The US military will begin plans to withdraw troops from Niger

Dakar, Apr 20 (AP) The United States will begin plans to withdraw troops from Niger, US officials said Saturday, in what experts say is a blow to Washington and its allies in the region in terms of staging security operations in the Sahel.
     The planned departure comes as US officials said they were trying to find a new military agreement.
     The prime minister of Niger, appointed by the ruling military junta, Ali Lamine Zeine, and US deputy secretary of state Kurt Campbell, agreed on Friday that the two nations would begin to plan the withdrawal of American troops, the US State Department told The Associated Press in an email Saturday.
     US officials gave no timeline about their withdrawal. An American delegation to coordinate the details of the withdrawal process will be dispatched soon.
     Niger plays a central role in the US military's operations in Africa's Sahel region, an area on the edge of the Sahara Desert.
     Washington is concerned about the spread of jihadi violence, where local groups have pledged allegiance to al-Qaida and the Islamic State groups. Niger is home to a major US air base, in the city of Agadez, about 920 kilometres from the capital, Niamey, using it for manned and unmanned surveillance flights and other operations.      The US has also invested hundreds of millions of dollars in training Niger's military since it began operations there in 2013.
     But relations have frayed between Niger and Western countries since mutinous soldiers ousted the country's democratically elected president in July. Niger's junta has since told French forces to leave and turned instead to Russia for security.
     Earlier this month, Russian military trainers arrived to reinforce the country's air defences and with Russian equipment to train Nigeriens to use.
     There was an attempt on the behalf of the US to revise the military agreement with Niger that would allow them to stay, US officials told the AP. But the agreement between Zeine and Campbell shows that the effort has failed.
     The loss of access to air bases in Niger is a major setback for the US and its allies in the region because of its strategic location for security operations in the Sahel, said Peter Pham, former US special envoy for the Sahel region.
     “In the short term, they will be hard to replace,” said Pham, adding that remaining European Union military presence would likely pull out of Niger following the news of a US departure.
     The rupture of relations between the two nations would impact the development and humanitarian aid funds destined for Niger, a country at the bottom of many indicators of well-being, Pham said.
     Insa Garba Saidou, a local activist who assists Niger's military rulers with their communications, told the AP that American troops could potentially return after negotiations and that the ruling Niger junta, the National Council for the Safeguard of the Homeland, wants to maintain a good working relationship with the US.
     The US should find a new mode of engagement that departs from the failed counterterrorism cooperation model of the past decade, and continues to press other states in the Sahel region on accountability and human rights abuses, said Hannah Rae Armstrong, a senior consultant on Sahel peace and security.
     The two officials said that Niger and the US would continue to work together on areas of shared interest. (AP)

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(This story has not been edited by THE WEEK and is auto-generated from PTI)