February 23, 2013

U.S. TROOPS ARRIVE IN NIGER TO SET UP DRONE BASE

[The Predators in Niger will only conduct surveillance, not airstrikes, the official said. “This is purely an intelligence-gathering mission,” he said. Other officials said the Obama administration had not ruled out arming the Predators with missiles in the future.]

Drones and spy planes over Africa
President Obama announced Friday that about 100 U.S. troops have been deployed to the West African country of Niger, where defense officials said they are setting up a drone base to spy on al-Qaeda fighters in the Sahara.

It was the latest step by the Pentagon to increase its intelligence-gathering across Africa in response to what officials see as a rising threat from militant groups.

In a letter to Congress, Obama said about 40 U.S. service members arrived in Niger on Wednesday, bringing the total number of troops based there to “approximately” 100. He said the troops, which are armed for self-protection, would support a French-led military operation in neighboring Mali, where al-Qaeda fighters and other militants have carved out a refuge in a remote territory the size of Texas.

The base in Niger marks the opening of another far-flung U.S. military front against al-Qaeda and its affiliates, adding to drone combat missions in Afghanistan, Yemen and Somalia. The CIA is also conducting drone airstrikes against al-Qaeda targets in Pakistan and Yemen.

Senior U.S. officials have said for months that they would not put U.S. military “boots on the ground” in Mali, an impoverished nation that has been mired in chaos since March, when a U.S.-trained Malian army captain took power in a coup. But U.S. troops are becoming increasingly involved in the conflict from the skies and the rear echelons, where they are supporting French and African forces seeking to stabilize the region.

Obama did not explicitly reveal the drone base in his letter to Congress, but he said the U.S. troops in Niger would “provide support for intelligence collection” and share the intelligence with French forces in Mali.

A U.S. defense official, speaking on the condition of anonymity to provide details about military operations, said that the 40 troops who arrived in Niger on Wednesday were almost all Air Force personnel and that their mission was to support drone flights.

The official said drone flights were “imminent” but declined to say whether unarmed, unmanned Predator aircraft had arrived in Niger or how many would be deployed there.

The drones will be based at first in the capital, Niamey. But military officials would like to eventually move them north to the city of Agadez, which is closer to parts of Mali where al-Qaeda cells have taken root.

“That’s a better location for the mission, but it’s not feasible at this point,” the official said, describing Agadez as a frontier city “with logistical challenges.”

The introduction of Predators to Niger fills a gap in U.S. military capabilities over the Sahara, most of which remains beyond the reach of its drone bases in East Africa and southern Europe.

The Pentagon also operates drones from a permanent base in Djibouti, on the Horn of Africa, and from a civilian airport in Ethi­o­pia.

The U.S. military has been flying small turboprop surveillance planes over northern Mali and West Africa for years, but the PC-12 spy aircraft have limited range and lack the sophisticated sensors that Predators carry.

U.S. military contractors have been flying PC-12 surveillance aircraft from Agadez for several months. Those planes do not carry military markings and only require a handful of people to operate.

In contrast, Predators need ground crews to launch, recover and maintain the drones. Those crews, in turn, require armed personnel for protection.

The U.S. defense official said it is likely that more U.S. troops will deploy to Niger but declined to be specific. "I think it’s safe to say the number will probably grow,” he said.

The Predators in Niger will only conduct surveillance, not airstrikes, the official said. “This is purely an intelligence-gathering mission,” he said. Other officials said the Obama administration had not ruled out arming the Predators with missiles in the future.

Information collected from reconnaissance missions will be shared with the French and other African militaries so they can attack al-Qaeda targets, officials said.

There is evidence that al-Qaeda fighters in West Africa are already bracing for drone warfare. The Associated Press reported finding an al-Qaeda document in Timbuktu, Mali, that listed 22 tips for avoiding drones. Among other countermeasures, it advised hiding “under thick trees” and buying off-the-shelf electronic scramblers “to confuse the frequencies used to control the drone.”

Niger, one of the poorest countries in the world, signed an agreement with the United States last month that provides legal safeguards for U.S. forces stationed there. Nigerien officials are concerned about the spillover of violence and refugees from Mali, which has threatened to destabilize the entire region.

