As the U.S. supposedly winds down in Iraq and Afghanistan, it is increasing its shadow wars in Africa. Since 9/11, under the guise of fighting terrorism, the U.S. expanded its military presence in Central Asia (with the invasion of Afghanistan), the Middle East (with the invasion of Iraq), and the Horn of Africa — regions that are predominantly Muslim. In 2003, the Combined Joint Task Force — Horn of Africa (CJTF-HOA) was established to carry out civil-military operations in the Horn of Africa to counter terrorism. Its base is at Camp Lemonnier in Djibouti, the only major U.S. military outpost in Africa. In 2008, the U.S. created the United States Africa Command (AFRICOM) to coordinate its military operations on the continent, even though it’s headquartered in Germany. Under the rubric of the Global War on Terror, the U.S. military and CIA have been spreading their forces throughout Africa to fight against al-Qaeda and other terrorist groups. However, there are deeper geopolitical reasons motivating Washington’s militarism in Africa. This increased militarism is destabilizing Africa and exacerbates human suffering on the continent. Read the rest of this entry »
Tag Archives: Uganda
U.S. expands its shadow wars in Africa
Posted by Adam Hudson on July 23, 2012 in Africa, African/African-American history/politics/issues, Drones/Drone warfare, Empire/Hegemony, Human Rights, International Relations, Irregular warfare & covert operations, Military-industrial complex, war economy, & war profiteering, Somalia, Targeted killing, War & Peace, Yemen
Tags: Africa, AFRICOM, air wars, Camp Lemonnier, China, CIA, Djibouti, drone warfare, drones, empire, espionage, Ethiopia, hegemony, Human Rights, imperialism, Libya, Mali, NATO, natural resources, oil, secret prisons, shadow war, Somalia, special operations, Uganda
Kony 2012 — propaganda for U.S. militarism in Africa
Within a matter of days, the film “Kony 2012”, put out by the NGO Invisible Children (IC), went viral. In the beginning, the film highlights the brutality of the Lord’s Resistance Army (LRA), a Christian militia group in Uganda led by a man named Joseph Kony. The LRA is known for committing massive human rights violations, such as using child soldiers, murder, mutilation, abduction, and sexual enslavement of women and children. Most of the film, though, focuses on IC’s efforts to bring Kony to justice and encourages viewers to take part in the campaign. What IC explicitly advocates is U.S. military intervention in Uganda to apprehend Joseph Kony.
I could not help but cringe as I watched this film. For one, it reeked of a disturbing white savior undertone. Ugandans were not portrayed as agents of their own liberation. Rather, they (particularly the young boy Jacob) were portrayed as helpless victims in need of Western do-gooders to save them with charity rather than solidarity and empowerment. As an African-American, I could not help but be offended by this. Many Read the rest of this entry »
Posted by Adam Hudson on March 26, 2012 in Activism & Social Change, Africa, African/African-American history/politics/issues, Empire/Hegemony, International Relations, Military-industrial complex, war economy, & war profiteering, War & Peace
Tags: Africa, AFRICOM, Barack Obama, Congo, Democratic Republic of Congo, DRC, imperialism, Invisible Children, Kony, Kony 2012, militarism, Obama, Rwanda, Uganda