Moscow's growing influence in Africa is worrying many in the West, the report says.
- Russian
officials are eyeing a port of Berbera as a location for their base on
the coast of Somaliland, a self-declared state within Somalia on the
Gulf of Aden, according to U.S. Defense Department officials. Both China
and the United States, with military bases in Djibouti, share the same
coastline as the potential Russian port.
Russia has also
expressed interest in building a naval logistics center in Eritrea, but
it is unclear how far along those negotiations are, American officials
said, according to NYT.
About
1,500 miles south, down the eastern coast of Africa, Russian military
transport planes landed last summer in Cabo Delgado Province in northern
Mozambique and, according to American officials, deployed about 160
personnel belonging to the Wagner Group, a Russian private military
contractor.
The Mozambique government hired the Russian
mercenaries to help beleaguered local security forces combat an
insurgency that claimed to be affiliated with the Islamic State. At
least seven Russian personnel have been killed in operations, American
officials say, underscoring the risks facing troops for hire.
American
officials, analyzing what they call great power competition, say they
are alarmed by Russia's growing influence, as well as China's, as
Washington struggles to exert its economic and security goals on the
continent.
This campaign for influence is playing out as U.S.
Defense Secretary Mark T. Esper is weighing the potential withdrawal of
hundreds of forces from West Africa to better counter threats from
Russia and China closer to their borders. But Mr. Esper's review has
drawn sharp criticism from influential congressional Republicans and
Democrats who argue that cutting American forces in Africa would help
only its rivals.
Source: Reuters
No comments:
Post a Comment