[House Hearing, 113 Congress]
[From the U.S. Government Printing Office]
THE GROWING CRISIS IN AFRICA'S SAHEL REGION
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JOINT HEARING
BEFORE THE
SUBCOMMITTEE ON AFRICA, GLOBAL HEALTH,
GLOBAL HUMAN RIGHTS, AND
INTERNATIONAL ORGANIZATIONS
AND THE
SUBCOMMITTEE ON
THE MIDDLE EAST AND NORTH AFRICA
AND THE
SUBCOMMITTEE ON TERRORISM, NONPROLIFERATION, AND TRADE
OF THE
COMMITTEE ON FOREIGN AFFAIRS
HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES
ONE HUNDRED THIRTEENTH CONGRESS
FIRST SESSION
__________
MAY 21, 2013
__________
Serial No. 113-72
__________
Printed for the use of the Committee on Foreign Affairs
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COMMITTEE ON FOREIGN AFFAIRS
EDWARD R. ROYCE, California, Chairman
CHRISTOPHER H. SMITH, New Jersey ELIOT L. ENGEL, New York
ILEANA ROS-LEHTINEN, Florida ENI F.H. FALEOMAVAEGA, American
DANA ROHRABACHER, California Samoa
STEVE CHABOT, Ohio BRAD SHERMAN, California
JOE WILSON, South Carolina GREGORY W. MEEKS, New York
MICHAEL T. McCAUL, Texas ALBIO SIRES, New Jersey
TED POE, Texas GERALD E. CONNOLLY, Virginia
MATT SALMON, Arizona THEODORE E. DEUTCH, Florida
TOM MARINO, Pennsylvania BRIAN HIGGINS, New York
JEFF DUNCAN, South Carolina KAREN BASS, California
ADAM KINZINGER, Illinois WILLIAM KEATING, Massachusetts
MO BROOKS, Alabama DAVID CICILLINE, Rhode Island
TOM COTTON, Arkansas ALAN GRAYSON, Florida
PAUL COOK, California JUAN VARGAS, California
GEORGE HOLDING, North Carolina BRADLEY S. SCHNEIDER, Illinois
RANDY K. WEBER SR., Texas JOSEPH P. KENNEDY III,
SCOTT PERRY, Pennsylvania Massachusetts
STEVE STOCKMAN, Texas AMI BERA, California
RON DeSANTIS, Florida ALAN S. LOWENTHAL, California
TREY RADEL, Florida GRACE MENG, New York
DOUG COLLINS, Georgia LOIS FRANKEL, Florida
MARK MEADOWS, North Carolina TULSI GABBARD, Hawaii
TED S. YOHO, Florida JOAQUIN CASTRO, Texas
LUKE MESSER, Indiana
Amy Porter, Chief of Staff Thomas Sheehy, Staff Director
Jason Steinbaum, Democratic Staff Director
------
Subcommittee on Africa, Global Health, Global Human Rights, and
International Organizations
CHRISTOPHER H. SMITH, New Jersey, Chairman
TOM MARINO, Pennsylvania KAREN BASS, California
RANDY K. WEBER SR., Texas DAVID CICILLINE, Rhode Island
STEVE STOCKMAN, Texas AMI BERA, California
MARK MEADOWS, North Carolina
Subcommittee on the Middle East and North Africa
ILEANA ROS-LEHTINEN, Florida, Chairman
STEVE CHABOT, Ohio THEODORE E. DEUTCH, Florida
JOE WILSON, South Carolina GERALD E. CONNOLLY, Virginia
ADAM KINZINGER, Illinois BRIAN HIGGINS, New York
TOM COTTON, Arkansas DAVID CICILLINE, Rhode Island
RANDY K. WEBER SR., Texas ALAN GRAYSON, Florida
RON DeSANTIS, Florida JUAN VARGAS, California
TREY RADEL, Florida BRADLEY S. SCHNEIDER, Illinois
DOUG COLLINS, Georgia JOSEPH P. KENNEDY III,
MARK MEADOWS, North Carolina Massachusetts
TED S. YOHO, Florida GRACE MENG, New York
LUKE MESSER, Indiana LOIS FRANKEL, Florida
------
Subcommittee on Terrorism, Nonproliferation, and Trade
TED POE, Texas, Chairman
JOE WILSON, South Carolina BRAD SHERMAN, California
ADAM KINZINGER, Illinois ALAN S. LOWENTHAL, California
MO BROOKS, Alabama JOAQUIN CASTRO, Texas
TOM COTTON, Arkansas JUAN VARGAS, California
PAUL COOK, California BRADLEY S. SCHNEIDER, Illinois
SCOTT PERRY, Pennsylvania JOSEPH P. KENNEDY III,
TED S. YOHO, Florida Massachusetts
C O N T E N T S
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Page
WITNESSES
The Honorable Donald Y. Yamamoto, Acting Assistant Secretary of
State, Bureau of African Affairs, U.S. Department of State..... 9
The Honorable Nancy E. Lindborg, Assistant Administrator, Bureau
for Democracy, Conflict and Humanitarian Assistance, U.S.
Agency for International Development........................... 19
Mr. Rudolph Atallah, senior fellow, Michael S. Ansari Africa
Center, Atlantic Council....................................... 37
Mima S. Nedelcovych, Ph.D., partner, Schaffer Global Group....... 57
Mr. Nii Akuetteh (former Georgetown University professor of
African
affairs)....................................................... 65
LETTERS, STATEMENTS, ETC., SUBMITTED FOR THE HEARING
The Honorable Donald Y. Yamamoto: Prepared statement............. 11
The Honorable Nancy E. Lindborg: Prepared statement.............. 21
Mr. Rudolph Atallah: Prepared statement.......................... 40
Mima S. Nedelcovych, Ph.D.: Prepared statement................... 59
Mr. Nii Akuetteh: Prepared statement............................. 67
APPENDIX
Hearing notice................................................... 90
Hearing minutes.................................................. 91
The Honorable Christopher H. Smith, a Representative in Congress
from the State of New Jersey, and chairman, Subcommittee on
Africa, Global Health, Global Human Rights, and International
Organizations:
Question for the record to the Honorable Nancy E. Lindborg..... 92
Summary of recommendations from the Corporate Council on Africa 93
Statement from Shari Berenbach of the U.S. African Development
Foundation................................................... 101
THE GROWING CRISIS IN AFRICA'S SAHEL REGION
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TUESDAY, MAY 21, 2013
House of Representatives,
Subcommittee on Africa, Global Health,
Global Human Rights, and International Organizations, and
Subcommittee on the Middle East and North Africa, and
Subcommittee on Terrorism, Nonproliferation, and Trade,
Committee on Foreign Affairs,
Washington, DC.
The committees met, pursuant to notice, at 2 o'clock p.m.,
in room 2172 Rayburn House Office Building, Hon. Christopher H.
Smith (chairman of the subcommittee) presiding.
Mr. Smith. This meeting will come to order. And good
afternoon to everyone. Today's hearing is intended to examine
the challenges faced by the nations of Africa's Sahel region,
especially the spread of both terrorism and trafficking in the
entire area. These problems alone impose a danger to the
security of both the Sahel and developed countries, not only
because of air traffic to West Africa that transits northern
Mali but also because of the use of the region as a base of
attacks by Islamic extremists on Western targets. Moreover, the
preexisting humanitarian crisis is now worsened and as are
human rights concerns. The underlying political instability is
becoming equally serious.
We are holding this hearing jointly because the threat that
we face goes beyond the jurisdiction of any one of our
subcommittees. It involves not only Africa's Sahel region but
also countries in north Africa, especially Algeria and Libya.
It also involves terrorist groups originating from and based in
nations outside of the Sahel. It is a sign of how seriously the
Committee on Foreign Affairs considers this matter that our
three subcommittees have come together to consider this today.
There are various definitions of the Sahel, but for the
purposes of this hearing, we mean the nations of Senegal,
Mauritania, Mali, Burkina Faso, Niger, and Chad.
In early 2012, the Government of Mali was overthrown, as we
all know, in a military coup and subsequently lost control of
the northern area of the country, which constitutes more than
half of its land area. Mali had long been considered a stable
example of African democracy, but, as we learned in our
subcommittee's hearing in June 2012, the coup and resulting
loss of so much territory revealed the hollowness and rot
within the Mali democratic system.
The influx of well-armed terrorist groups, broken promises
to neglected ethic groups, lack of adherence to democratic
principles, and rampant drug smuggling all made the Malian
Government vulnerable to breakdown.
We must ask now whether other countries in Africa's Sahel
region are also more vulnerable than we think. Mali provided a
staging ground for al-Qaeda in the Islamic Maghreb, or AQIM,
which is daily becoming an ever-greater threat in the region
and perhaps globally. AQIM is considered the best funded of all
al-Qaeda affiliates and, through its ties to other terrorist
groups, may be funding their activities as well.
In a July subcommittee hearing last year, we learned that
Boko Haram, in Nigeria, is not a unified organization but,
rather, various factions, some of which are focused on
embarrassing the Nigerian Government but others that have a
more global jihadist view. It is the latter that we have had
present in northern Mali and impose a threat to Western
interests, not to mention the interests of the Mali people.
Boko Haram attacks lead Nigerian President Goodluck
Jonathan, last week, to declare a state of emergency in three
northern states in his country. A radical Boko Haram splinter
group, known as Ansaru, may have attacked Nigerian troops en
route to a peacekeeping operation in Mali.
In Mali, three terrorist groups dominate the rebellion that
split off the north: MUJAO, a splinter group of AQIM; Ansar al-
Dine, an Islamic Tuareg rebel group; and the MNLA, a more
secular Tuareg group. These groups have different aims and
sometimes clash with one another. Nevertheless, they
collectively pose and continue to pose a threat to the peace of
Mali and the region.
As a result of the rebel actions in northern Mali, there
are currently more than 300,000 internally displaced persons in
Mali, more than 74,000 refugees in Mauritania, 50,000 refugees
in Niger, and nearly 50,000 refugees in Burkina Faso. The
displacement of nearly \1/2\ million Malians strains already
scare resources in the Sahel, with recipients often in remote
areas.
French forces, as we know, were able to forestall a rebel
advance in southern Mali earlier this year. And an African
military contingent is in the process of being deployed to Mali
even now. However, chasing rebels out of Mali's major northern
towns will be easier than ending ongoing terrorist attacks or
reconciling ethnic groups whose enmity has grown over the last
year.
We look forward to today's witnesses. To our two witnesses
from the administration, thank you for being here. And I will
properly introduce you in a moment, but thank you for your
leadership. It is making a huge difference.
I would like to now yield to my good friend and colleague
Ms. Bass for an opening statement.
Ms. Bass. As always, thank you, Chairman Smith, for holding
this hearing today.
I was pleased yesterday to see the formal announcement of
President Obama's upcoming visit to the continent next month.
I know we are here today to discuss the Sahel, a vast
region that stretches from the Atlantic Ocean to the Red Sea.
Each of the nations in the region experience a unique set of
challenges, which, as we know, make developing effective and
far-reaching programs extraordinarily difficult. While the
crisis in Mali was spiraling out of control, a humanitarian
crisis was underway that affected tens of millions of people
throughout the region.
The U.N.'s 2013 Sahel regional strategy amply illustrates
the immense challenge experienced by those living in the Sahel
and nations like our own, who have the resources and desire to
make a difference.
The report notes that some of the key drivers to the
humanitarian crisis include food and security, epidemic
disease, floods, locust infestation, and the continued crisis
in Mali and the displacement of populations, both internally
and those who continue to seek refuge in Mali's neighboring
countries.
With an estimated need of nearly $2 billion, CRS reports
that the U.N. consolidated appeals process will bring aid
organizations together to coordinate a response to major
humanitarian crises and disasters and appeal for funds through
a collaborative and coordinated plan.
I am pleased that Nancy Lindborg from USAID will be here to
discuss the administration's new resilience strategy, which was
launched late last year and is a promising program that I
believe will fundamentally change the way we think about
development, particularly in regions and in countries that
endure repeated cycles of shock. The resilience strategy makes
sense when you consider these key drivers to these humanitarian
crises.
While the challenges are great, there is a window of
opportunity that can be seized upon. If we work within nations
and collaborate effectively with donors, the resources
available can be used to save lives and prevent decline in the
living conditions of millions of infants, expectant mothers,
and those that require assistance of some sort.
Mr. Chairman, today and tomorrow, a delegation from Mali, a
country that has been the focus of this committee's attention,
will visit the Congress. I believe you have already had a
chance to meet with them. This delegation, led by the Speaker
of Mali's National Assembly, is here to discuss their upcoming
Presidential election, now slated for July 28th, the security
challenges that remain in the north of the country and
opportunities toward economic development, including a focus on
expanding the country's fragile infrastructure.
As members of the committee are likely aware, yesterday the
U.N. announced the appointment of a special envoy who will
assist in helping Mali regain political stability and security
in its vast north. And last week, the country was able to
secure over $4 billion in pledges from donor nations to assist
in peace and stability efforts and reconstruction of failing
infrastructure. With these important announcements and the
transition of the African-led international support mission to
a U.N. peacekeeping force, I believe these are positive steps
that will ensure a Malian future that is both peaceful and
prosperous.
