What's new

US soldiers killed in ambush in Niger

mike2000 is back

ELITE MEMBER
Joined
Apr 12, 2015
Messages
8,513
Reaction score
19
Country
United Kingdom
Location
United Kingdom
US soldiers killed in ambush in Niger
  • 5 October 2017
  • From the sectionAfrica
_98151263_niger_neighbours_976.png

Three US soldiers have been killed and two others wounded in an ambush in Niger near the border with Mali, the US Africa Command has said.

Another soldier from a "partner nation" had also died in the attack, it said - without specifying their nationality.

The US soldiers had been providing advice and assistance in Niger's counter-terror operations and come under "hostile fire", it said.

Islamist militants, including al-Qaeda fighters, operate in the region.

They are most active in neighbouring Mali, where French troops intervened in 2013 to prevent them from advancing on the capital.

The Boko Haram group, based in Nigeria to the south, has also staged several attacks in Niger.

US President Donald Trump has been briefed by his chief-of-staff, John Kelly, about the attack, White House spokeswoman Sarah Sanders said.

_98151271_niger_epausarmy.jpg

Image copyrightEPA/US ARMY These Nigerien soldiers took part in a US training exercise earlier this year

The attack happened 200km (124 miles) north of Niamey, the capital of Niger, the US Africa Command statement said.

The two injured US soldiers had been evacuated to the Landstuhul Regional Medical Centre in Germany and were in a stable condition, it added.

According to the New York Times, those killed were special forces soldiers and were the first Americans to die as a result of hostile fire since the US Africa Command deployed in Niger.

Earlier, an official from Niger's Tillaberi region told Reuters that five Nigerien soldiers were among the dead.

It is not clear who fired on the soldiers.

Militants belonging to al-Qaeda in the Islamic Maghreb (AQIM) - an affiliate of al-Qaeda - are active in the region and are known to have conducted cross-border raids.

Scale of jihadist threat
By Tomi Oladipo, BBC Africa security correspondent

This attack will draw attention to the presence of US troops, not just in Niger but in other countries too. In a letter to Congress in June, President Trump confirmed there were 645 military personnel deployed to Niger to support counterterrorism missions there.

The US has long maintained that its troops play a "train, advise and assist" role with its partners, whether in the Sahel or the Horn of Africa. Its acknowledgement that the troops in south-west Niger were carrying out a "joint patrol" with local forces is being explained as the US providing "security assistance" but it is not clear how broadly this assistance is defined.

The attack also highlights the scale of the jihadist threat in Niger, a vast nation with a varied jihadist presence - Boko Haram in Nigeria, militants linked to both al-Qaeda and so-called Islamic State in Mali, and uncertainty from unstable Libya in the north.

For as long as the regional jihadist threat remains, the US and other Western powers will continue to strengthen their presence on the ground. Their target, the jihadists, will also be motivated to take them on.


http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-africa-41507337



@Vergennes , @Taygibay
i'm abit surprised to see that the U.S(an anglo saxon power) has a bigger military presence in Niger than i thought. Especially in a country that is considered as le pré carré français (france's backyard for our english speakers), since France doesn't usually fancy other powers venturing so closely(especially with a vast strategic military/political presence) to it's African zones of influence( CFA zone). Interesting.
 
. . . .
huh.......same could be said about the tens of thousands of soldiers/security forces you have lost/(and still losing) fighting this same kind of jihadists, NO?
many of our enemies say so. BTW we are not fighting the same kind of "jihadists". we are fighting US trained and equipped terrorists just like assad and putin are doing in russia.
 
. .
That is the price to be world police.
Anyway, Why is the US always involved in almost every conflict around the world?
 
.
Well, Mike good mate, the AFRICOM by itself was a
sign that the region held interest and the training
effort by it is much bigger than is generally known.

Africom even holds a yearly contest between the
different nations they train. But you certainly also
guessed that as the SyrIraq affairs wind down for
the lunatics, North Africa to the exclusion of the
Morocco-Algeria duo is fragilized and tempting.

Would you be surprised if some SAS had hunting
trips in our Barkhane zone ( Mauritania, Burkina-
Faso, Mali, Niger, Tchad ) or nearby in the Sudans,
Lybia, Nigeria w. BozoHaram not to forget Somalia?

I wouldn't. 8-)

Lots of work has to be done there eventually.

Cheers and a great day, Tay.
 
. . . .
There's a number of your Iranian countrymen here in Nairobi who wouldn't agree! You should know more than most the danger of believing the MSM .It

Africa is beautiful.


As for the topic, RIP soldiers, fighting vermin like this. I presume they are part of ongoing operations by AFRICOM to eliminate various militant outfits.
I believe one of the soldiers who died was the one at the centre of the Trump contravene i.e. when he called the mother and told her that he knew what he was signing up for.
 
. .
Africa is beautiful.


As for the topic, RIP soldiers, fighting vermin like this. I presume they are part of ongoing operations by AFRICOM to eliminate various militant outfits.
I believe one of the soldiers who died was the one at the centre of the Trump contravene i.e. when he called the mother and told her that he knew what he was signing up for.

Well technically Trump was right,when the soldier signed,he knew the risks he could encounter during his career,including the one that is to lose life. However I believe it was uncalled for to say this to the family or maybe he could have used much softer words.

On topic : May they RIP.
 
.
Always interfering in other countries

That is the price to be world police.
Anyway, Why is the US always involved in almost every conflict around the world?

Maybe it's time to educate yourself?

US was asked to provide 100 troop to train Niger Border/Guard force to prevent the spill over from the conflict next door, which is Mali. US signed agreement to provide training and intelligence force as per Niger Government request.

Also provided is the drone network to be operated by US military in Niger to monitor Niger and Mali border at the request of Niger Government.

The operation is UN Sanctioned. (Notice in the news report it also states that a soldier from the partner nation also lose the life)

what US solders were doing there first place

Niger government asked for assistance in 2013 because of the border conflict and instability with Mali, Niger Government asked US Military to provide unarmed drone support and graduately evolved into a request to train Niger Border Guard since 2015
 
.
Back
Top Bottom