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Isis and al-Qaeda join forces in West Africa | The Independent

Fighters appear to be coordinating attacks and carving out mutually agreed-upon areas of influence in the Sahel, a strip of land south of the Sahara desert. The rural territory at risk is so large it could “fit multiple Afghanistans and Iraqs,” said brigade general Dagvin Anderson, head of the US military’s Special Operations arm in Africa. Sharing headlines “What we’ve seen is not just random acts of violence under a terrorist banner but a deliberate campaign that is trying to bring these various groups under a common cause,” he said. “That larger effort then poses a threat to the United States.” The militants have wielded increasingly sophisticated tactics in recent months as they have rooted deeper into Mali , Niger and Burkina Faso , ambushing army bases and dominating villages with surprising force, according to interviews with more than a dozen senior officials and military leaders from the United States, France and West Africa. The groups are not declaring “caliphates,” so as to avoid scrutiny from the West, officials said, buying time to train, gather force and plot attacks that could ultimately reach major international targets. A coalition of al-Qaeda loyalists called Jama’at Nasr al-Islam wal Muslimin (JNIM) has as many as 2,000 fighters in West Africa, according to a US report released this month. The Islamic State in the Greater Sahara, which staged the 2017 attack that killed four American soldiers in Niger, is also thought to be hundreds strong and recruiting combatants in northeastern Mali. “This cancer will spread far beyond here if we don’t fight together to end it,” said general Ibrahim Fane, secretary general of Mali’s ministry of defence, whose country has lost more than 100 soldiers in routine clashes since October. The warnings come as the Pentagon weighs pulling forces from West Africa, where about 1,400 troops provide intelligence and drone support, among other forms of military help. About 4,400 American troops are based in East Africa, where the US military advises African forces fighting al-Shabab. At a US-led training exercise this week in coastal Mauritania, officials said the Defence Department has made no decision as it considers shifting resources to the Asia-Pacific region to counter China and Russia. France, which has about 4,500 troops in West Africa – the most of any foreign partner by far – has urged the United States to stay in the battle and other European powers to step up. (The United Nations has about 13,000 peacekeepers in Mali alone.)