I want to close by retelling a story. In late February, I
traveled to Mali to see firsthand the many efforts underway
that would return Mali to a model democracy for the region and
the continent. The CODEL that I was on included Senators Coons
and Isakson as well as Representative Sewell. We had a chance
to meet with displaced families from Timbuktu who spoke of
their desire to return to their homes. They sought to return
home, not merely because that was where they were from but
because they wanted to return home to vote. They wanted to cast
their ballots to show the world that the people from Mali
themselves seek peace, stability, and a return to normalcy. Our
nation is helping to make this a reality. And we should
continue to do so throughout the Sahel, a region that greatly
requires our attention and support.
Thank you.
Mr. Smith. Thank you very much, Ranking Member.
I would like to, before I go to Chairwoman Ros-Lehtinen,
just introduce to all assembled, Younoussi Toure, who is the
Speaker of the Malian Assembly. Thank you. You and your
delegation are very welcome to this hearing. And I appreciated
the time earlier that we had together. Thank you, Mr. Speaker.
I would like to now yield to my good friend and colleague,
the former chair of the full committee, now chair of the
Subcommittee on the Middle East and North Africa, Ileana Ros-
Lehtinen.
Ms. Ros-Lehtinen. Thank you so much, Mr. Chairman. And
thank you for your steadfast leadership for many decades on
this important topic.
We have been following the developments in this region
closely, but the growing crisis in north Africa and the Sahel
has been a largely underemphasized threat to U.S. national
security interests. For far too long, U.S. foreign policy has
been focused on fighting terrorist groups like al-Qaeda and
Afghanistan in the Middle East. Yet, we have looked away from
the serious and growing threats coming from north Africa and
the Sahel. These areas have become breeding grounds of
extremist activity as these nations face many internal
struggles, political instability from dangerous droughts that
are wiping out entire villages to food shortages, human rights
concerns, and domestic conflicts. This leaves large swaths of
land ungoverned. And their borders are porous and easy to cross
undetected.
This fragility gives these extremist groups, like al-Qaeda
in the Islamic Maghreb, AQIM, Boko Haram, Ansar al-Dine, and
others, the ability to roam freely in the most lawless region,
setting up safe havens for terrorist activities, and doing
their dirty work, kidnapping, drug trafficking, arms
trafficking. And this became evident in the fallout of the Arab
Spring as Ghadafi fell and arms and fighters from Libya spread
throughout the region.
As Secretary Clinton said when she testified before us in
January, there is no doubt that the Algerian terrorists had
weapons from Libya. There is no doubt that the remnants of AQIM
in Mali had weapons from Libya. The weak governments in north
Africa and the Sahel don't have the will nor the capacity to
confront these extremist groups. And that leaves the United
States and our interests extremely vulnerable.
The administration has yet to develop a plan or even
recognize the severity of the threat. In his push to end the
war in Afghanistan, the President justifies a withdrawal
because he believes that, as he has repeatedly stated, that we
are close to our goal of defeating al-Qaeda, that we have
decimated al-Qaeda. Yet, al-Qaeda is still as great a threat as
ever and is expanding. We see them in north Africa. We see them
in the Sahel. They are fighting in Syria. I guess they didn't
get the same memo the President received.
We have seen a disturbing alliance between drug traffickers
and these terrorist groups in the region, allowing the
terrorists to develop new resources to finance their illicit
activities while at the same time undermining those governments
and our U.S. national security interests.
Just last month, we saw a direct narcoterrorism link
between African nations and the FARC, a U.S.-designated foreign
terrorist organization. Several top figures from Guinea-
Bissau's military, including the head of its armed forces and
former head of the Navy, were arrested on cocaine and weapons
trafficking charges. Both were accused of agreeing to store
tons of cocaine and buying weapons for the FARC. These criminal
activities undermine our security in our hemisphere and provide
the financing capabilities to terrorists.
The administration needs to come to the realization that we
are a long way still from defeating al-Qaeda and its influence.
To confront these threats, we need a strategy, a strategy that
disrupts the operations of extremist networks, that denies them
safe havens, and prevents an escalation of emerging threats by
also targeting precursor conditions that foment instability.
I look forward, Mr. Chairman and Ranking Member Bass, to
our witnesses today. Thank you so much for convening this
timely hearing.
Mr. Smith. Thank you very much, Chairwoman Ros-Lehtinen.
The chair now recognizes the ranking member of the Middle East
and North Africa Subcommittee, Mr. Deutch.
Mr. Deutch. Thank you, Mr. Chairman, for holding this
hearing on an issue that, while it may not make the top
headlines on a regular basis, certainly has significant
implications on the security of the African continent and
implications for stability throughout the Middle East.
Now, the current environment in the Sahel is precarious and
worrisome. The proliferation of militant groups in the region,
many of which have ties to al-Qaeda in the Maghreb, pose
debilitating threats to a region with a history of instability.
The partnership and coordination of these radical groups can
and has turned smaller domestic disputes into full-blown
regional crises.
With service on commercial networks traversing over state
lines, the porous borders between countries allow for easy and
unregulated movement of militant groups, arms, drugs, and other
contraband that weaken nations and put populations at risk. The
conflict in Mali exemplifies the trouble that these non-state
armed groups can cause, not only to a country's security and
safety of their civilians but to the greater Sahel region as
well.
We are seeing how quickly a previously stable democratic
government can deteriorate, heading toward the likes of
Somalia. Thus far in Mali, our approach has been one of limited
engagement, bolstering French and U.N. forces with intelligence
and other forms of assistance. In the short term, intervention
was needed and the United States, supported, through the
Security Council, authorization of an international
peacekeeping force in Mali.
We have taken other steps to strengthen the security
infrastructures in the region, including through bilateral
agreement with Niger in the presence of UAV base in that
country, but this should only be one step in our development of
what I hope is a broader, more comprehensive approach to
dealing with the instability and violent extremism in the
region.
To combat these and other armed groups and to reduce
further threats to regional and international security, we must
join with our partners in Maghreb to enhance cooperation and
prevent the spread of extremism and the flow of arms to the
Sahel. We must create and implement the comprehensive and a
multifaceted plan. We must consider what preemptory and
preventative steps we can take to address the structural issues
found across the region. Strengthening a country's essential
institutions can help prevent any need for future military use.
There are a number of regional challenges that are widespread
and interlinked, from severe institutional underdevelopment,
punishing socioeconomic conditions, high levels of poverty, and
other troubling indicators that I am sure will be the focus of
today's testimony.
The problems we are witnessing are long-term challenges to
the region. I am concerned that they may only be setting the
scene for additional crises in the future. There must be
greater international attention placed on the Sahel. That is
what we are doing today.
I appreciate your holding this hearing, Mr. Chairman. I
look forward to hearing from the witnesses. I yield back.
Mr. Smith. Thank you very much, Mr. Deutch.
I now recognize the chairman of the Terrorism,
Nonproliferation, and Trade Subcommittee, Ted Poe of Texas.
Mr. Poe. Thank you, Mr. Chairman.
Since 2012, a coup in Mali, and the 2011 overthrow of
Ghadafi in Libya, the security in the Sahel has gotten worse,
not better. At a time when the United States, as it is said by
the administration, pivots to the East, we cannot leave behind
our obligation to the continent of Africa.
Some might think that this is not a problem for the United
States, but they are wrong. Most Americans, many Americans,
shall I say, never heard of Mali until this crisis. They
thought it was an island in the south Pacific. But what happens
in the Sahel is directly related to our regional interests and
security here at home. The prevention of an attack on our
homeland and on our Western allies by radical Islamic
extremists is a challenge and will be for the foreseeable
future.
In the Sahel, al-Qaeda in the Islamic Maghreb, or AQIM,
appears to be taking advantage of the chaos. That is what
terrorist groups do. In January, thousands of French troops,
along with local allied fighters, had to launch a military
offensive because terrorists had taken over part of Mali, which
is about the size of Texas. I want to commend the French for
their efficiency and their quick response.
Recently the French announced that they will keep 1,000
troops in Mali for the foreseeable future to consolidate the
gains and keep al-Qaeda on its back foot.
Recognizing the scope of this challenge, the United States
has begun training African forces in neighboring Niger to fight
in Mali. The United States only has about 1,800 troops in all
of Africa, but 4,000 more are on the way to train African
forces.
Due north in Algeria, al-Qaeda has brigades of radical
killers aided by their brothers in Tunisia. Fortunately, the
Algerian National Popular Army is doing its best to fight al-
Qaeda.
The seriousness of the situation in Algeria hit home with
us after the extremists attacked a gas plant on the border of
Algeria and Libya. AQIM-linked terrorists wanted to seize the
plant in the hopes of creating a massive explosion and killing
everyone in the area. Fortunately, they were unsuccessful but
not before gunfights and the follow-up rescue mission resulted
in the death of plant workers from nine different countries.
Three of those killed were Americans, two of them being Texans.
And one of them was my constituent, Victor Lovelady from
Atascocita, Texas. He was an energy worker, and he was killed,
not just because of what he did but because of who he was. He
was killed because he was an American.
A radical Islamic al-Qaeda group by the name of the
Signatories in Blood--what a lovely name that is--claimed
responsibility for this terrorist attack. They are a spinoff of
AQIM. And they seek to destroy us and kill us indiscriminately.
This is the real world. This is not a fiction story.
We have asked the Algerian Government for Victor Lovelady's
personal effects, but we haven't gotten them back yet.
We have learned from the past couple of years that we are
not good at predicting threats. I hope we can better understand
today the nature of the terrorist threat in the Sahel and
policy options available to us.
I look forward to the testimony of our witnesses.
Mr. Smith. Thank you, Chairman Poe.
I now yield to the ranking member, Brad Sherman, from
California.
Mr. Sherman. Thank you.
Several groups have rebelled against the central Malian
Government for independence in northern Mali just in the last
1\1/2\ years. The Tuareg tribes in northern Mali have had major
socioeconomic and political grievances against the Bamako
government and have rebelled in the past.
Ghadafi supported this movement. And many Tuaregs fought
for Colonel Ghadafi as he struggled to stay in power. Before
returning to Mali, Tuaregs took a large amount of sophisticated
weapons with them, including a huge number of surface-to-air
missiles looted from Libyan weapons depots. The Libyan weapons
reinvigorated a longstanding rebellion and expanded it into a
major conflict.
We should learn from this lesson as we look at Syria. The
outcome in Syria is important to us. The outflow of weapons
from Syria may turn out to be even more important.
Returning to looking at Mali in the Sahel, we should note
that the MNLA, the National Movement for Liberation of Azawad,
is fighting to create an independent country that would have
less than 1 million people as far as we can tell and would
include only half Tuaregs in the Sahel region. This seems to be
an unrealistic objective from so many standpoints, including
the world's general consensus that the borders in Africa are
inviolate and that messing around with those borders could only
lead to huge numbers of conflicts.
The MNLA was initially backed by Ansar al-Dine, the
extremist Islamic group. Then that group and smaller Islamic
groups began imposing a harsh version of Sharia law in some
areas. Many of these extremist Islamists are foreign jihadist
fighters. By July of last year, the MNLA had a falling out with
the Islamic groups over their vision for the future of northern
Mali. Ansar al-Dine and the other Islamic groups seemed to have
the upper hand. And then France intervened, as we all know, in
July 2012 to beat back the advance on Mali's central
government. And France has deployed thousands of troops with
the aid of the United States, both in terms of aerial refueling
missions, drones, other logistical support.
Among the questions raised there, is the Malian Government
capable of defending itself and its territorial integrity? And
for how long will it need French assistance to do that?
We are still haunted by Colonel Ghadafi's legacy. We are
facing the consequences of the arms leaving Libya. What can be
done to both continue to contain weapons in Libya, which is
still not a stable country, as recent events or relatively
recent events in Benghazi illustrated? What can we do to make
sure that we don't have more outflows of weapons from Libya?
We need to examine the role of Saudi and Gulf states and
well-connected, wealthy individuals operating with the tacit
support of their governments in funding Islamic extremists in
the Sahel and elsewhere. We need to ask what can be done to
stop drug smuggling in the Sahel. And how big a problem is
that? And who is earning the profits? And what are those
profits funding?
And we need to ask whether the Tuareg have legitimate
concerns and what can be done to meet those legitimate concerns
without profiting the bad actors that have been operating in
northern Mali.
We have a lot to learn. We have some excellent witnesses.
And I yield back.
Mr. Smith. Thank you very much, Mr. Chairman.
We welcome back Ambassador Yamamoto, Donald Yamamoto, who
is no stranger to the Africa Subcommittee having testified
several times before. He is Acting Assistant Secretary of State
for African Affairs, having served since 2009 as the Principal
Deputy Assistant Secretary for the Bureau of African Affairs at
the U.S. Department of State. His distinguished career has
included serving as U.S. Ambassador to Ethiopia from November
2006 to July 2009 and as a Deputy Assistant Secretary of State
in the Bureau of African Affairs from 2003 to 2006.
We will then hear from Nancy Lindborg, who has testified
before our subcommittee on the Eastern African famine. She is
the Assistant Administrator for the Bureau for Democracy,
Conflict, and Humanitarian Assistance at USAID. She previously
spent 14 years as President of Mercy Corps, where she focused
on international development.
During her time with Mercy Corps, she also served in a
number of positions where she worked on issues relating to
foreign relations and foreign assistance and, again, like
Ambassador Yamamoto, has a very distinguished background.
Ambassador Yamamoto?
STATEMENT OF THE HONORABLE DONALD Y. YAMAMOTO, ACTING ASSISTANT
SECRETARY OF STATE, BUREAU OF AFRICAN AFFAIRS, U.S. DEPARTMENT
OF STATE
Ambassador Yamamoto. Thank you very much for your
graciousness.
