The United States is assessing the future of its military command for Africa, its top general for the continent said on Tuesday, and called on African governments to make their views on its possible elimination known in Washington.
President Donald Trump’s administration is considering merging AFRICOM, which became a distinct geographical command in 2008, with the U.S. command in Europe to cut bureaucracy, American media outlets reported in March.
Speaking to reporters before a conference of African defence chiefs in Kenya, AFRICOM’s commander,
General Michael Langley, said he had discussed the issue with officials on the continent.
“I’ve talked to a number of ministers of defence and a few presidents and told them we were assessing,” Langley said.
He said governments should make their views about AFRICOM’s future known through their ambassadors in the U.S.
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“That’s what I tell them. I said: ‘okay, if we’re that important to (you), you need to communicate that and we’ll see’.”
Before 2008, U.S. military activities in Africa were handled by commands from other regions. AFRICOM’s creation reflected rising U.S. national security interests on the continent, including Islamist insurgencies and competition with China and Russia.
In West Africa, where groups with ties to al Qaeda and Islamic State have grown in recent years, U.S. security influence has waned following a series of military coups.
(Editor: Oloyede Oworu)