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On to Timbuktu! A New Jolly Little War We Can’t Find on a Map
by
Eric Margolis
Recently
by Eric Margolis: Rogue
Republican
Welcome Mali,
our newest crisis! Open your maps.
Mali is a huge,
arid nation extending from the Sahara Desert and Algeria’s border
in the north to the steamy south along the Niger River. Most of
Mali’s 14.5 million people eke out an existence farming and fishing.
France used
to rule Mali as part of its West African Empire, and still has deep
financial, military, commercial and intelligence interests in the
region.
Not so long
ago, France installed West African leaders, financed them, and kept
them in power using small garrisons of tough Foreign Legionnaires.
Secret payments continue today. Spooks from France’s DGSE intelligence
agency, and "special advisors" are active behind the scenes
in West Africa as well as North Africa.
The US has
been rapidly expanding its influence in France’s former African
sphere of influence, both in a drive for resources and to block
China’s growing activity on the continent.
Arid Northern
Mali was a backwater in France’s colonial empire. Last March, Tuareg
and militant Islamic militias seized Mali’s vast north. US-trained
army officers then overthrew the elected civilian government in
Bamako of Amadou Touré.
Tuareg are
fierce desert nomads often called the "blue men of the Sahara"
because their skins become tinted by the blue veils they always
wear to cover their faces. French colonial troops and Legionnaires
battled the Tuareg throughout the 19th century and half
of the 20th in a romantic little struggle on which the
famed Victorian novel, "Beau Geste" was based.
The Tuareg
want their own state, Azawad, carved from northern Mali, and bits
of southern Algeria and Mauritania. Call them the Kurds of the Sahara.
Militant Islamists,
led by Ansar Din, first joined the Tuareg fighters, but then pushed
them out, seizing the fabled city of Timbuktu. These angry Islamists
set about destroying ancient tombs of assorted local saints, producing
huge indignation from westerners who could not find Timbuktu on
a map if their lives depended on it. Orthodox Muslims denounce worship
of saints as blasphemy and idolatry.
Western media
immediately branded Ansar Din "linked to al-Qaida" without
any real proof. These days, anyone we don’t like is "linked
to al-Qaida," a tiny groups that barely exists any more. However,
lurking behind the next sand dune may be Al-Qaida in the Islamic
Maghreb, a small, violent anti-western movement from Algeria that
has nothing to do with the original al-Qaida but expropriated its
name.
A French-backed
UN Security Council vote for military intervention in Mali to oust
the rebels is imminent. France wants the West African economic group
ECOWAS to lead the charge. But this is merely the kind of "coalition"
fig-leaf favored by the US in Afghanistan, Iraq and Libya. Any real
fighting and transport will be done by French military units from
Europe or bases in central Africa and Chad. And, of course, the
Legion.
Washington
has a different plan. The US wants to follow the model it is using
to fight Somalia’s Shebab movement. In the last four years, the
US has spent some $600 million to rent an African proxy force of
20,000 Ugandan, Ethiopian and Kenyan soldiers to invade Somalia
and battle Shebab.
Washington
plans a similar strategy in Mali, led by its sexy new star, Africa
Command. Nigeria is expected to play a key role; Morocco and Algeria
may contribute troops.
All this seems
like a lot of effort to combat a bunch of Saharan tribesmen and
trouble-makers in pickup trucks in a place whose main city, Timbuktu,
is a synonym for remoteness and obscurity. No matter. The US and
French media are dutifully raising alarms about the "Islamic
threat" from deepest Sahara – in part to distract from domestic
economic woes.
Is
the US ready to wage yet another little conflict on credit?
Doesn’t Washington have enough conflicts? Apparently not.
Mali could
get nasty: neighbors Algeria, Mauritania, Burkina Faso, and Ivory
Coast are unstable. The Saharawi of Western Sahara have fought for
decades against Morocco for their own state. They are backed by
Algeria.
Into this potential
tinder box France and the US are preparing to charge. "On to
Timbuktu" goes out the battle cry of the latest obscure crusade.
October
13, 2012
Eric
Margolis [send
him mail] is the author of War
at the Top of the World and the new book, American
Raj: Liberation or Domination?: Resolving the Conflict Between the
West and the Muslim World. See his
website.
Copyright
© 2012 Eric Margolis
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