And I submit a longer version for the record.
Mr. Smith. Without objection, it will be a part of the
record.
Ambassador Yamamoto. Thank you, Chairman Smith, Ros-
Lehtinen, and Poe, and Ranking Members Bass, Deutch, Sherman,
and the other members of this committee, for the opportunity to
testify to you today.
The countries of the Sahel face a complex series of
interconnected and ever-evolving challenges. The 80 million
people of the Sahel, representing roughly 10 percent of the
sub-Saharan Africa's total population live in some of the
world's poorest countries, which consistently rank at the
bottom of any human development scale.
The security vacuum following the Libyan revolution and the
crisis in Mali exacerbated the Sahel's longstanding political,
economic security and humanitarian vulnerabilities. Instability
in Mali and increased arms flow from Libya into the region also
collided with a humanitarian crisis brought on by drought, poor
harvests in the region already burdened by chronic poverty and
food insecurity.
Addressing the Sahel's many challenges demands a
comprehensive approach. We are working closely with regional
countries and organizations to improve their capacity to secure
porous borders and challenge terrorists and transnational
criminal networks.
The Trans-Sahara Counterterrorism Partnership, TSCTP, is
the United States' primary vehicle to assist countries in the
region to improve the counterterrorism capacity capability and
capacity to control border areas. Algeria, Burkina Faso,
Mauritania, and Chad are currently using training and equipment
provided under TSCTP to contain the threat of AQIM and other
extremist groups.
Sahel countries have played an active role in supporting
the French and African-led military intervention that has
pushed extremists back into the isolated areas in northern
Mali. Chad's role in Mali has been significant. Burkina Faso
and Niger have also each contributed around 670 soldiers to the
African-led International Support Mission in Mali, AFISMA.
The United States is in the process of providing up to $96
million to support AFISMA troop and police-contributing
countries, including Niger and Burkina Faso. Improving security
in the Sahel, however, requires more than counterterrorism
responses. The acute security and humanitarian challenges
facing the Sahel today demand a robust international response.
Our short-term successes may be fleeting if we fail to
address the longstanding political and economic fragility and
render the Sahel susceptible to crisis and conflict. Poor
governance, weak democratic institutions, and a lack of
development and economic opportunities cultivate fertile ground
for instability. Improving governance, strengthening democratic
institutions, and increasing economic opportunities,
particularly for the young, therefore, are central to improving
Sahel's prospects for long-term stability and security. This is
recited in the U.N. Security Council resolution 2100, which
articulates a comprehensive approach to addressing the
multifaceted problems facing Mali. And this is also to a
conference that my colleague and I attended in Brussels to
address this issue.
While Mali and the Sahel remain extremely vulnerable, there
are signs of progress. Niger, for instance, has achieved
remarkable political and economic reforms since returning to
democracy after the 2010 coup.
Mali is also moving forward. The United States cosponsored
resolution 2100 and joins the international community in
supporting Mali's plan to hold Presidential elections in July.
The creation of a Malian Peace and Reconciliation Commission
signifies another important step forward. Elections and
national reconciliations are crucial in setting Mali back on
the path toward peace and security.
And so, with this, I welcome your questions.
[The prepared statement of Mr. Yamamoto follows:]
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Mr. Smith. Ambassador Yamamoto, thank you very much.
Ms. Lindborg?
Ms. Lindborg. Thank you.
STATEMENT OF THE HONORABLE NANCY E. LINDBORG, ASSISTANT
ADMINISTRATOR, BUREAU FOR DEMOCRACY, CONFLICT AND HUMANITARIAN
ASSISTANCE, U.S. AGENCY FOR INTERNATIONAL DEVELOPMENT
Ms. Lindborg. Good afternoon. Thank you, Chairman Smith,
Ranking Member Bass, and members of the other subcommittee
leadership: Ros-Lehtinen, Poe, Deutch, and Sherman. Thank you
for assembling us today for this important topic.
As Acting Assistant Secretary Yamamoto noted, he and I were
at a conference in Brussels last week, where 80 nations came
together to support Mali, which is an important development.
During that event, President Traore of Mali noted how grateful
he was for the international support and the fact that terror
had abated. And he commended us to address the root causes of
this crisis, with good governance as the priority. And his
comments, as many of you understood, really addressed the
complex challenges that fact the Sahel, where we have
insecurity, weak governance, chronic underdevelopment that
combine to result in great vulnerabilities to drought, to
conflict, to terrorism. And these vulnerabilities have kept
millions in the Sahel in a state of poverty and perpetual
humanitarian crisis.
I have visited four countries in the Sahel since the Fall
of 2011. Without question, there are bright spots. In Senegal,
with the peaceful transfer of power in their last elections,
women attained 43 percent of the parliamentary seats. A
civilian energetic government in Niger that has withstood the
recent pressures, remarkable farmer-led regreening efforts in
Niger and Burkina Faso. However, the challenges in this highly
complicated region have humanitarian and security implications
that, as you have noticed, we absolutely must stay focused on.
So four ways that USAID is tackling these challenges:
First, continued humanitarian assistance, life-saving for a
region that is buffeted by continual shock. In 2012, the third
drought hit the Sahel in less than a decade. It affected 18.7
million people, 8 million people were in need of emergency food
assistance.
Thanks to the early warning systems that we have invested
in for the past several decades, we saw signs of this drought
as early as the Fall of 2011. We were able to move in
prepositioned assistance and I believe forestall a much worse
crisis.
However, as that drought was coming forward, the conflict
worsened in northern Mali. Malians fled to the south and across
borders to communities that were already stretched by drought.
In 2012 and 2013, we have provided over $550 million in
humanitarian assistance to the drought-affected and conflict-
affected families. And this brings me to our second area of
focus, which is building resilience.
Even in the best of times, the Sahel has high malnutrition.
And shock after shock keeps millions in perpetual crisis. We
know that these will continue to happen. And what used to be
10-year cycles of drought are now every other year. Galvanized
by the Horn drought, followed by the Sahel drought, we have
launched a resilience agenda, with the goal of reducing chronic
crisis because of chronic poverty. We are working with
international development partners to get ahead of the crisis
and enable families and communities to weather these shocks
more effectively. We have increased our team in the Sahel. And
we have our development and humanitarian teams working together
to design joint programs.
Our third area of focus is governance. This is fundamental
to stability, to sustaining our resilience and our development
gains, and to withstanding the inevitable shocks. The March
2012 coup in Mali vividly illustrates this.
Going forward, legitimacy will be essential for the
sustainability of any democratic transition. We are working in
Mali to support this return to democracy, as we are working to
support and consolidate democracies in Niger and Nigeria and
elsewhere in the region.
Assistant Secretary Yamamoto has spoken about our efforts
to counter violent extremism. And we continue to work as part
of the interagency on the interagency Trans-Sahara
Counterterrorism Partnership to complement our relief,
resilience, and development efforts.
None of these shocks will be defeated overnight. And the
heart of progress will be legitimate accountable democratic
governance. This is vital to ensuring that we have an
alternative to extremism and to protecting precious development
gains in the face of inevitable shocks for our own national and
economic security and for the people of the Sahel who have
already endured so much.
Thank you very much.
[The prepared statement of Ms. Lindborg follows:]
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----------
Mr. Smith. Ms. Lindborg, thank you very much for your
testimony. And, without objection, your full statement will
also be made a part of the record.
We do have three votes on the floor. I thought I would ask
some questions and then we would go into a brief recess. Then
we will come right back and go to the other members for their
questions if that is okay.
Let me just ask first, earlier today, as I mentioned, I had
a very good meeting with Malian Speaker Toure, who is obviously
the former Prime Minister as well. And we spoke about a number
of issues, including the challenges of the July election. And I
wonder if you might just speak to whether or not that election
can occur in a way that would be free, fair, and inclusive.
We also talked about malaria. I chaired a hearing just a
few days ago with Admiral Ziemer. We had Mark Dybul, who now is
Executive Director of the Global Fund, who told us that we are
at a tipping point. There is a lack of bed nets, despite the
best efforts of the international community, including the
United States, and that the nets do not last forever. You know,
once they are 2 to 3 years old, they have to be replaced. When
there is a crisis like we have seen in Mali, infectious
diseases and parasites are also opportunistic and could gain a
foothold.
I wonder, Ms. Lindborg especially, if you could speak to
that? You spoke eloquently to the hunger issue. Maybe you could
elaborate a bit on what the issues are, the challenges of
malaria and other infectious diseases.
We also had just a few days before that with Dr. Frieden,
who talked about multi-drug resistance and resistance in
general. You talked about the resiliency efforts. Well,
resistance is something we are all concerned about when
antibiotics fail to do their magic. So if you could speak to
those issues, I would appreciate it.
Ms. Lindborg. Sure. First of all, for the July elections,
we are working very closely with international partners and
certainly with the Malians to do two things. First is support a
reconciliation approach. One of the issues is addressing the
fact that so many Malians felt disenfranchised and not a part
of the overall conversation.
We are supporting both that national reconciliation
approach as well as support for the mechanics of the election.
Clearly one of the important issues is ensuring that the many
refugees and IDPs, internally displaced people, have an
opportunity to vote. And UNDP along with UNHCR are very much
focused on ensuring that there are those kinds of more
inclusive registration approaches.
There are two parts to the election. One is the
Presidential, which is scheduled for July 28th. And it is
unclear whether the legislative elections will be able to be
held then or scheduled for later in the fall. It is critical
that Mali have the elections as a means of returning to its
democratic roots and taking a pathway forward.
On your second question about malaria, this is critical.
You are absolutely right in that, even as we look at very high
malnutrition rates, at the height of the drought, the largest
killer of children under five in Burkina Faso was malaria. For
that reason, as part of the resilience agenda--and it is a
little bit like your three subcommittees coming together--we
have brought together across sectors our teams in USAID to put
together a more comprehensive, focused approach that includes
our efforts to combat malaria and our family-planning
approaches and our food insecurity approaches together so that
we are able to address some of the root causes across the
sectors and have a more potent and effective approach to, even
as we save lives, setting the pathway to development.
Infectious diseases are always of concern when you are
moving into emergency. And a lot of our efforts, in addition to
our health programming, are also in water sanitation.
And the final piece is that, in addition to the bed nets,
it is the behavioral change that is so important, which is why
you want to package these together.
Mr. Smith. Was the Brussels conference a success?
Ms. Lindborg. It was----
Mr. Smith. Go ahead. Please. I am sorry.
Ms. Lindborg. It was very successful in that it both raised
a lot of money, it kept the attention of the issue with the top
of international attention. And there was a combined agreement
among most of the nations there that it was imperative for Mali
to return to its democratic roots and to have national
reconciliation as key to moving forward.
Mr. Smith. We are almost out of time, but just if you could
spend a moment on the State Department-led, pan-Sahel
initiative charged with detecting and responding to suspicious
movement? Has it worked? Are we happy with the coordination?
And the other point, just like these committees coming
across lines, I know that the State Department is looking to do
so because there is a split in terms of jurisdiction. Is the
coordination much improved in your opinion? And what might we
expect in terms of new initiatives?
Ambassador Yamamoto. Yes. As far as the coordination
between not only the interagencies but also with the
governments involved in the Sahel, it has been very cooperative
and focused on really clear common agendas and themes.
And then one last step, going back to the elections in
Mali, I think the elections in Mali would be critical to
establishing and moving forward on the whole wide range of
issues because by going into democracy issues, we can address
the other issues; in other words, release our funding and
assistance which have been held up by the sanctions of 7008.
But more important is that it is part of the linchpin of
the other crises that we must address, which is the
humanitarian crisis, the reconciliation in the north, and also
the conflict with the extremists.
Mr. Smith. Ms. Bass?
Ms. Bass. Yes. I know we are getting ready to break to go
to votes, but I just wanted to begin my questioning. And I can
finish it when we come back.
I wanted to know if you could briefly discuss the role that
AFRICOM may be planning to secure the areas. And if you don't
have time to finish, we can finish when I get back.
Ambassador Yamamoto. You know, I defer to the DoD
colleagues on AFRICOM, but, just shortly, in the Mali context,
what AFRICOM and DoD are not only the refueling for French
aircraft but also intelligence sharing, which we are doing
multi-agency.
And the other issue is providing strategic lift within the
region to help some of the 15 African countries who are
participating in AFISMA go into Mali to provide security
assistance.
Mr. Smith. The subcommittee stands in brief recess, subject
to the call of the chair. I do apologize to our witnesses for
the delay.
[Brief recess.]
Ms. Bass. Thank you very much. And sorry you had to wait,
but we are through with votes now. We won't be interrupted
again.
I know as I was running back and forth to my other hearing,
that you mentioned the conference in Brussels. I wanted to know
if you could describe the character of the conference and what
new information may assist our committees.
And then I know it was reported that over $4 billion was
pledged at the conference. I wanted to know how much was the
U.S.'s contribution and what stipulations were made to ensure
that Mali takes appropriate steps to hold elections.
Ms. Lindborg. Hi. Thank you.
You know, it was very important that 80 nations came
together at that moment to signal support for Mali. The funding
that was raised is not all new money, I think, as the French
noted. It includes money that is already in play. It also
includes money that will be forthcoming from a variety of
countries based on benchmarks achieved by Mali. But what is
essential is that it provide that immediate assistance right
now, especially as Mali moves forward to address national
reconciliation in elections.
