
AFRICANGLOBE – The United States has signed a deal with the central Africa nation of Niger that allows deployment of surveillance drones to keep tabs on Arab terrorists in the region, officials from both countries said Tuesday.
Niger is next door to Mali, where France joined the fight against terrorist groups earlier this month.
Pentagon spokesman George Little said the role of the U.S. military in Niger “has not yet been defined” — but Niger’s ambassador to the United States, Maman Sidikou, told reporters that his government has agreed to let United States drones operate from its territory.
Sidikou said his understanding of the agreement is the drones will be unarmed and used for surveillance to monitor terrorist movements. He refused to discuss where in the country the drones would be based or when they will be operational.
Niger lies to the east of Mali, where French troops and warplanes are fighting alongside government troops to push back foreign terrorist fighters who seized much of the peaceful African country in 2012.
The rebels took advantage of the chaos that followed a revolt by Touareg nomads and a military coup, and banned music, smoking, drinking and watching televised sports in the territories under their control.
Washington is backing its NATO ally by sharing intelligence, flying French troops to neighboring countries and refueling French jets.
Mali has been invaded by al Qaeda in the Islamic Maghreb, the North African offshoot of the terrorist movement. The group has been connected to the recent assault on the natural gas facility in Algiers and the attack on the U.S. diplomatic mission in Benghazi, Libya, that killed U.S. Ambassador Chris Stevens and three other Americans.
Little said the group does not pose a direct threat to the U.S. homeland, but that could change.
“I’m unaware of any specific or credible information at this time that points to an AQIM threat against the homeland, but, again, I’m not ruling it out,” he said. “We take al Qaeda, wherever they are, very seriously. We are not going to rest on our laurels until we find that that kind of specific and credible information.”
A United States official said that intelligence-gathering in that part of Africa is a challenge. The United States has a drone base in Djibouti, at the southern tip of the Red Sea — on the opposite side of the continent from Mali.
“Djibouti is a long way from Bamako, and there’s certainly a growing need for intelligence-gathering,” the official said.
While not confirming the reports about establishing a drone base, the official noted that if one was created, the operation would need infrastructure, security and support.