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Panetta: Djibouti critical to US terror fight

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U.S. Defense Secretary Leon Panetta said Tuesday that U.S. operations against al-Qaida are now concentrating on key groups in Yemen, Somalia  and North Africa.
Panetta said efforts against the al-Qaida  affiliates depend on American partnerships with countries like Djibouti. The military base in this tiny port nation in the Horn of Africa is the launch point for U.S. drones used for intelligence, surveillance and,  at times, strikes against insurgents in terror hotspots.
Panetta  told troops stationed at the base that he will visit Libya, becoming the first Pentagon chief to travel to the embattled country, which is  emerging from an eight-month civil war.
He said he will also  travel to Iraq in the coming days for a ceremony that will shut down the U.S. military mission there after nearly nine years at war.
As  the U.S. winds down operations in Iraq and begins its methodical  withdrawal from Afghanistan, the U.S. military has increasingly focused  on Africa — particularly the north, where insurgents have found  sanctuary.
“It’s fair to say that the United States is intent on  going after al-Qaida wherever they locate, and making sure they have no  place to hide,” said Panetta, who is making his first trip to Djibouti.
A key U.S. ally in this region, Djibouti has the only U.S. base in  sub-Saharan Africa. It hosts the military’s Combined Joint Task  Force-Horn of Africa.
U.S. officials have acknowledged that as the threat from core al-Qaida leaders in Pakistan declines — largely due to U.S. strikes that have killed insurgents or kept them on the run — affiliated groups in Africa and Yemen have taken on more active and  dangerous roles.
The worry is that militant groups — including  al-Shabab in Somalia and al-Qaida in the Arabian Peninsula in Yemen — operate out of safe havens in undergoverned spaces.
“Our goal is  to make sure that wherever they go, we go after them and make sure that  they are not able to ever develop the kind of planning that would  involve attacks on our homeland,” Panetta told reporters traveling with  him.
Militants based in Somalia and Yemen have been at the heart  of a number of deadly terror attacks in the region, and several  near-misses in the U.S.
The Somalia-based al-Shabab, which is  linked to al-Qaida, unleashed twin bombings in Kampala, Uganda, that  killed 76 in 2010. The group is particularly worrisome because it has  recruited dozens of Somali-Americans, particularly young men, to travel  to Somalia and take up the fight.
On Christmas Day 2009, a  Nigerian man tried to blow up an airliner over Detroit during a flight  that originated from Lagos, Nigeria.
U.S. and European officials  also worry that al-Qaida in the Islamic Maghreb — which operates in the  west and north of Africa — is working to establish links with al-Shabab  and the Nigerian group Boko Haram.
Panetta met with Djibouti  President Ismail Omar Guelleh as well as some of the roughly 3,000 U.S.  troops that are based here, conducting counterterrorism, counter-piracy  and humanitarian missions.
U.S. defense officials said Djibouti is planning to deploy some troops to the Somalia mission, joining forces  from Uganda and Burundi who are working to push al-Shabab back,  particularly from key areas around the capital region.
Panetta’s  plan to visit Libya comes amid ongoing violence there, including recent  clashes between revolutionary fighters and national army troops near  Tripoli’s airport.
Panetta said Libya reflects the ongoing changes in the region after the Arab Spring, and said the U.S. wants to help  Libyans move in the right direction as the people take back their  country. With military assistance from the U.S. and NATO, Libyans ousted and later killed longtime leader Moammar Gadhafi earlier this year.
Tuesday, December 13, 2011


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