We announced $32 million of new money that is primarily for
humanitarian assistance and for specifically the refugees. But
we also noted the funds that we have already put toward Mali,
which includes the $550 million of humanitarian assistance
regionally and of that $7 million of democracy rights and
governance support specifically for Mali and our funding for
health programs and, specific to Mali, humanitarian.
So I think that it was a very positive conference. We
commended the French and the Europeans for hosting it. And we
look forward to working with the international community on
what is a very important, and it won't be easy, road to bring
Mali back to democracy.
Ms. Bass. Well, you know, I wondered when we were there in
February and had met with the President and asked him how he
was going to be able to hold elections with a couple of hundred
thousand people displaced. And maybe you could respond to that,
you know, whether there is the capacity to do that, how it will
be done, who will be monitoring.
Ambassador Yamamoto. Thank you.
Let me just start with a couple of points and turn to my
colleague. The issue is that registration in the north, as you
know, in the last election was about 36-37 percent of the
people voting in 2007. And for credible elections to take
place, you really need to have the registration of the minority
groups, ethnic groups up in the north: The Tuaregs, the
Songhais, and the Arab groups.
Nancy Lindborg and I talked to President Issoufou of Niger.
And we said that we would like to work for it and registering
the refugees. There were about 400,000 who are internally
displaced or in refugee camps. And so registering them, we
figured that we can probably get to those magical numbers and
to make it a reasonably credible election.
The French are also working in Kidal. So, therefore, you
can have registration of groups in that area.
It is not the cleanest. It is messy. But at least we need
to work for it. The elections are critical. The elections would
be critical in holding because from there, we can do the other
things that we need to do.
Ms. Bass. And you referred to the internally displaced.
Ambassador Yamamoto. That is right.
Ms. Bass. The externally displaced?
Ambassador Yamamoto. Like Tunisia, Mauritania, Chad, to
register them as well in the refugee camps.
Do you want to add?
Ms. Lindborg. I would just simply add that USAID with our
efforts to provide election support is very focused on ways to
include the internally displaced populations. There are a
number of measures underway, including outreach, information
campaigns. There will be a need, as you probably heard when you
were there, to continue to augment the capacities of the
Elections Commission.
There is a proposal to introduce biometric identification.
And all of these measures we strongly believe must be
accompanied by a reconciliation campaign, that there is that
opportunity for dialogue so that people trust the elections and
enable them to feel compelled. So there is both the mechanics
of it and then the communications campaign and ways to make it
a more inclusive, legitimate process.
Ms. Bass. And could you speak some about USAID's
humanitarian efforts in the greater Sahel?
Ms. Lindborg. Sure. You know, as I noted in my comments, we
started in 2011, in the fall, with efforts to provide
humanitarian assistance to the drought and doing so in a way
that lay the foundation for greater resilience, even as we
saved lives, overlay by all this displacement. So we have both
the ongoing efforts to address the drought.
And one thing we kept in mind is that in the north, there
was only ever 10 percent of the population that was in need.
And in Mali, the greater need always was in the south with the
food insecurity just in terms of proportion.
So the resilience agenda is giving us a way to address
that, even as we look at ensuring we reach those populations in
the north that are coming out of, really, a reign of terror
over the last year.
Mr. Smith. Mr. Weber, the gentleman from Texas?
Mr. Weber. Thank you, Mr. Chairman.
I guess this question is for Ms. Lindborg. Am I saying that
right? Are we able to identify a lot of the countries in the
Sahel that are going to be U.S.-friendly, for example? And if
they are coming out of a background, terror, for example, how
do we identify them and get the word out that we want to help
them become stable economies, stable governments? Are we able
to identify a list and then prioritize that list so that we can
begin to work in the ones that need the most priority firstest?
Is that a word?
Ms. Lindborg. Let me start. And I may ask my colleague if
he wants to jump in on that.
Mr. Weber. Okay.
Ms. Lindborg. But our humanitarian assistance is provided
on the basis of need. And we work directly with communities in
need, not through the governments. Our development assistance
is very much about working in ways that create more
accountable, more transparent, and more inclusive democracies,
even as we invest also in health and agricultural programs.
In the Sahel, there are a range of governments. And there
is a range of ways in which we are providing support to
strengthen both our democracies but also investments in their
economic and social indicators.
Mr. Weber. Without going through the list and counting the
countries, is it seven, ten, twelve?
Ms. Lindborg. We have development programs and development
missions primarily in Senegal. And of that spine of countries,
we did in Mali. As Assistant Secretary Yamamoto said, the
development activities are suspended until the return to the
democratic roots of Mali.
We are increasing our programming in Burkina Faso and in
Niger. And in Chad, we have primarily just humanitarian
assistance, as is the case in Mauritania.
Mr. Weber. Is there another country that you will identify
that is probably going to need our help next; in other words,
developing events, where you could say, ``On a timeline basis,
we are going to be here next''?
Ms. Lindborg. You know, one of the problems with the Sahel
is that it is chronically underdeveloped. And you could argue
that it could absorb significant new development investments
across the whole region. That is one of the reasons that we
have partnered very closely with the European Union in an
organization called AGIR, the Alliance for Global Investments
in Resilience because we know that we need to partner to
leverage the investments that everybody brings to the table,
both to build resilience and improve more inclusive governance
at all levels, local level, national, and regional.
Mr. Weber. Okay. Did you want to weigh in, Mr. Yamamoto?
Ambassador Yamamoto. I guess just a general comment is that
not only coordinating with the other organizations because this
is not only a U.S. issue. It involves the regional states but
also the diaspora. You know, you were mentioning how many
countries are like the United States. You know, we did a survey
about, you know, 70 percent of Africans like the United States.
And why is that? Because we didn't have the colonial baggage,
but more importantly is you have a large----
Mr. Weber. You said 70 percent?
Ambassador Yamamoto. 70 percent.
Mr. Weber. Okay.
Ambassador Yamamoto. You have a large diaspora in the
United States who provide assistance and support. And that is
also another group that we can rely on to help engage and try
to resolve problems in Africa.
Mr. Weber. Okay. Thank you, Mr. Chairman. I yield back.
Mr. Smith. Thank you very much.
Mr. Cotton?
Mr. Cotton. Thank you, Mr. Chairman.
Mr. Yamamoto, I would like to ask a couple of questions
about Mali and its implications. I am new to Congress, but when
I saw the news in 2012 the Mali Government was struggling, that
it might fall and France had to intervene, I found that to be
somewhat surprising. I thought Mali was one of the more stable
examples of a Sahel country. So I would like to know, one--do
you share that assessment, first? Second, if so, what do you
think we got wrong in our assessment? What did we miss in
thinking that it was one of the better examples of stability in
the region? And, third, how does that assessment bear on what
other countries might face similar instability?
Ambassador Yamamoto. Let me take a first crack and then
turn to my colleague. I think the issue is, you know, you look
at these democratic countries or democratic-leaning countries.
This year it is fragility of institutions within these
countries. Mali is a very democratic country, where the
institutions were very fragile. And so when you say, ``Where
did we fail?'' I think the issue is not so much the failure. I
think what you look at is there is a lot of number of issue. In
other words, you had the influx of extremists coming into the
area. You have the rise of the Tuareg rebellion. You have
missed cues and missed plays by the government in making a
military operation in the north, rather than dialogue as some
of their main input into trying to reach out to these ethnic
groups.
And so there is a combination of problems within these
countries. What we are trying to do right now is stabilize it
to first return democratic values and good governance to make
the governments accountable to the people. And second is to
address the terrible humanitarian crisis of 400,000 displaced.
The other issue is to promote a dialogue with the government
with all of the ethnic groups and tribal groups. And the final
point is to address the issue of extremism. So that is the kind
of thing.
Do you have anything you want to add?
Ms. Lindborg. I would just underscore that any time you
have marginalized populations, even if you have successful
democratic elections, if you do not address those grievances,
you are setting the stage for longer-term problems and the
possibility of the kind of conflict that broke out. And we see
this country after country. And it speaks to the importance of
having an inclusive and very legitimate democracy, not just
elections.
Mr. Cotton. I believe that other countries in the region
are expected to contribute peacekeeping forces for Mali. I know
that Mali right now is the center of counterterrorist
operations in the region. Is there a concern on your part that
the peacekeeping forces from those other countries could weaken
their defenses and encourage Islamic jihadists to move out of
Mali and into neighboring countries?
Ambassador Yamamoto. That is a very good point. They right
now are speaking with the commander for the AFISMA, the African
troops. In AFRICOM, you know, we have 15 countries, which speak
3 different foreign languages. And the capacity and capability
is very different from each troop but because these countries
are committed to stability in Mali, because it is not only for
Mali but for the stability of the region.
So are these countries also facing problems? Of course,
they are, not only from extremist operations but also
internally from weak institutions, fragility. And so by them
coordinating and developing and providing assistance in troops
to the Mali operation, that speaks volumes of their commitment,
not only to Mali but also to their own defense as well.
I think it is going to take time. It is going to take a lot
of effort. But we wanted to emphasize that this has to really
be an African-led, African-managed operation because ultimately
they bear the full responsibility for what happens in that
area.
Mr. Cotton. When France intervened, they took the lead, but
the United States very promptly had to provide assets like
strategic airlifts, refueling, intelligence surveillance,
reconnaissance. I am aware of those things as an ex-soldier.
Are there other kinds of critical assistance that the
United States Government provided to either the French or to
the Mali Government that we should have in mind as we look at
the possibility of having to intervene to support
counterterrorist operations elsewhere in the region?
Ambassador Yamamoto. I defer to my DoD colleagues, but on
the French side, of course, we did the presidential draw-down
authority. So, in other words, we had the $19 million total for
the fuel, for the aircraft, and then intelligence we collected.
And the other thing is to provide lift for the equipment into
the area but also for helping for lift of some of the African
troops into Mali.
As far as doing military operations or other things for the
Malian Government, you would have to go to the DoD side, but
what we are trying to do is make sure that AFISMA and the
troops there have the equipment they need and the support,
logistical support, and also we are going to continue to
contribute so they can develop a command and control center,
coordinate and integrate all of these troops and have good
interoperability. I think that would be critical.
Mr. Cotton. Thank you.
Mr. Smith. Mr. Cotton, thank you very much.
I just want to observe that Speaker Toure is still here,
the Speaker of the Malian Parliament, the former Prime
Minister. And I would just say, Mr. Speaker, Tom Cotton, who
just asked the questions, one of the greatest things about our
committee and, really, our Congress is the diversity of
backgrounds. Tom spent 5 years on active duty. He is a graduate
of Harvard Law School. So he combines those disciplines. And he
was deployed twice to Afghanistan and to Iraq. So he asks
questions that are relative to military issues, as do other
members, all of whom have come here with a great deal of
background sometimes.
Thank you.
Mr. Cotton. And I did join the Army after having gone to
law school and practiced law, which may affect the depth of my
legal skill and knowledge.
Mr. Smith. That is great. Thank you, Tom.
Mr. Cook?
Mr. Cook. Thank you very much, Mr. Chair.
I have to apologize for my voice. I have laryngitis. I
haven't been giving a lot of speeches, obviously.
But I just wanted to go back to your comment about the
popularity of Americans, which I think obviously was a shock to
a lot of people here. And I appreciate you explaining why. Now,
how we could take advantage of that--and I think you already
answered the question in terms of, you know, support those
activities, just the geography of the region there with so many
different countries and the different languages and ethnic
groups and how some type of--whether it is the African Union or
some type of loose federation of African states, what is the
glue, the common denominator? Because I agree with you. I think
that is the only way. You know, Africa governed and the chances
made by Africa's outside interlopers are not going to do it,
but I think we have the opportunity to help something like
that.
I think what I am looking for is some kind of common
denominator to enable something like that, where it is just
very hard for me when I look at a map and you look at the
different countries and just remember some of the countries,
Ouagadougou, the capitals. And what was it? Nouakchott that was
the capital of Mauritania and very, very difficult. Most
Americans don't understand it and particularly looking at a
map.
And then I wonder if you might have any--if you could
elaborate on what kind of denominators that we think are most
successful for the Americans to have an impact in that area.
Ambassador Yamamoto. I think each and every day, the United
States has a tremendous impact, not only from the agencies but
from American industry. I mean, here today, we have NGO groups,
faith-based groups doing a lot of work in Africa and doing good
work.
I think one of the things that you raise as a very
important issue is, how do you bring all of these countries
together? The African Union is one forum. You know, we assigned
an American Ambassador to the African Union several years ago.
Other countries have followed suit. We are trying to build
capacity and capability. And then we are looking at the
subregional groups, such as ECOWAS in the West, CEEAC in the
central, SADC in the South. You have got all of these different
organizations and regional groups.
And I think to build capacity, to build the ability to
coordinate, and to face challenges on their own, that really is
kind of the golden objective we are trying to do.
And I think the careful coordination between these
organizations and the good will that we have with these groups,
I think we are looking at I think successes now. And they can
multiply in the future.
And so I think the--not only American foreign assistance
but mainly American good will. Look what the United States does
today. We brought in justices recently to look at the American
system. That really helped influence how they view, how justice
and law and the ability to talk with you, sir, and the chairman
on how the Parliaments and the Congresses should work and
operate. That also helps to promote good governance.
But I will turn to my colleague from USAID.
Ms. Lindborg. You know, when I was in Senegal shortly after
their Parliamentary elections, I met with a group of women who
were ecstatic because 43 percent of the new Parliamentarians
were women. And I was congratulating them. And one woman looked
at me and said, ``You know, this didn't happen overnight. We
have been working on this for 25 years. And it has been with
extraordinary help from the American public.''
