts, among them the Trans-Sahara Counterterrorism Partnership, a program designed to âcounter and prevent violent extremismâ in the region. Training and assistance to local militaries offered through that partnership has alone cost America more than $1 billion.
Just prior to his recent visit to Niger, AFRICOMâs General Langley went before the Senate Armed Services Committee to rebuke Americaâs longtime West African partners. âDuring the past three years, national defense forces turned their guns against their own elected governments in Burkina Faso, Guinea, Mali, and Niger,â he said. âThese juntas avoid accountability to the peoples they claim to serve.â
After 20 years, itâs clear that Americaâs Sahelian partnerships arenât âreducing terrorist violenceâ at all.
Langley did not mention, however, that at least 15 officers who benefited from American security cooperation have been involved in 12 coups in West Africa and the greater Sahel during the Global War on Terror. They include the very nations he named: Burkina Faso (2014, 2015, and twice in 2022); Guinea (2021); Mali (2012, 2020, and 2021); and Niger (2023). In fact, at least five leaders of a July coup in Niger received U.S. assistance, according to an American official. When they overthrew that countryâs democratically elected president, they, in turn, appointed five U.S.-trained members of the Nigerien security forces to serve as governors.
Langley went on to lament that, while coup leaders invariably promise to defeat terrorist threats, they fail to do so and then âturn to partners who lack restrictions in dealing with coup governments⦠particularly Russia.â But he also failed to lay out Americaâs direct responsibility for the security freefall in the Sahel, despite more than a decade of expensive efforts to remedy the situation.
âWe came, we saw, he died,â then-Secretary of State Hillary Clinton
joked after a U.S.-led NATO air campaign helped overthrow Colonel Muammar el-Qaddafi, the longtime Libyan dictator, in 2011. Former President Barack Obama hailed the intervention as a success, even as Libya began to slip into near-failed-state status. Obama would later admit that âfailing to plan for the day afterâ Qaddafiâs defeat was the âworst mistakeâ of his presidency.
As the Libyan leader fell, Tuareg fighters in his service looted his regimeâs weapons caches, returned to their native Mali, and began to take over the northern part of that nation. Anger in Maliâs armed forces over the governmentâs ineffective response resulted in a 2012 military coup led by Amadou Sanogo, an officer who learned English in Texas, and underwent infantry-officer basic training in Georgia, military-intelligence instruction in Arizona, and mentorship by Marines in Virginia.
Having overthrown Maliâs democratic government, Sanogo proved hapless in battling local militants who had also benefited from the arms flowing out of Libya. With Mali in chaos, those Tuareg fighters declared their own independent state, only to be pushed aside by heavily armed Islamist militants who instituted a harsh brand of Shariah law, causing a humanitarian crisis. A joint French, American, and African mission prevented Maliâs complete collapse but pushed the Islamists to the borders of both Burkina Faso and Niger, spreading terror and chaos to those countries.
Since then, the nations of the West African Sahel have been plagued by terrorist groups that have evolved, splintered, and reconstituted themselves. Under the black banners of jihadist militancy, men on motorcycles armed with Kalashnikov rifles regularly roar into villages to impose
zakat (an Islamic tax) and terrorize and kill civilians. Relentless attacks by such armed groups have not only destabilized Burkina Faso, Mali, and Niger, prompting coups and political instability, but have spread south to countries along the Gulf of Guinea. Violence has, for example, spiked in Togo (633%) and Benin (718%), according to Pentagon statistics.
American officials have often turned a blind eye to the carnage. Asked about the devolving situation in Niger, for instance, State Department spokesperson Vedant Patel recently
insisted that security partnerships in West Africa âare mutually beneficial and are intended to achieve what we believe to be shared goals of detecting, deterring, and reducing terrorist violence.â His pronouncement is either an outright lie or a total fantasy.
After 20 years, itâs clear that Americaâs Sahelian partnerships arenât âreducing terrorist violenceâ at all. Even the Pentagon tacitly admits this. Despite U.S. troop strength in Niger
growing by more than 900% in the last decade and American commandos training local counterparts, while fighting and even dying there; despite hundreds of millions of dollars flowing into Burkina Faso in the form of training as well as equipment like armored personnel carriers, body armor, communications gear, machine guns, night-vision equipment, and rifles; and despite U.S. security assistance pouring into Mali and its military officers receiving training from the United States, terrorist violence in the Sahel has in no way been reduced. In 2002 and 2003, according to State Department statistics, terrorists caused 23 casualties in all of Africa. Last year, according to the Africa Center for Strategic Studies, a Pentagon research institution, attacks by Islamist militants in the Sahel alone resulted in 11,643 deathsâan increase of more than 50,000%.
