Friday, March 22, 2024

Niger finds itself trapped in America’s foreign policy Roach Motel

 

Niger finds itself trapped in America’s foreign policy Roach Motel
Does even one American in hundred, make that one in a thousand, possibly one in a million, feel we must be involved militarily in Niger? I doubt it. But the U.S. military, from Commander In Chief Joe Biden on down, certainly do. He’s got 1,000 troops in Niger. The new Niger government wants them out.
US presence in Niger goes back to 2013. Authorized by President Obama, it has continued under both Trump and Biden. Back in 2015, 4 US troops were killed in an ambush. It made no dent in Obama’s foreign policy acquiescing in every cockamamie intervention the military demands.
Last July, a military group, the National Council for the Safeguard of the Homeland (CNSP), seized power from a US friendly government. The new sheriff in town is demanding the US leave. When the US visited Niger recently to plead Uncle Sam’s case, they insulted Niger’s sovereignty by telling the CNSP to stop cozying up to Russia and Iran. The CNSP’s response? “Niger regrets the intention of the American delegation to deny the sovereign Nigerien people the right to choose their partners and types of partnerships capable of truly helping them fight against terrorism.”
One reason the US refuses to leave is its $100 million drone based used for reconnaissance and yes, bombing imagined bad guys in the region.
Leaders of Iraq and Syria, both of whom have long wanted US troops out of defiling their sovereignty, should advise Niger to relax. Niger is now part of American’s foreign policy Roach Motel. US soldiers go in…but never come out.

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