I say that to illustrate two things: 1) that progress is
possible; and, 2) that it is going to take a while. But it is
about helping countries, communities, civil society, private
sector feel an ownership stake in the future of their country,
and supporting their pathway forward. And we are seeing, as I
noted, bright spots. Niger has an extraordinary program called
the Nigerieus Nourish Nigeriens that is a very energetic
comprehensive look at how to create greater economic
opportunities for their people. And it is when people feel
included in that future and understand the support that the
United States is providing for that that you work on both of
those fronts.
And the U.S. has been a tremendous partner for support for
Africa that I think is borne out by these public opinion polls.
Mr. Smith. Two very brief questions. One, when it comes to
inclusion in partners, are we including the faith-based groups?
And to what extent? If you could maybe say a word or two and
then provide a breakout, if you will, a spreadsheet?
And, secondly, we have 300,000 IDPs and, of course, what,
150,000-plus refugees. I know we are working hand in glove with
the UNHCR and other friends, but what is the unmet need when it
comes to those IDPs and refugees? Is there a dollar amount that
could be affixed to what that need is and maybe a breakout as
to what the commodities are and other kinds of items that are
now missing?
Ms. Lindborg. Well, first of all, we have wonderful faith-
based partners throughout the region. And the importance of
those groups is that they have been there through thick and
thin working at the community level. And we are honored to have
them as partners and be delighted to provide you a breakout of
who is doing what where. It is an impressive list. And we are
through that able to leverage the generosity of the American
public, which provides private support through these groups as
well so that we are able to greatly increase the overall
assistance that we provide. It is part of the American
generosity.
On the needs of the IDPs and the refugees, there is a new
U.N. appeal for 2013 of $410 million. And I am delighted to
provide the committee a breakout of what that goes to, what has
come in, both from the U.S. and from other donors.
Mr. Smith. What is our contribution to that $410 million
appeal?
Ms. Lindborg. Our contribution to date just for Mali,
refugees and IDPs, is $181 million, just over. And so there are
both ongoing needs for just essential----
Mr. Smith. Is that the same thing? The $410 million appeal
is also the Mali aid or is that different?
Ms. Lindborg. Right. That is just Mali.
Mr. Smith. That is just Mali.
Ms. Lindborg. That is just Mali. And so it is both ongoing
needs.
Mr. Smith. Okay.
Ms. Lindborg. It is also we have been very focused on
ensuring that the impact on drought-affected communities is
addressed as well because many of them have gone to stay with
communities that are already deeply stressed from the drought.
Mr. Smith. Now, in terms of the assistance, I was part of a
launch with seven African first ladies 2 years ago. You might
recall it very well, the First 1,000 Days Initiative, from
conception to the second birthday. How well are we doing in the
Sahel region with regards to backing up that unbelievably
important first 1,000 days of life? Because if you get that
right, of course, you are more apt to get the rest of it right
too.
Ms. Lindborg. Yes. You are absolutely right. That is
critical. And we have increased our focus on nutrition during
those first 1,000 days. And one of the most important things we
have done from the emergency side is increased the development
of the highly digestible therapeutic foods that are so critical
for those first 1,000 days and refocus some of our assistance
programs to work both on the behavioral changes as well as the
more nutritional products that can address malnutrition,
without which you have impacts for the rest of an individual's
life.
Mr. Smith. Can I ask you, in terms of probiotics, has USAID
integrated a probiotic mindset? Obviously, antibiotics have
greatly increased the ability of people in their gut to carry
the good flora. Where are we in terms of promoting good
probiotic efforts, the good organisms?
Ms. Lindborg. Yes. There are some interesting new studies
out that show that clean water can be even more important than
antibiotic treatments for addressing some of the
gastrointestinal diseases that affect children and create
malnutrition. So part of that is investment in greater clean
water and sanitation approaches.
Mr. Smith. Well, my point is--and maybe you can take it
back--is, you know, the whole idea of immunity. And there is a
growing body of knowledge that immunity is almost exponentially
enhanced by having the right probiotic mix in a person's gut,
gut flora.
Ms. Lindborg. Yes. We can give you more details on that.
Mr. Smith. Thank you for your testimony. I think we are
finished with members. And thank you for your very honorable
and effective service. Thank you.
Mr. Smith. I would like to now welcome our second panel to
the witness table, beginning with Mr. Rudolph Atallah, a 21-
year veteran of the U.S. Air Force who retired as a lieutenant
colonel. He served in the Office of the Secretary of Defense
and as Africa counterterrorism director, where his
responsibilities included advising the Secretary of Defense and
other senior officials on counterterrorism policy, strategy,
and serving as an adviser to the State Department numerous
Embassies across Africa.
He has been a featured guest on programs on NPR, CSPAN, and
the National Geographic Channel, where he has discussed African
piracy and successful resolution of the 2009 Maersk Alabama
incident.
We will then hear from Dr. Mima Nedelcovych, who is a
partner in the Schaffer Global Group, a Louisiana-based project
development, finance, and implementation company focused on
agro-industrial and renewable energy projects in the emerging
markets in Africa and Latin America. For the Schaffer Group, he
is the lead partner in a sugar project in Mali. He recently
established an independent consulting practice on trade
facilitation, project development, project finance, and public-
private partnerships in Africa.
And then we will hear from Nii Akuetteh, who is an
independent policy researcher analyst who specializes in U.S.
foreign policy, African development, and international
relations. He often publishes in American and African journals
and appears in Aljazeera, Voice of America, the BBC, and other
TV and radio outlets analyzing African issues. He has been a
Georgetown University professor, journal editor, and leader of
advocacy organizations working on three continents. He created
and led two organizations focusing on democracy and conflict in
Mali.
Colonel, if you could begin?
Mr. Atallah. Thank you, Mr. Chairman, distinguished members
of the subcommittee.
I submitted a written statement for the record.
Mr. Smith. Without objection, yours and all of the others'
full statements will be made a part of the record.
STATEMENT OF MR. RUDOLPH ATALLAH, SENIOR FELLOW, MICHAEL S.
ANSARI AFRICA CENTER, ATLANTIC COUNCIL
Mr. Atallah. Since my testimony on the situation in Mali
last June, things have escalated dramatically, causing further
instability in the Sahara and the Sahel. Many skeptics
underestimated the Islamist threat and claim that the Saharan
branch of AQIM was only focused on kidnappings for ransom and
illicit trade, rather than jihadist activities. A year later,
Mali is faced with a new threat: Suicide bombers, a phenomenon
never seen in the Sahel before. In fact, since 9 February, Mali
has experienced 12 suicide attacks in the cities of Timbuktu,
Gao, Kidal, Meneka, and now Gossi, which happened on 9 May.
These are primarily areas that were once under Islamist control
after the secular MNLA was elbowed out by AQIM and its allies.
I am concerned that in time, AQIM's influence and tactics will
grow more sophisticated and violent following a similar
evolution seen by the Nigerian jihadist group Boko Haram from
2011 to present.
The root causes of terrorist escalation in Mali and across
the region are complex and multi-faceted. Understanding the why
of this present violence and the logic of its perpetrators
requires us to look more closely at some of the principal
regional issues that contributed to this current crisis.
First, militants linked to al-Qaeda, hardened by years of
survival under oppressive regimes, have been revived in this
region since the start of the Arab Spring. Seasoned fighters
from Afghanistan, Algeria, Iraq, Syria further bolster their
skills and intent, helping them to expand their networks,
strengthening their fighting capacities and resolve to recruit
new militants.
Terrorist training camps exist in several parts of the
region, and every state is vulnerable to AQIM, which has been
massively bolstered by weapons flow, porous borders, and
security vacuums in the Sahel, in combination with fragile
regional governments.
The recruitment narrative of AQIM has also been given new
life via Western intervention in Mali and renewed, increasingly
severe focus on Western targets. The recent Amenas in Algeria;
the hostage crisis; and the September 11, 2012 attack on the
U.S. consulate just exemplify some of these patterns.
Another catalyst for violence, violent extremism in Mali
and the broader region is the confluence of marginalized
peoples, pushed into harsh border areas, and violent extremist
organizations. Militant Islamists, like AQIM, Boko Haram,
MUJAO, Ansar al-Dine, and others prove attractive to some
within marginalized ethnic groups, coerced into a veritable no-
man's land, seeking social justice and political recognition.
Despite the French intervention in 2013, of this year,
designed to route out AQIM, the former has most certainly not
concluded its project in Mali. For the better part of a decade,
proselytization, intermarriage, a variety of inducements, and
alliances with tribes have left AQIM with many friends in
northern Mali and the region.
Moreover, AQIM fighters have opted for tactical withdrawal
versus the supposed strategic defeat that some claim. Some
militants clearly remain in the country, evidenced by the
increased suicide bombings, while others have merely taken
refuge in Libya, Algeria, Sudan, Niger, Mauritania, and
elsewhere.
In sum, the French, Chadian, and Malian efforts in the main
pushed against AQIM and their allies out of Mali. The network
remains resilient and has emerged less effective but more
clandestine in nature.
In contrast to Mali, Morocco stands out as a model for a
reform in progress in the region. It continues to fight
terrorism through the strengthening of the security and justice
systems and emphasizes a preventive dimension against violent
extremism and organized crime through reform in the economic,
political, social, religious, and educational fields. And they
have actually put this all in the Amazigh, or the Berber,
language.
Nevertheless, like other countries in the region, Morocco
is concerned with the risks of infiltration by terrorists
fleeing Mali via illegal immigration channels. For example, 2
weeks ago, Moroccan authorities dismantled two terror cells
that, according to news agencies, were believed to be in
contact with jihadists in Mali.
While there are few proverbial silver bullets to solve this
complex problem set, there are several approaches that could
make a difference. And let me provide a few of them.
The first recommendation is, as we were discussing with the
previous panel, to bring USAID back into the fight in the key
territories in northern Mali and the surrounding region. Couple
that with the support of U.S. and allied special forces
initiatives. From Tindouf, Algeria to the Aouzou Strip in
northern Chad, the arc of instability, as the U.N. calls it,
the populations of this under-governed region receive little
support and are left exploited by various political actors,
including AQIM and its allies.
The second recommendation pertains to addressing border
insecurity in the region. Borders between countries of the
Sahara remain porous and open to terrorists and smuggler
activity, both of which weaken governance and promote
corruption, not to mention global insecurity. It is time that
these countries of the region receive assistance to secure and
monitor a movement along their borders. This applies not only
to land traffic but also to air.
Finally to effectively counter the jihadist narrative
wielded by AQIM, a comprehensive and expertly crafted
information operations campaign is necessary for the region.
Violent extremists associated with AQIM experience far too much
safe haven in social, print, and televised media, and this must
be rectified. Recently, news agencies flocked to write about
AQIM's new Twitter account, which gained 5,000 new members in 2
weeks. And it is noteworthy that the Syrian terror group Jabhat
al-Nusra, Somalia's al-Shabaab, and Tunisia's Ansar al-Sharia
are all followed by this new AQIM Twitter account. Countering
AQIM's media expansion and online havens is crucial to our
long-term success against violent extremism in the region.
Thank you.
[The prepared statement of Mr. Atallah follows:]
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Mr. Smith. Thank you very much for your testimony and
concrete recommendations for the committee and for the
administration to consider.
Mr. Nedelcovych?
STATEMENT OF MIMA S. NEDELCOVYCH, PH.D., PARTNER, SCHAFFER
GLOBAL GROUP
Mr. Nedelcovych. Thank you, Chairman Smith and honorable
members of the Foreign Affairs Committee.
I appreciate the opportunity to speak. I was asked to speak
from a business perspective in dealing in Africa and especially
in the Sahel. I like the forum. I am new to this, but there is
a full statement. So I can just speak off the cuff.
I have been in Africa pretty much all of my life. You can
tell from the accent. And thank you for attempting pronouncing
Nedelcovych. I come out of the Balkans. So we know a little bit
about tribal warfare. I left Belgrade at 1 year old, grew up in
Ethiopia, actually my first 10 years, before coming to the U.S.
and making this a home. So I have spent most of my life, one
way or another, in Africa. I have been on the public side. I
have been on the private side. I have been going many moons ago
when USAID first discovered the private sector, brought in as
an adviser to see how the private sector could assist, was
named to be the U.S. executive director of the African
Development Bank in the late '80s under the first father Bush
administration.
So I since then have joined Schaffer. Schaffer is in the
agro industry. We have been managing developing agro-industrial
projects throughout the continent. We have also been in very
difficult places. We did the major sugar state development in
Kenana, in Sudan, got pulled out of there for various reasons.
As you know, it happened that we got pulled out on U.S.
sanctions.
Most recently and in the last decade, I would say, we have
been working a major, major project in the Office du Niger in
Mali. Our attempts are always bringing in these small farmers
to the investments into the schemes that we develop. It is the
only way we see in the end--and I like this term
``resilience.'' I have to remember that. I always thought of it
as economic growth, but I guess it is one and the same, the
flip side of the same coin. The importance in the end is very,
very simple for me. I went back. I actually have a Ph.D. in
political risk. I went back and thought what I wrote back in my
dissertation.
There was a sociologist, Maslow, and how theory of the five
critical requirements, the pyramid of needs. And the very basic
two needs at the bottom of the pyramid are your food, the
water, the survival; and then shelter and employment. And if
those needs are not met, you will have always the opportunity
under whatever guise for extremism to come. You will find
radical solutions. I would call them momentive solutions.