Pack Up Your War
In January 2021, President Biden entered the White House promising to end his countryâs forever wars. He quickly claimed to have kept his pledge. âI stand here today for the first time in 20 years with the United States not at war,â Biden announced months later. âWeâve turned the page.â
Late last year, however, in one of his periodic âwar powersâ missives to Congress, detailing publicly acknowledged U.S. military operations around the world, Biden said just the opposite. In fact, he left open the possibility that Americaâs forever wars might, indeed, go on forever. âIt is not possible,â he wrote, âto know at this time the precise scope or the duration of the deployments of United States Armed Forces that are or will be necessary to counter terrorist threats to the United States.â
Nigerâs U.S.-trained junta has made it clear that it wants Americaâs forever war there to end. That would assumedly mean the closing of Air Base 201 and the withdrawal of about 1,000 American military personnel and contractors. So far, however, Washington shows no signs of acceding to their wishes. âWe are aware of the March 16th statement⦠announcing an end to the status of forces agreement between Niger and the United States,â said Deputy Pentagon Press Secretary Sabrina Singh. âWe are working through diplomatic channels to seek clarification⦠I donât have a timeframe of any withdrawal of forces.â
Carnage, stalemate, and failure seem to have had remarkably little effect on Washingtonâs desire to continue funding and fighting such wars, but facts on the ground like the Talibanâs triumph in Afghanistan have sometimes forced Washingtonâs hand.
âThe U.S. military is in Niger at the request of the Government of Niger,â said AFRICOM spokesperson Kelly Cahalan last year. Now that the junta has told AFRICOM to leave, the command has little to say. Email return receipts show that TomDispatchâs questions about developments in Niger sent to AFRICOMâs press office were read by a raft of personnel including Cahalan, Zack Frank, Joshua Frey, Yvonne Levardi, Rebekah Clark Mattes, Christopher Meade, Takisha Miller, Alvin Phillips, Robert Dixon, Lennea Montandon, and Courtney Dock, AFRICOMâs deputy director of public affairs, but none of them answered any of the questions posed. Cahalan instead referred TomDispatch to the State Department. The State Department, in turn, directed TomDispatch to the transcript of a press conference dealing primarily with U.S. diplomatic efforts in the Philippines.
âUSAFRICOM needs to stay in West Africa⦠to limit the spread of terrorism across the region and beyond,â General Langley told the Senate Armed Services Committee in March. But Nigerâs junta insists that AFRICOM needs to go and U.S. failures to âlimit the spread of terrorismâ in Niger and beyond are a key reason why. âThis security cooperation did not live up to the expectations of Nigeriensâall the massacres committed by the jihadists were carried out while the Americans were here,â said a Nigerien security analyst who has worked with U.S. officials, speaking on the condition of anonymity.
Americaâs forever wars, including the battle for the Sahel, have ground on through the presidencies of George W. Bush, Barack Obama, Donald Trump, and Joe Biden with failure the defining storyline and catastrophic results the norm. From the Islamic State routing the U.S.-trained Iraqi army in 2014 to the Talibanâs victory in Afghanistan in 2021, from the forever stalemate in Somalia to the 2011 destabilization of Libya that plunged the Sahel into chaos and now threatens the littoral states along the Gulf of Guinea, the Global War on Terror has been responsible for the deaths, wounding, or displacement of tens of millions of people.
Carnage, stalemate, and failure seem to have had remarkably little effect on Washingtonâs desire to continue funding and fighting such wars, but facts on the ground like the Talibanâs triumph in Afghanistan have sometimes forced Washingtonâs hand. Nigerâs junta is pursuing another such path, attempting to end an American forever war in one small corner of the worldâdoing what President Biden pledged but failed to do. Still, the question remains: Will the Biden administration reverse a course that the U.S. has been on since the early 2000s? Will it agree to set a date for withdrawal? Will Washington finally pack up its disastrous war and go home?