Mass terror killings in Nigeria put US Somalia withdrawal in spotlight

AuthorSETH J. FRANTZMAN
Published date06 December 2020
Date06 December 2020
Publication titleJerusalem Post, The: Web Edition Articles (Israel)
For more than a decade, depredations by Al-Shabab, a group linked to global Islamist terror, have necessitated focus by the international community. The group has spread terror beyond Somalia, affecting Kenya and East Africa.

At the same time, Islamist terror attacks in Nigeria and across the Sahel have increased in recent years, despite the role of the US in Niger and France across the Sahel.

The US decisions in Africa, which look to reduce America's very small footprint on the continent, could send a message to groups destroying northern Nigeria, like Boko Haram, that Washington is not committed in the long term. While Somalia is very far from Nigeria, these groups, which are affiliates of various extremist global groups such as Al Qaeda or Islamic State, follow regional news and understand that if Western governments and the US are not committed then they could increase their attacks.

In a recent attack in Nigeria, around 110 people were murdered. These were farm workers. France24 says the attacks were carried out by jihadists; the UN has said it was the deadliest attack this year.

These attacks look increasingly like ISIS-style genocide and they have included targeted killings of Christians and Muslims as well as the kidnapping of women and children. The only reason this has not been treated with the seriousness with which ISIS was treated in Iraq and Syria appears to be that most countries do not consider African states a priority. For this reason, extremist groups have penetrated further and further in recent years, destabilizing and spreading terror to the Central African Republic and many other states.

While in some cases the extremists have been pushed back, such as they were in Mali, in other places they appear to be spreading.

There is not enough reporting on or...

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