Opinion: NATO expanding in Africa

Anxiety about the expansion of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) toward the Russian border is one of the causes of the current war in Ukraine but reports indicate that this US-led military alliance is on the rise in Africa.
NATO, a treaty organization created
in 1949 by the United States to project its military and political power over
Europe. In 2001, NATO conducted an “out of area” military operation in
Afghanistan, which lasted 20 years, and in 2011, NATO—at the urging of
France—bombed Libya and overthrew its government. NATO military operations in
Afghanistan and Libya were the prelude to discussions of a “Global NATO,” a
project to use the NATO military alliance beyond its own charter obligations
from the South China Sea to the Caribbean Sea.
War in Libya was NATO’s major military operation in Africa
NATO’s war
in Libya was its first major military operation in Africa, but it was not the
first European military footprint on the continent. After centuries of European
colonial wars in Africa, new states emerged in the aftermath of World War II to
assert their sovereignty. Many of these states—from Ghana to Tanzania—refused
to allow the European military forces to reenter the continent, which is why
these European powers had to resort to assassinations and military coups to
anoint pro-Western governments in the region. This allowed for the creation of
Western military bases in Africa and gave Western firms freedom to exploit the
continent’s natural resources.
Early NATO
operations stayed at the edge of Africa, with the Mediterranean Sea being the
major frontline. NATO set up the Allied Forces Southern Europe (AFSOUTH) in
Naples in 1951, and then the Allied Forces Mediterranean (AFMED) in Malta in
1952. Western governments established these military formations to garrison the
Mediterranean Sea against the Soviet navy and to create platforms from where
they could militarily intervene in the African continent. After the Six-Day War
in 1967, NATO’s Defense Planning Committee, which was dissolved in 2010,
created the Naval On-Call Force Mediterranean (NOCFORMED) to put pressure on
pro-Soviet states—such as Egypt—and to defend the monarchies of northern Africa
(NATO was unable to prevent the anti-imperialist coup of 1969 that overthrew
the monarchy in Libya and brought Colonel Muammar Gaddafi to power; Gaddafi’s
government ejected U.S. military bases from the country soon thereafter).
NATO’s ‘out
of area’ operations
Conversations
at NATO headquarters about “out of area” operations took place with increasing
frequency after NATO joined the U.S. war on Afghanistan. A senior official at NATO
told me in 2003 that the United States had “developed an appetite to use NATO”
in its attempt to project power against possible adversaries. Two years later,
in 2005, in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia, NATO began to cooperate closely with the
African Union (AU). The AU, which was formed in 2002, and was the “successor”
to the Organization of African Unity, struggled to build an independent
security structure. The lack of a viable military force meant that the AU often
turned to the West for assistance, and asked NATO to help with logistics and
airlift support for its peacekeeping mission in Sudan.
NATO using
AFRICOM
Alongside
NATO, the U.S. operated its military capacity through the United States
European Command (EUCOM), which oversaw the country’s operations in Africa from
1952 to 2007. Thereafter, General James Jones, head of EUCOM from 2003 to 2006,
formed the U.S. Africa Command (AFRICOM) in 2008, which was headquartered in
Stuttgart, Germany, because none of the 54 African nations were willing to give
it a home. NATO began to operate on the African continent through AFRICOM.
NATO’s war
on Libya changed the dynamics of the relationship between the African countries
and the West. The African Union was wary of Western military intervention in
the region. On 10 March, 2011, the AU’s Peace and Security Council set up the
High-Level ad hoc Committee on Libya. The members of this committee included
then-AU Chairperson Dr. Jean Ping and the heads of state of five African
nations—former President of Mauritania Mohamed Ould Abdel Aziz, Republic of
Congo’s President Denis Sassou Nguesso, Mali’s former President Amadou Toumani
Touré, former President of South Africa Jacob Zuma and Uganda’s President
Yoweri Museveni—who were supposed to fly into Tripoli, Libya, and negotiate
between the two sides of the Libyan civil war soon after the committee’s
formation. The United Nations Security Council, however, prevented this mission
from entering the country.
At a meeting
between the High-Level ad hoc Committee on Libya and the United Nations in June
2011, Uganda’s Permanent Representative to the United Nations during that time,
Dr. Ruhakana Rugunda, said, “It is unwise for certain players to be intoxicated
with technological superiority and begin to think they alone can alter the
course of human history toward freedom for the whole of mankind. Certainly, no
constellation of states should think that they can recreate hegemony over
Africa.” But this is precisely what the NATO states began to imagine.
Libya aftermath
Chaos in Libya
set in motion a series of catastrophic conflicts in Mali, southern Algeria and
parts of Niger. The French military intervention in Mali in 2013 was followed
by the creation of the G5 Sahel, a political platform of the five Sahel
states—Burkina Faso, Chad, Mali, Mauritania and Niger—and a military alliance
between them. In May 2014, NATO opened a liaison office at the AU headquarters
in Addis Ababa. At NATO’s Wales Summit in September 2014, the alliance partners
considered the problems in the Sahel that entered the alliance’s Readiness
Action Plan, which served as “[the] driver of NATO’s military adaptation to the
changed and evolving security environment.” In December 2014, NATO foreign
ministers reviewed the plan’s implementation, and focused on the “threats
emanating from our southern neighborhood, the Middle East, and North Africa”
and established a framework to meet the threats and challenges being faced by
the South, according to a report by the former President of the NATO
Parliamentary Assembly, Michael R. Turner. Two years later, at NATO’s Warsaw
Summit in 2016, NATO leaders decided to increase their cooperation with the
African Union. They “[welcomed] the robust military commitment of Allies in the
Sahel-Sahara region.” To deepen this commitment, NATO set up an African Standby
Force and began the process of training officers in African military forces.
Sentiments
against Western military aggression
Meanwhile,
the recent decision to eject the French military is rooted in a general
sensibility growing in the continent against Western military aggression. No
wonder then that many of the larger African countries refused to follow
Washington’s position on the war on Ukraine, with half the countries either
abstaining or voting against the UN resolution to condemn Russia (this includes
countries such as Algeria, South Africa, Angola and Ethiopia). It is telling
that South Africa’s President Cyril Ramaphosa said that his country “is
committed to advancing the human rights and fundamental freedoms not only of
our own people but for the peoples of Palestine, Western Sahara, Afghanistan,
Syria and across Africa and the world.”
The ignominy of Western—and NATO’s—follies, including arms
deals with Morocco to deliver Western Sahara to the kingdom and diplomatic
backing for Israel as it continues its apartheid treatment of Palestinians,
bring into sharp contrast Western outrage at the events taking place in
Ukraine. Evidence of this hypocrisy serves as a warning while reading the
benevolent language used by the West when it comes to NATO’s expansion into Africa.
This article by Vijay Prashad was first published by Globetrotter