But it is very easy. People have nothing to lose, have
nothing to lose. And that is where we come from the business
standpoint, Mr. Chairman. Looking at difficult areas, I would
argue that U.S. business--and we are there in agro industry,
certainly.
There is a huge Niger River coming through that area. There
are many, many opportunities to develop agro-industrial schemes
that bring in all of the small farmers, but for all of this to
happen, you have to have security. We put together a program of
over $600 million for the Office du Niger near Segou and
Markala that basically went on hold. We were to go into the
major expansion on April 15th. And something happened in
February. So we are on hold. Who loses? It is the people there
in the end because what we have done now? We have concentrated
on projects elsewhere.
I could use an example in Nigeria, where we are up in
Sokoto in a rice program. Things got heated up, became very
difficult work while we are not developing the program, the
project down in the middle states. Who loses? The people in the
north.
So, in the end, my plea is really, to the extent possible--
and I think USAID has been moving in this direction with my
various names, global development alliance or other, to bring
in the corporates, get people in that are in, especially people
like us, who are in the agro-industrial area. We operate in
rural areas. We operate where poverty is.
And the only way you are going to get out of poverty is to
create growth, create jobs. Otherwise you are going to have
desperate people. And desperate people do desperate acts. So,
for me, Mr. Chairman, that is the one take-away I really wanted
to pull out of this discussion with further questions.
Also, I will be remiss to not say I sit on the board of the
Corporate Council in Africa. I am one of the founding members,
among the parties to cut hunger and poverty in Africa. So I can
sit and have the debate on the public policy side or from the
straight corporate investment standpoint, but I will argue that
it is always when those two come together. That is the key.
That is where we can have the long-term development money
coming in with the commercial money to make growth happen.
We have--and I have copies--submitted a couple of months
ago recommendations to the Obama administration from the
Corporate Council in Africa on doing business in Africa. And I
would also like to conclude by saying the continent, by and
large, the trend is very, very positive. The issue is what
happens in difficult places like the Sahel and how can public
and private interests come together to actually really continue
on the basis of resilience, but let's also get on. This is one
world we must also all grow and people must have some reason to
not be desperate.
Thank you, Mr. Chairman.
[The prepared statement of Mr. Nedelcovych follows:]
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Mr. Smith. Mr. Nedelcovych, thank you so very much for
that. And your recommendations, I have seen that. I would like
to at least take some of that and put it into the record. And
we will follow up on those recommendations as well, I think. I
thank you for that.
Remember, you are not just speaking to the Congress. You
are speaking to the Speaker of the National Assembly of Mali.
So I hope he heard your message as well.
I would like to now ask Mr. Akuetteh if he could proceed.
STATEMENT OF MR. NII AKUETTEH (FORMER GEORGETOWN UNIVERSITY
PROFESSOR OF AFRICAN AFFAIRS)
Mr. Akuetteh. Chairman Smith, thank you very much for
including me in this hearing this afternoon. And I thank you
and the other committees for placing so much attention on an
important Africa issue.
Point of personal privilege. Because I am immigrant from
Ghana, I am an African, I would like to extend to you the
appreciation of fellow Africans for the attention that you and
the committees are placing on this very important issue.
I also have to say that, as was mentioned by Mr.
Nedelcovych, there is some good news in Africa. The AU is
celebrating its 50th anniversary. The President is visiting
three countries noted for the advanced, you know, progress in
democracy. There is fast economic growth.
So I think it is appropriate that this hearing is focusing
on a troubled spot, a big area that is under stress, but it
should be noted that there is good news on the continent.
Now, the region that we are talking about and in the
invitation letter, about nine countries are covered. So we are
talking about a very big area. I would also even add that there
is one area we should include, which is the Western Sahara,
because some of the issues, some of the problems in the Western
Sahara are spilling over into Mali in terms of fighters with
grievances who may be involved in Mali.
Now, the problems that the Sahel, as defined in this
hearing, is facing are very serious problems, from terrorism
all the way to bad governance through lack of democracy. So
this is a region in stress.
And always when I look at U.S. policy, it seems to me that
there is a very big unspoken question by the American people,
what has this got to do with me? What has this got to do with
us? And I think it is great to focus on this problem because it
does affect U.S. interests. Problems in the Sahel which are
stressing the countries does affect the U.S. Therefore, it
seems to me the imperative is very clear for the U.S. to help
these countries cope with their problems that they are facing.
Otherwise, when the problems get out of hand, they spill over
into the neighborhood, it will not be just one or two African
countries if the problems get out of hand. It will affect you
clearly.
It might even because--one of the problems that were cited
has been cited is drug trafficking from Latin America through
West Africa. I think research has shown that there is a
reverse. There is drug money going back into Latin America and
even arms.
So this can also affect U.S. interests in its own
hemisphere. It can affect U.S. interests in Europe. So this is
a very important issue. And any help that the U.S. gives
African countries to cope with them is really I think a good
investment in its own interests.
Now, one of the things that strikes me is that I think in
the area we are talking about, the U.S. interests really picked
up after 9/11. It has been 10 years. So a key recommendation,a
key point in my view is that there needs to be a review of U.S.
strategy in the region. After 10 years and after the problem in
Libya, now we have Mali. It seems to me that a thorough review
needs to be done so that lessons can be learned and a new
strategy can be crafted.
Until that thorough review is done, it seems to me there
are areas where improvements can be made. I think that
terrorism is a problem, not just for the U.S. but even for
African countries. And I think the way to deal with it is to
push hard on democracy because it seems to inclusive democratic
government goes a long way in preventing, at the very least,
homegrown terrorism.
In the region that we are looking at also, Mali is clearly
the epicenter. So it seems to me that special attention should
be paid to Mali. And I would like to see the U.S. play a
leading role, not in the security area, because, you know, we
have AFISMA and the U.N., but in the reconstruction of Mali,
what just happened in Brussels.
I would like for the U.S. to--it is my recommendation that
the U.S. play a very strong role in that, particularly in two
areas: The area of the elections. I have to confess, Mr.
Chairman, that I am one of the people who is nervous about the
elections because the recent example in a couple of other
African countries, Cote d'Ivoire, next door, and Kenya, that we
need to make sure that, as important as the Malian elections
are, we have to have contingency plans and make sure that they
happen well.
And, secondly, I think the Mali's reconstruction plan,
their reconciliation and dialogue committee, I think the U.S.,
with its history and its diversity and its democracy, can be a
special help to the U.S. So it is also my recommendation that
that should be a big focus in the way that the U.S. can help
Mali and, therefore, the Saharan region going forward.
I thank you again for including me.
[The prepared statement of Mr. Akuetteh follows:]
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Mr. Smith. Thank you very much for your testimony.
At least let me ask you on that last point about the
elections, are you concerned about the July elections? Nothing
focuses the mind like a deadline. And sometimes when deadlines
are delayed, it leads to a certain ennui and a belief that
things can spiral out of control again. So it seems to be
positive if it is in July, but if you could elaborate on your
concerns? Are there any other panelists who would want to touch
on that?
Mr. Akuetteh. Yes. And I am particularly grateful for that
question, too, because I do see the need for elections. I mean,
there is a lot of good that elections can do Mali. Even the
issue of the MNLA and Tuaregs, you need to know who represents
whom. Who does the MNLA speak for? Who are other people who
speak for other communities? And elections will help with that.
You do the research, and you will see that a lot of people
say that they want a government environment that the people
themselves elected. So I am saying, on the one hand, it is
important and good to have elections. At the same time, because
elections are so important, we need to make sure that they are
done right. And that means a lot of preparation from
registering people. And the fact that you have so many
displaced people in Mali causes me some nervousness.
So, thinking about it, I agree with you that there should
be a deadline to make sure that we move quickly. But I also
think we need what I will call electoral insurance policy.
Given the difficulties that Mali has, it seems to me there
should be contingency plans to say, what do we do if we run
into this particular circle or that particular circle? So I
think the election should be done. They should be done as fast
as possible. But we should also be aware of the off circles and
the dangers that bad elections can lead to.
Mr. Smith. Dr. Nedelcovych?
Mr. Nedelcovych. Chairman, I would agree that it is
essential to have a deadline. I will draw from an example next
door in Guinea. We are involved in a rice program. There the
elections, we are halfway through the administration 2\1/2\
years later, we haven't had the legislature.
So I think the most critical thing is you will not have the
perfect elections, clearly, but one must get on with having as
good an election as you can. Is July too soon? One could argue
perhaps, that it is important, that it is perceived as
legitimate, and that people can, in fact, vote. But I certainly
if it were to be pushed back would not push back very far
because what is happening is, in essence, all of us who are on
hold waiting for this to happen--and it is those very
investments that will in the end stabilize the country and
bring back the growth to make it go forward.
So I would argue better and imperfect elections sooner than
a perfect one later.
Mr. Smith. Thank you.
Mr. Atallah?
Mr. Atallah. Mr. Chairman, just briefly if I may comment? I
agree with pushing for elections. However, there are some
underlying issues in the country that have been festering now
since the independence of Mali in 1960. And if we don't address
local grievances in the divide between north and south, I think
what we return to is a forced election and the continued
problem sets that remain in the country. Those need to be
addressed for fair elections going to the future. We have to
address those, those internal dynamics. And those need to come
right now, before the elections, in order to bring everybody
together.
Thank you.
Mr. Smith. Dr. Nedelcovych, you mentioned in your written
testimony the old saying that capital is a coward and that it
goes into flight, obviously, when there is a crisis. And, yet,
you cite the examples of China, India, and other nations who
continue to invest in Africa. Why are American companies so
reluctant?
As you might know, I have introduced legislation. It is co-
sponsored by my friend and colleague Ms. Bass. And we are
building a co-sponsor base, hopefully a large group that would
put a very heavy emphasis on exporting to Africa. Obviously, a
rising tide raises all of the boats.
We know that AGOA is working, but it is only one initiative
among what should be many. Why are we so reluctant?
Mr. Nedelcovych. Thank you for the questions. I have been
living the last 20-plus years since leaving the ADB.
You know, Mr. Chairman, when you say capital is a coward,
it needs certainty. Okay? That certainty can be bad. Certainty
can be good. I need to know what that certainty is so I can
mitigate. This was actually the irony to some extent that,
really, Mali, even we that have been operating all over,
Angola, Sudan, I mean, you name it, we, are a bit surprised.
If you dig back far, you would say, ``Well, but, in
essence, as the colleague said, these were discrepancies from
the north and the south and the country.'' Maybe why am I
surprised that it boiled over? It is those uncertainties that
are difficult for American companies. Now, at the same time--
and I refer the patchwork--if you look at 60, 70, 80 percent of
the countries, most of them, the trend is very positive.
I look at my own reactions here. At some point, I was about
ready to hang up the boots. You know, I have been doing this
for many years. And I said, ``You know what? This is crazy.''
When the continent finally for 30 years--20 years, I have been
scratching odds and ends sort of deals.
Now real deals are happening. There are real business deals
happening, Mr. Chairman. And it is not just oil and gas. It is
the growing middle class. There is a consuming substantive
group. When you start speaking of Nigeria, you start speaking
of Nairobi in Kenya, you start speaking of Tanzania, there are
so many centers now of growth where investment is interesting.
What I hope the lesson will go back to both the political
and society in the unstable areas is, you know what, ladies and
gentlemen? If you want that capital, that capital needs to have
some stability. Otherwise, it will very happily go elsewhere.
So help us come because then we all win. That I think is the
message that needs to come out.
Thank you.
Mr. Smith. Thank you.
Let me ask you, Mr. Akuetteh. You mentioned that there is a
great burden and stress being placed on Mali's neighbors
because of the refugees that are spilling over the border.
Could you perhaps elaborate on what that burden is? And is
there an expectation that those individuals will be able to be
repatriated back to their homes?
Mr. Akuetteh. Thank you again. I think it is connected to
my answer to the elections question because, of course, these
people, one of their fundamental rights, the displaced people,
both in the southern part of Mali and in the other regions, is
the right to vote. So if elections are being held, we have to
think about how do we allow them to cast a vote?
In terms of the stress placed on the other countries, I am
very glad that this hearing is about the region, not just about
Mali. Mali's neighbors are also stressed. It just so happens
that because of the Tuareg problem and the MNLA coming from
Libya, Mali imploded. But the other countries are also at risk.
And, therefore, it is a question of countries that are already
at risk that now have had to play host to the refugees from
Mali.
It seems to me it is clear that they are industrious in
terms of food, in terms of water, in terms of the impact on
very fragile agricultural communities.
Now, I am glad for the discussion in the previous panel. I
think the one area where the U.S. has been doing a pretty good
job is the humanitarian assistance, especially in the region.
But I still think that these are countries that really do need
help. And it will be good to increase that.
And, if I might, on the question of U.S. companies and
their presence in Africa, which is an issue that concerns me, I
would just add that, you know, Africans are also puzzled. I
mean, I would echo your questions. We would like to see more
involvement from the U.S.
The elephant in the room is the presence of the Chinese.
And I will actually say that, I mean, I have been in the U.S.
for quite a while, going into my fourth decade. And what I
don't understand, I think that the U.S. has far more positive
assets if you look at the Chinese versus the U.S. There are
people like me, African-born, but, of course, there is the
African community, the African-American community, here, which
is a big asset.
So, frankly, it puzzles me that with all of those assets,
with the U.S.'s democracy, as Ambassador Yamamoto said, the
U.S. is very popular in Africa. So if you look at that, if you
look at the experience with capitalism, if you look at the
black community in this country, it seems to me the U.S. should
have a much bigger presence.
