3000 U.S. Troops To Africa To Fight Ebola
United States Africa Command will almost certainly be the military lead. AFRICOM, which was activated in 2008, has had a checkered history. Its creation was viewed with alarm by activists and scholars interested in Sub-Saharan Africa, who feared American foreign policy towards the region was being militarized. In November 2012, AFRICOM’s Commander, Army General William “Kip” Ward, was demoted and retired after an investigation revealed abuse of his position and misuse of government funds. An October 2013 Defense Department Inspector General’s report criticized the command’s ability to carry out civil-military operations and called into question its financial accounting practices in the field.
Though AFRICOM has conducted a large number of humanitarian and training operations across Sub-Saharan Africa, and has coordinated counter-terrorism operations with US Special Operations Command (SOCOM), neither the command nor the Defense Department has in the six years of its existence produced any satisfactory data that shows AFRICOM’s missions have led to an outcome greater than the sum of their parts. AFRICOM was created in large measure because Africa was a strategic after-thought during the Cold War — other than as a source of proxies for competing with the Soviet Union and China, American foreign policy gave little thought to Africa below the Sahara. For example, AFRICOM has no dedicated troops of its own. Other than small service headquarters in Stuttgart and Vicenza, Italy, to coordinate programming, it has to borrow troops from the individual services to carry out its mission.
As a result, of all the military commands AFRICOM has the least amount of political support on the Hill, and its cost-to-outcome ratio has made it a target for Congressional budget-cutters. NGOs in the US and Europe remain suspicious of its “true” purposes. Comparatively few military personnel view an AFRICOM assignment as a career-maker. In strategic terms, the command’s relationship with African leaders who lean autocratic, rather than democratic, could well lead to future foreign policy blowback, as some fear AFRICOM is training the next generation of African despots in the same way that the notorious School of the Americas trained so many of Latin America’s tyrants.
The Ebola task force is a “real-world” mission in every sense of the term. Pandemic disease specialists are concerned that, left unchecked, Ebola strains may quickly mutate into a form much more readily transmitted. Fighting Ebola, not terrorists, may turn out to be AFRICOM’s proof-of-concept. Given the stakes, we can only hope the organization is up to the job.
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10 responses to 3000 U.S. Troops To Africa To Fight Ebola
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mea_mark September 16th, 2014 at 12:26
I am glad it looks like we are going to try and do some good. I am afraid of how the right-wing is going to react to this though. They will probably freak out and think Obama is trying to bring ebola back here to the states. On the plus side, it sure will make them look really stupid right before the elections.
juicyfruityyy September 16th, 2014 at 12:30
The RW, is not for helping with social diseases or social issues. They are more for money in their pockets. The life of others don’t matter.
mea_mark September 16th, 2014 at 12:26
I am glad it looks like we are going to try and do some good. I am afraid of how the right-wing is going to react to this though. They will probably freak out and think Obama is trying to bring ebola back here to the states. On the plus side, it sure will make them look really stupid right before the elections.
juicyfruityyy September 16th, 2014 at 12:30
The RW, is not for helping with social diseases or social issues. They are more for money in their pockets. The life of others don’t matter.
juicyfruityyy September 16th, 2014 at 12:28
Sounds like, they will be their for Research purposes and traffic control. Can’t have people storming the clinics.
juicyfruityyy September 16th, 2014 at 12:28
Sounds like, they will be there for Research purposes and traffic control. Can’t have people storming the clinics.
Khary A September 16th, 2014 at 12:42
If i may put out a wingnut idea on this. How much surprise would you have if these highly specialized counter terrorism forces were also there to manage situations in Nigeria as well? it’s not unfamiliar territory for the US to have operations off the books.
The last of the Thousad Sons September 16th, 2014 at 12:42
If i may put out a wingnut idea on this. How much surprise would you have if these highly specialized counter terrorism forces were also there to manage situations in Nigeria as well? it’s not unfamiliar territory for the US to have operations off the books.
mea_mark September 16th, 2014 at 16:42
For more facts and info than any body really wants this just came out from the White house … http://www.whitehouse.gov/the-press-office/2014/09/16/fact-sheet-us-response-ebola-epidemic-west-africa
mea_mark September 16th, 2014 at 16:42
For more facts and info than any body really wants this just came out from the White house … http://www.whitehouse.gov/the-press-office/2014/09/16/fact-sheet-us-response-ebola-epidemic-west-africa