Because Mali’s coup leaders toppled a democratically elected government, the U.S. government is prohibited by law from giving direct military aid to Mali.

Johnnie Carson, the State Department’s top diplomat for Africa, told reporters Friday that security assistance and other aid could “immediately” resume to Mali “if there is a restoration of democracy.” Mali has tentatively scheduled elections for July.

The French military launched a surprise intervention in Mali last month after Islamist fighters swept south and threatened to take over much of the country.

Since then, about 4,000 French troops and a coalition of about 6,000 African forces have retaken major cities in northern Mali, chasing al-Qaeda fighters and other militants into remote areas. One French official described combat operations there as “a little like Afghanistan.”

French military leaders have said they would begin a partial withdrawal next month. Their strategy hinges on enlisting Malian troops and other African forces to act as peacekeepers, while negotiating side deals to persuade some of Mali’s many militant factions to turn against al-Qaeda.

But al-Qaeda fighters and other Islamist militants have quickly adopted guerrilla tactics and show no sign of disappearing. Car bombs and suicide attacks have flared in recent days and are likely to intensify in the coming weeks, Carson acknowledged.

“There’s no question that [al-Qaeda] has not been totally defeated, but they have been significantly degraded,” he said at a breakfast sponsored by the Center for Media and Security.
Karen DeYoung contributed to this report.


[A police officer told reporters in Hyderabad that improvised explosive devices may have been placed on two bicycles at the site. But he added that a surveillance camera in the area was not functioning, and police did not have video footage to assist their investigation]

NEW DELHI — Investigators examined forensic evidence, worked on sketches and searched for tell-tale clues at the site of twin explosions that ripped through the southern Indian city of Hyderabad Thursday killing 16 people and wounding 119.

The blasts occurred soon after sunset, within a span of about two minutes, in a movie theater parking lot and at a bus stop in Dilsukhnagar, an area on the city’s outskirts full of restaurants and tea shops.

The blast sites were about 400 feet apart, Hyderabad police said. Television images showed the area littered with shattered glass, blood-soaked clothes, bags and shoes, and people rushing around in panic.

There was no immediate assertion of responsibility for the attacks, and police did not identify any suspects.

A police officer told reporters in Hyderabad that improvised explosive devices may have been placed on two bicycles at the site. But he added that a surveillance camera in the area was not functioning, and police did not have video footage to assist their investigation

Home Minister Sushil Kumar Shinde said several Indian cities had been put on high security alert before the explosions, after warnings were received.

“We got some information two days ago about a possible attack, though it was not specific about what kind of an attack, or where,” Shinde told reporters in New Delhi.

An intelligence official said on the condition of anonymity because he is not authorized to speak to the media that the alert was sent to several “vulnerable” cities after some militant groups vowed revenge for the recent hanging of Afzal Guru, convicted for the attack on parliament.

A police officer in New Delhi said that a man arrested in October had confessed to being part of a team that reconnoitered by motorcycle in several parts of Hyderabad, including Dilsukhnagar. The officer spoke on the condition of anonymity because it was considered premature to link Thursday’s blasts with that arrest.

An intelligence official in the capital, who spoke anonymously in line with agency rules, said Hyderabad is considered a “sensitive target” because it has been the scene of terrorist attacks before. In August 2007, two powerful bomb blasts there killed 40 people.

More than 100 Muslims were rounded up after the 2007 explosions and kept in custody for many months. A court eventually ordered their release, citing a lack of concrete evidence of their role in the blasts.

The Hyderabad-based Civil Liberties Monitoring Committee appealed to the media Thursday to be “sensitive in reporting the blasts, [to] halt their self-investigation and [to] stop targeting a particular community” by quoting unnamed intelligence sources.”

A national security team was heading to Hyderabad to examine the type of explosives used, the Press Trust of India reported.

“This is a very congested area,” Sarve Satyanarayana, a member of Parliament from the Dilsukhnagar area, said in a telephone interview. “A lot of people gather there all the time. It is a commercial area. There is a bus depot, shops, eateries, one big temple and cinema halls.”

The lawmaker added: “Such attacks will spoil the image of our city. I don’t know who has committed this heinous crime.”