And I, too, like you, don't understand why U.S. companies
haven't made bigger progress into the continent.
Mr. Smith. You know, on that point, our legislation would
try to encourage the diaspora as part of a strategy to be more
involved with reconnecting and certainly being part of an
export strategy. So I thank you for your comment.
Just two final questions and I yield to my friend and
colleague Ms. Bass. Mr. Akuetteh, you mentioned that in your
testimony, the Government of Niger has handled the potential
Tuareg threat much more effectively than the Government of
Mali. Could you explain what they are doing differently and why
it has worked better?
Mr. Akuetteh. Thank you again.
A lot of this is from the analysis of experts in the area.
What I do know for a fact, for instance, is that in the
immediate aftermath of the Libyan problem and when people moved
south into the countries bordering the south of Libya, one of
the things that the Nigerian Government did was they said they
insisted that everybody coming from Libya who wanted to go into
Niger had to disarm and if they refused to disarm, they cannot
get in.
Now, on the other hand, it is not clear how Mali handled
that, but all of the experts and, in fact, Nigerian officials
say, ``This is what we did. We said nobody can come in who had
arms. Otherwise, we are not letting them in.'' It is not clear
how that was handled in Mali, but we do know that the MNLA,
which was heavily armed--and I have seen statistics that say
that some say there were 800 of them, others like 2,000 of
them. One way or another, they happened to enter back into Mali
and the rebellion started.
Mr. Smith. Mr. Atallah, one final question. You testified
that there was an underestimation of the jihadist intentions of
al-Qaeda in the Islamic Maghreb. Could you explain as to why
that was the case? And are we repeating that mistake in your
opinion anywhere else in the Sahel?
Mr. Atallah. Thank you, Mr. Chairman. Yes, I think the
issue has been festering for a very long time; in fact, for two
decades. Specifically, if I look at northern Mali, GSPC, which
is a precursor to AQIM, established itself in late 2002, early
2003. In fact, I was in the northern parts of Mali. At the
time, I was still in uniform running around looking at the
problem set.
Since then, they have intermarried within ethnic groups in
the north. They have done the same thing across the region. And
this is where AQIM becomes a threat. If you look across the
region--and I am going to include north Africa in it--currently
Tunisia, the fledgling government in Tunisia, is fighting
affiliates of AQIM in the western side of their border.
Southern Libya has AQIM. AQIM has direct connections with Boko
Haram. And the current Government of Nigeria is involved in
trying to push Boko Haram and Ansaru from the north, with a lot
of refugees pulling across the border. We have AQIM operational
in northern Niger and Mauritania and, of course, in Mali. So
they are all across the region.
The problem is and what I find amongst peers, my colleagues
is we try to quantify AQIM saying, oh, they are about 3,000
strong or 2,000 strong or whatnot. That is irrelevant. There
can be 10 or 15. It doesn't matter. The fact is that every
single time the Shura council, which exists in the northeastern
part of Algeria, when one of their members speaks, they are
able to incite and bring and leverage people into the fold. And
this is where we have the issue.
Today there are over 800 Tunisians fighting on the militant
side in Syria. Sooner or later, these guys are going to come
back. Many of them have connections to AQIM.
So the problem set is not only within the African context
but outside of that as well. And this is where we are literally
missing the boat. I think we need to do more.
And those are the three small recommendations I made. There
are several others. But we need to get involved in this issue
across that region of the Sahara.
Mr. Smith. Thank you so very much.
Ms. Bass?
Ms. Bass. Yes. Just following up on that when you were
talking about AQIM--and you might have referenced it when I was
running back and forth to committee to vote. So excuse me if I
am asking stuff you already covered. But do you think that
there is a degree of coordination between the different
factions or is it similar to al-Qaeda, where there are spinoffs
but they are not necessarily working in coordination?
Mr. Atallah. Thank you very much for your question.
As far as I understand so far, it depends on where, but
there is definitely coordination. And it depends also loosely
on how we define coordination. For example, there has been a
lot of testimony on what happened in Benghazi, but it is
understood, at least from experts, that the Sahara branch of
AQIM, one member specifically, Mokhtar Belmokhtar, was getting
feed of information, what was going on in Benghazi.
Currently what is going on in Tunisia, there are members
there that are specifically battling Tunisian authorities that
have directly links to the Shura council or to the emir of
AQIM, Droukdel.
The same thing within Boko Haram. Boko Haram, for example,
in Nigeria has had connections to AQIM for a very long time. In
fact, Abubakar Shekau, the emir of Boko Haram, had one of his
messages pushed on AQIM media back in 2011. It was an audiotape
that AQIM kind of facilitated. So there are coordinations here
and there. And that is part of the issue.
We know so little about the band of the Sahara Sahel. And
some of these groups are linked to AQIM not out of ideological,
you know, views but sometimes out of just necessity of survival
because AQIM has become the wealthiest affiliate out of all the
AQ affiliates around the world.
Ms. Bass. Wealthiest from drug trafficking?
Mr. Atallah. From kidnap for ransom. And I would say a lot
of Western countries are to blame for that. You know, over the
years, 2007, 2008, 2009, we see multiple kidnappings and, in
return, payments that are provided in return for these.
The last one was more recently, not even a year ago. You
had aid workers that were kidnapped from the Tindouf area. And,
in return, two AQIM affiliates were released from a Mauritanian
jail. And supposedly AQIM received 15 million euros.
I was in contact with friends in northern Kidal. They said
that for the longest time, folks were no longer using the West
African CFA but they were actually using euros to pay for
things. That is indicative of how much, how deep-rooted this
problem set is.
Ms. Bass. So you are saying the Western countries are to
blame because they are paying the ransom?
Mr. Atallah. They are enabling. They are enabling.
Ms. Bass. What should they do?
Mr. Atallah. Well, again, this is where--and that is a fair
question. This is where I think we need to stop enabling and we
need to really focus on the problem sets. Messaging is
important. You know, the current recruits that AQIM is able to
leverage, they have built this over time, but 12 suicide
bombers never seen in the history of Mali, we are not messaging
in these problem set areas. We are not dealing with the root
causes of the problem. In fact, we just put, as I--and pardon
the expression--a Band-Aid on a sucking chest wound. It just
doesn't work.
Ms. Bass. Thank you.
And I am sorry. I am not going to attempt. Would you
describe a couple of your businesses? Specifically what do you
do? And where are you working?
And, actually, let me ask you about Mali because I have a
big interest, especially as Mr. Akuetteh said, in promoting
U.S. businesses and, in particular, you know, African-American
businesses, their involvement on a continent. And so I am
wondering, how you do work in Mali? What do you do?
Mr. Nedelcovych. Thank you, Congresswoman.
We are in agro industry. We are primarily in the process
side. So being out of Louisiana, it is sugar cane, cane
processing. It is rice, rice milling. And it is always the co-
generation of electricity from the agriwaste. So the Mali
project, in fact, I believe Eric had a chance to speak with the
people out there when you were in Bamako. It was to be 200,000
tons of sugar produced, 30 megawatts of electricity, and 10
million liters of ethanol, actually, for a 10 percent gasohol
blend in all the gasoline----
Ms. Bass. And it is in Bamako or around Bamako?
Mr. Nedelcovych. It is in Segou and Markala in the Office
du Niger. It is using the strength and the value of water.
Agriculture is water. And this is why I say oftentimes while
one looks at the Sahel, its very, very desperate region, from
an agro-industrial standpoint, I would say quite the opposite.
You have a major, major river that is coming through that needs
to be properly harnessed in a sustainable way.
The key, the key, is absolutely the way you structure it.
And this comes back to the question of why U.S. investments
don't go in. Investments that are small are just going to be
difficult for international investors to come in. So the key
becomes sizing the investment.
For agri industry, if you don't scale up, you can't
compete. Now, that does not mean you dislocate the small
farmers. What it does mean is literally capture them in the
scheme as outgrowers. In our case in the 15,000 hectare, 7,000
were going to be independent small farmers that are being
brought into modern agriculture, if you will. The same happens
with our rice schemes now in Nigeria. The key is always
bringing in the community, bringing in the small farmer.
And guess what? In the end, that will be what is putting
the Band-Aid on whatever----
Ms. Bass. Right.
Mr. Nedelcovych [continuing]. It that you are placing it
because then it is those people that will make sure that this
doesn't get undermined.
Unfortunately, in Mali, we were about to start up the major
operation. Had we been there a year or two, I am willing to bet
the region would act differently. Those would be the people
protecting our aid workers going in there.
So I would continue to argue for that combination of larger
investment, which is interesting foreign national groups, with
schemes that bring in the smaller. And then there is one very
important thing, coming back to what Congressman Smith was
asking. That is, if you take out Nigeria, South Africa, Kenya,
most of these economies are just simply too small to be
interesting.
Ms. Bass. Right, which is why----
Mr. Nedelcovych. And I hate to say it, but the ECOWASes and
the economic committees have all spoken very nicely. But, in
reality, those are not functioning as true common markets. And
in our case, for example, on the sugar, the state and the Mali
delegation, the Ambassador knows very well, it is ties to the
point where now we have taken advantage of being landlocked.
The advantage is you have got a huge population that grow the
national markets.
We don't need to export the sugar. It is not even
interesting. The price is a lot more interesting for sugar and
rice in the region. Grow it. But what happens then is if those
common markets are not functioning,----
Ms. Bass. Right.
Mr. Nedelcovych [continuing]. You begin to have to start
subsidizing the small factories that don't work. The reality of
the world has to come back in. And that goes also on the
African side.
Ms. Bass. Well, I really appreciate what you are saying. I
mean, one of our challenges here in trying to work with
businesses to go to the continent is they are afraid to death--
well, I mean, basically, it is our own ignorance of the
continent. So when we hear a conflict in Mali, we think that it
is happening all over the place. And we have no geographic
understanding as to where one country is, you know.
So you have been able to do this in Mali, in the middle of
a conflict. And I think that is a really important perspective
to bring. Even where there is a conflict, you can still
successfully od business, let alone all of the nations where
there isn't a current conflict. So I appreciate that.
And, Mr. Akuetteh, I wanted to ask you about a few things
that you were saying. You talked about the U.S. playing a
stronger role. And I wanted to know what your opinion was, how
U.S. security activities in the region are perceived by the
governments and populations in the Sahel. So I always worry
about the U.S. playing a stronger role, but where is that fine
line between playing that stronger role and then feeling as
though we have overplayed our hand?
Mr. Akuetteh. Thank you very much. I think it is a great
question. And also, especially because you mentioned
governments and people, sometimes I think that there is a split
in how some particular U.S. programs may be looked at.
But it seems to me that, as I mentioned, the U.S. interests
in the Sahel, West Africa and North Africa, really picked up,
for understandable reasons, after 9/11. So the issue is
terrorism and the potential for terrorism.
And I think it is important to underline that terrorism is
a problem for Africans as well. I mean, Boko Haram has been
killing Nigerians. The Embassy bombings killed a lot of
Africans. So Africans welcome the U.S.'s help in dealing with
terrorism. I do think there should be dialogue about what
particular approaches will work.
Ms. Bass. Right.
Mr. Akuetteh. I think if there is that dialogue, then we
don't overstep and don't do things that may make Africans
nervous. I particularly think that a stress on democracy will
be a very good way. Paradoxical as it may sound, it will be a
very good way of dealing with terrorism and potential terrorism
across Africa.
So, yes, I want the U.S. to say, ``Look, this is very
important to us. We want to be engaged,'' but then have a
dialogue with the Africans, whether regionally or in particular
countries, as to exactly what will work.
If I might mention one particular example; for instance,
training African militaries. I think this is part of the
strategy for dealing with terrorism in Africa, but in my mind,
it has to be in three stages. I think the first thing that
African soldiers need is respect for civilian authority to know
that an elected President is really their Commander in Chief
and it has chosen to turn a gun on him.
I think the second phase for training for African soldiers
has to be respect for citizens; that is, citizens pay their
salaries, pay for their uniforms, and it is not their job to
abuse them. I think if they pass those two phases of tests,
then for me, you go to the third level, which is how to make
them better fighters.
So I would say again the U.S. needs to be involved with the
Africans and particularly on the training of the soldiers. Make
sure that they respect democracy and they respect civilian
authorities.
Ms. Bass. So taking Mali for an example, do you think that
what we did didn't work? I mean, because we trained the
military there. And that is exactly what the military did. So
is it that it didn't work? I mean, that is always the fine
line. How do you determine when you have moved from one stage
to the other?
Mr. Akuetteh. I think it is a good question here. Without
ducking the question, I need to display some humility, which is
why, in fact, an important point in my testimony, and even last
year when I was here, is that I think the U.S. needs to do the
most thorough of reviews of their strategy over the 10 years
and look at everything. Experts will have to do it. I think
Congress will have a role. Experts in DoD will have a role so
they can determine exactly what the training went to and what
it was meant to achieve, where things may have gone wrong, and
what lessons can be learned from it.
So in terms of if you look at just the results, of course,
I think it is disastrous for Mali, but there was the coup and
the role of the U.S.-trained soldier in that coup.
Ms. Bass. Right.
Mr. Akuetteh. It doesn't make the U.S. look good. Even it
is disastrous for Mali. My point is we need to do a very
thorough review to find out exactly what happened. From this
distance, that is all I can recommend because there are details
I don't know.
