AFRICOM and the Geopolitics of African Oil
By Daniel Volman | June 2009
On 1 October 2008, the new Africa Command (AFRICOM) officially became operational as America’s newest combatant command, with its headquarters in Stuttgart, Germany, to oversee U.S. military activities on the continent. Until the creation of AFRICOM, U.S.-African military relations was conducted through three different commands: the European Command, which had responsibility for most of the continent; the Central Command, which oversaw Egypt and the Horn of Africa region along with the Middle East and Central Asia; and the Pacific Command, which administered military ties with Madagascar and other islands in the Indian Ocean. This reflected the fact that Africa was chiefly viewed as a regional theater in the global Cold War, or as an adjunct to U.S.-European relations, or—as in the immediate post-Cold War period—as a region of little concern to the United States.
From The Geopolitics of Petroleum ACAS Blog Series
Keywords: Africom | Algeria | Bush administration | China | Egypt | Gabon | Horn of Africa | Kenya | Mali | Morocco | Namibia | Pentagon | Sao Tome | Senegal | Tunisia | Uganda | Zambia
U.S. Military Activities in Kenya
By Daniel Volman | January 2008
Now that President George Bush’s special envoy to the Kenyan crisis, Jendayi Fraser (US Assistant Secretary of State for African Affairs) has admitted that the elections in Kenya were seriously flawed (a polite way of saying they are fraudulent) and ordered President Mwai Kibaki to meet the opposition leader, Raile Odinga, it is easy to forget that the United States Ambassador in Kenya only weeks ago declared the elections free and fair.
Keywords: Gabon | Kenya | Mali | Morocco | Namibia | Sao Tome | Senegal | Tunisia | Uganda | Zambia