Ms. Bass. Sure. And, you know, I wanted to know about what
you thought about the people that are running right now for
President. We have actually met a number of them. And I know we
have a whole Malian delegation here that I look forward to
meeting with as soon as this meeting is over. But how many
people were running for President? I think I have met two or
three Presidential candidates who have come through the
Capitol. And what is your opinion of the capacity?
Mr. Akuetteh. You know, I think my definitive answer is I
have heard of 12 running. I know that at least one is a woman,
which is a good sign. On the other hand, as Chairman Smith had
asked about the elections, I see the value of the elections. On
the other hand, I am nervous because between now and July is
not a lot of time.
Ms. Bass. Right.
Mr. Akuetteh. And so the way I am linking this to your
question is that there doesn't seem to be a lot of time to get
to know the candidates, at least from people like us from the
outside.
Now, the talk inside Mali is that many of the candidates
are from the old political class. So they may be well-known.
But from an activist like me, what I know is fairly
superficial, which is that there are about 12 of them. And they
are vying. And I wish there was more time to do things right.
Ms. Bass. Well, and I also think it is going to be
interesting. And, Mr. Chair, maybe it is something that we
could look at because after the election takes place, what is
our role going to be supporting whoever it is that is elected
to help to strengthen their capacity?
A final question for you. When I was making one of my runs
back to another committee, you were talking about drug
trafficking.
Mr. Akuetteh. Yes.
Ms. Bass. And I wanted to know if you could expand on that?
And I wanted to know your thoughts on how you think countries
in the region can best counter the drug trafficking.
Mr. Akuetteh. Oh, if I may take the back end of the
question first? Because in preparing for this testimony and
some of the research I was doing, one thing struck me which I
think is a good sign. And I will underline that.
Former U.N. Secretary General Kofi Annan has actually just
in January created the West Africa Commission on Drugs. And he
is bringing a lot of Africans, including former President
Obasanjo to deal with the drug problem in West Africa.
Now, what I was saying earlier is that the way I think it
affects U.S. interests is that these drugs, the experts
mentioned that you have cocaine, you have meth, and you have
heroin. The cocaine is coming from Latin America. And, in
return, what you are getting back into Latin America, of
course, is drug money, but you are also getting some of the
weapons that everyone agrees flowed out of Libya. So you are
getting weapons going to Latin America. Now, I am saying that
it seems to me that happening in the U.S. hemisphere should be
of concern to the U.S.
But, apart from cocaine, the research--and the U.N. Office
on Drugs has also done a lot of work in West Africa. And they
are finding out that meth is being produced in some West
African countries and then exported to east Asia. And the
heroin is coming from Asia through West Africa into Europe. And
the big problem this is having on the area, West Africa, is
three. You have got corruption. You have got democracy being
contaminated. And then you have got health problems because
people involved in the drug trade, locals, sometimes they are
being paid with drugs. And so consumption is also growing. And
it is a health problem for the Africans. And they are very
concerned.
I mean, one thing Kofi Annan said was that we really need
the help of our friends in Europe and the United States to help
us deal with the drug problem.
Ms. Bass. Thank you very much.
Mr. Smith. Thank you very much.
You have been very patient with your time. If I could just
ask a few follow-up questions? And anything you want to add,
please do. In my walk as a lawmaker--and I have been in
Congress now 33 years--I often differentiate between criticism
that mocks, belittles, and takes cheap shots, and criticism
that is constructive and leads to better outcomes. You did
listen to the administration witnesses earlier in the first
panel. You know and you understand the administration's
policies vis-a-vis the Sahel. I wonder if you could offer this
panel any constructive criticism that might lead to better
outcomes.
Secondly, Mr. Atallah, in your testimony, you heard Nancy
Lindborg say earlier that while the recent rise of violent
extremism in West Africa cannot be directly attributed to
drought, chronic food security, or weak governance, each of
these factors can indirectly exacerbate instability in the
region.
And you made three very specific recommendations at the end
of your testimony. One is that USAID get back into the fight.
And you pointed out that there are access restrictions which
our Embassy imposes and others imposed. If you could elaborate
on that?
Thirdly, talk about border security. I wonder if you might
tell us, to what degree you are talking about. How much? Is it
technical aid? Is it actual foreign aid that would beef up
their ability to have a more secure border?
And, finally, you point out that to effectively counter the
jihad narrative wielded by AQIM, a comprehensive and expertly
crafted information operation campaign is necessary for the
region. And that is, I think, a very profound recommendation,
but I wonder if you might tell us how that might be done. And
others might want to speak to that as well.
The first one would be on constructive criticism and then
to speak to the three or elaborate on the recommendations that
you made.
Mr. Atallah. Thank you, Mr. Chairman.
Yes. Constructive criticism, I think, sir, you asked the
question as what is AFRICOM doing. A component of AFRICOM is
SOCAF. I think SOCAF can be deeply rooted in the fight but with
restrictions. We are not taking enough steps.
I know the command is ready. I know the command wants to go
in. I know they have several plans to go in. However, there are
some political dynamics that prohibit them from doing so. And
my first criticism is I think we need to get in there.
There could be some assistance in targeting key AQIM,
MUJAO, Ansar al-Dine leaders, Iyad ag Aghali, Mokhtar
Belmokhtar. I can go on and on. There are several of them that
are still floating around the region. And we have experience in
other parts of the world that we can bring to bear in this
area. That is number one.
Number two, although USAID is doing some work, a lot more
can be done. Again, in the band of the Sahara--and when I talk
about northern Mali, northern Niger, southern Libya, southern
Algeria, all the way across the northern Chad, the peoples of
this part of the world are really marginalized by their host
governments. A call from Kidal, for example. A person was
telling me that there are very little food resources and
medical resources. Medecins du Monde, which is an NGO that
provides some medical aid, has a couple of workers up in Kidal
but not enough to meet all of the needs. We need to get those
folks up there. In order to do so, it requires, of course, soft
elements to provide that security. So that is in a sense a
criticism of the lack of involvement in the region.
In answer to the questions you asked specifically to my
statement, I have flown across the entire band of the Sahara. I
used to do that for the Defense Intelligence Agency. I have
landed on every dirt strip in the northern parts of the Sahara
from Mali, Niger, and Chad. There is no radar. Movements of
aircraft can go back and forth. People can land, say, in Kidal.
They can land in Tessalit. They can land in other parts of the
Sahara, literally without anybody knowing about it.
Number two, the movements across the Sahara in some of
these areas is difficult because of the geography. If you take
the highest peaks of the mountains in, say, southern Algeria,
the Ahaggar Mountains, into the Adrars in Mali and the Iron
Mountains in Niger, that band over there has some very
treacherous terrain. And people move very freely within those
areas. It is very difficult for the host countries to have any
visibility or control. So we need to do that, in effect.
In terms of messaging, AQIM is very apt. Like I said, they
have a Twitter account. And they have used Facebook
continuously. There was a Facebook page. And I mentioned that
in my written statement. That popped up after the attack on the
gas plant in Algeria. Mokhtar Belmokhtar, the guy who crafted
the strategy for its face, went on Facebook on a site called
the Derna Media Center, which stands for Derna, Libya. Within a
matter of weeks, it was taken down. But the number of people
that joined that literally in a 2-week span was 4,000
basically, counting Mokhtar Belmokhtar as a hero of what he did
in Algeria.
It doesn't mean all of these people are joining AQIM.
However, it means that they are getting an audience, whether it
is through Twitter, it is through Facebook, or whatnot. What we
need to do is counter that in order to prevent additional
recruits in the future and to prevent things like we are seeing
right now in Mali: Suicide bombers.
Ms. Bass. You mentioned Mokhtar Belmokhtar. I thought he
was killed.
Mr. Atallah. Ma'am, he wasn't killed. That was a mention
from the Chadian side. The Chadian President came out and said
that he was killed, but Mokhtar Belmokhtar is still alive. In
fact, jihadi forums came out and did say publicly that he is
still alive.
The only person who is confirmed killed--and the French had
to confirm it publicly--was Abou Zeid. There are several
others, but Mokhtar Belmokhtar is still around.
Ms. Bass. Thank you.
Mr. Atallah. Thank you, ma'am.
Mr. Nedelcovych. I think we just really have to ask
ourselves the very basic question. And that is, is it the
illness we are going after or the symptoms? You know, fighting
terrorism, fighting the mokhtars by whatever name is a little
bit like that game you have, the groundhog that comes up. You
smash its head here, and it pops up here. You smash it here. It
pops up there. It is never ending. I mean, if one does not get
in there and treat that hunger and that poverty and that
desperation, you just simply cannot win the war. You cannot.
So the question then becomes, why, yes, this has to be
done. Can we and how do we get to the real root issues so that
in the end, it is the people living in that area? It is their
leaderships that have to come back forward and say, ``Okay.
What are we going to do? We are not going to stabilize. They
are going to have to stabilize.'' I mean, let's be honest in
the end. What is the only answer there?
I was chuckling earlier. I visited my grandmother when I
was studying political philosophy. And, you know, she was the
grandmother from the old society. ``This is very brilliant. You
guys are all very wise, but can I spread this on bread and eat
it? Can I do that, that wisdom of yours?'' And there is too
much, at times, focus elections. And there is going to be a
discussion.
I mean, I don't even want to count how many national
dialogues have gone on in various countries on this continent,
but when do we get on? When does the civil society and the
people all say, ``What about us? We want to eat. We want to
grow up like the rest of the world is going forward.''
But, really, I think that focus has got to come also from
the people themselves, their own national leadership to pull
out what is in the end the absolute necessity. And that is
treat the disease, not the symptom. It is poverty. It is
hunger. It is desperation. And that is where if there is a
positive criticism, it is a realization from the development
agency and others. There are no surprises.
It is about every so many years. There is instability and
so many years. We could have predicted everything that has been
happening. The issue is recognize it and then deal with it with
the amount of time that is necessary. If it is 20 years, if it
is these kinds of resources, recognize where it is and do it or
say, ``You know what? We can't do it.'' That is the reality to
me.
Over. Thank you.
Mr. Akuetteh. Thank you again, Mr. Chairman. In terms of
constructive, if I might, my colleague's construction
suggestion, you know, if you look, Mali, Mali was very
important in terms of U.S. security activities in the region
prior to the war and the coup. And since then, clearly, the
French and the Europeans have a heavy presence.
My suggestion then will be for the U.S. to say, ``Look, we
weren't in here just to kill our enemies. And if some other
soldiers are here, then we are not interested.'' It should be,
actually, I would like the U.S. to send a message to the
Malians and the regions that ``We want to play a big role in
your reconstruction and your recovery.'' So that will be that
the U.S. shall have a bigger presence.
I did a little calculation of the pledges in Brussels. And
from what I can tell, based on what the U.S. has already put
down in their request that they have made to Congress--and I
could have gotten some things wrong, but it is about a 5-
percent contribution to what has been pledged for Mali. I wish
it was more.
And, secondly, in terms of specific things, again, I think
Mali because it is the test, what the U.S. does with Mali sends
a message to the rest of the region--and I will say the
elections. Again, there are already some signs. I don't think
the elections can be stopped or rolled back, but I do think
that there should be a contingency plan for quickly reacting
and helping the Malians make sure that it goes well.
And, finally, my big point, which is that we need to do a
review, to say, ``Over these years and with Libya and Mali
having happened, what have we learned? How can we reengage the
region to have security? Because security comes first and good
governance comes first and other things will follow.''
Thank you again.
Mr. Smith. Thank you very much for your testimonies. Thank
you for your insights and counsel. It is very helpful to the
committees that have met to receive it. And we will follow up
on it. So I thank you so very much.
I would also ask unanimous consent that a written testimony
from Shari Berenbach, President and CEO of the United States
African Development Foundation, be made a part of the record.
I want to thank Speaker Toure for being here for the entire
day of the hearing. We often have visiting diplomats and even
Speakers like yourself. This is the first time--and this is
about my 400th hearing--that we have ever had a Speaker come
and stay and listen to the entirety of the proceeding. You do
us a great honor by doing so. I want you to thank you for your
Ambassador, Maamoun Keita, who has been a great help over the
years and will continue to be, I am sure. And again I want to
thank our witnesses. Your testimonies were extraordinary.
The hearing is adjourned.
[Whereupon, at 4:51 p.m., the committees were adjourned.]
A P P E N D I X
----------
Material Submitted for the Hearing Record
[GRAPHIC(S) NOT AVAILABLE IN TIFF FORMAT]
Question for the record posed by the Honorable Christopher H. Smith, a
Representative in Congress from the State of New Jersey, and chairman,
Subcommittee on Africa, Global Health, Global Human Rights, and
International Organizations, to the Honorable Nancy E. Lindborg,
Assistant Administrator, Bureau for Democracy, Conflict and
Humanitarian Assistance, U.S. Agency for International Development
Question:
Please provide a breakout of the extent that we are partnering with
faith-based groups in the Sahel.
Response:
No response was received prior to printing.
Material submitted for the record by the Honorable Christopher H.
Smith, a Representative in Congress from the State of New Jersey, and
chairman, Subcommittee on Africa, Global Health, Global Human Rights,
and International Organizations
[GRAPHIC(S) NOT AVAILABLE IN TIFF FORMAT]
Material submitted for the record by the Honorable Christopher H.
Smith, a Representative in Congress from the State of New Jersey, and
chairman, Subcommittee on Africa, Global Health, Global Human Rights,
and International Organizations
[GRAPHIC(S) NOT AVAILABLE IN TIFF FORMAT]
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