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9 mars 2015 1 09 /03 /mars /2015 17:45
A Somali MAV 5

A Somali MAV 5

 

09 March 2015 by defenceWeb

 

The Italian government has donated 54 vehicles to the Somali National Army as part of efforts to strengthen its ability to combat al Shabaab militants and other security challenges.

 

The vehicles were received by General Dahir Adan, chief of the Somali National Army (SNA) on March 5 at Mogadishu’s port after arriving by ship. Also present at the handover was Colonel Bernardo Mencaraglia, Commander Italian National Support Element (IT-NSE), European Union Training Mission (EUTM) Somalia.

 

Garowe Online reports that the equipment will be used by the armed forces, intelligence service and police. The shipment includes trucks and MAV 5 light armoured vehicles, based on the IVECO 40.10 and capable of carrying six personnel.

 

Mencaraglia said the vehicles were donated in line with previous commitments. For example, in April 2014, Italy delivered 30 vehicles to the Somali Police Corps in the first instalment of materiel donated by the Italian ministry of defence to Somalia’s armed forces.

 

The donations are part of Italy’s commitment to safeguarding peace and stability in Somalia. Italy is strongly committed in the European Union Training Mission in Somalia. After four years in Uganda it redeployed to Mogadishu in 2014. The current strength of 130 personnel represents 11 nations and forms an integral part of the EU Horn of Africa strategic plan, proving a variety of military capabilities for the development of Somali security forces.

 

EUTM Somalia provides military advice to the MoD/Defence General Staff and basic/specialist training to the Somali National Army and as of October 2014 had planned and conducted 18 training courses at Jazeera Training Camp, training almost 1 500 Somalis.

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9 mars 2015 1 09 /03 /mars /2015 17:30
An Egyptian MiG-21

An Egyptian MiG-21

 

09 March 2015 defenceWeb (Reuters)

 

Egyptian military air strikes have killed 25 Islamist militants in Northern Sinai over the last two days, security sources said, targeting an insurgency that seeks to topple the Cairo government.

 

On Friday, air raids hit two houses south of the Sinai town of Sheikh Zuweid, killing 10 militants from Ansar Beit al-Maqdis - which renamed itself Sinai Province after pledging allegiance to Islamic State - the sources said.

 

At least 14 other militants were injured in the strikes. On Thursday, 15 militants were killed when air strikes hit three homes south of Sheikh Zuweid. Reuters could not immediately verify accounts of the attacks and the army spokesman was not immediately available for comment.

 

North Sinai is the epicentre of an Islamist militant insurgency that has killed hundreds of police and soldiers since then army chief Abdel Fattah al-Sisi ousted Islamist president Mohamed Mursi in July 2013 after mass protests against his rule.

 

Egypt has launched a crackdown in Sinai and systematically repressed Muslim Brotherhood supporters and other political opponents across the country. The Brotherhood says it is committed to peaceful activism.

 

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9 mars 2015 1 09 /03 /mars /2015 14:45
photo EMA

photo EMA

 

09 March 2015 defenceWeb (Reuters)

 

France and Mali have agreed to new measures to reinforce security in Mali in the wake of an attack that killed five people at a restaurant in Bamako, the French presidency said in a statement on Saturday.

 

"The two presidents decided common measures to reinforce security in Mali," the statement said after French President Francois Hollande spoke to his Malian counterpart.

 

It did not specify how the measures would be strengthened.

 

France has more than 3,000 troops in West Africa as part of a counter-insurgency force targeting al-Qaeda linked militants.

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9 mars 2015 1 09 /03 /mars /2015 13:45
(weo 2005)

(weo 2005)

Depuis plusieurs semaines, la Libye est le théâtre d'une série d'attaques revendiquées ou attribuées au groupe djihadiste EI qui contrôle des pans entiers de territoire en Syrie et en Irak.

 

09.03.2015 Le Monde.fr

 

Neuf personnes – quatre Philippins, deux Bangladeshis, un Ghanéen, un Tchèque et un Autrichien – ont été enlevés lors d'une attaque vendredi 6 mars contre le champ pétrolier Al-Ghani, dans le sud de la Libye, ont annoncé lundi les autorités philippines. L'attaque a été imputée aux djihadistes du groupe Etat islamique (EI), qui a fait huit morts parmi les gardes. Le porte-parole du ministère des affaires étrangères philippin, qui s'appuyait sur un rapport de l'ambassade des Philippines en Libye, a déclaré qu'il n'était pas en mesure de confirmer l'identité des ravisseurs, ajoutant qu'aucune demande n'avait été formulée par les ravisseurs.

 

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9 mars 2015 1 09 /03 /mars /2015 13:30
Islamic State conflict: Deadly strike on Syria refinery

Video posted by Raqqa is Being Slaughtered Silently purportedly showing fireball in sky after air strike on oil refinery outside Tal Abyad, Syria (8 March 2015)

 

9 March 2015 BBC MidEast

 

At least 14 people have been killed in US-led coalition air strikes on an oil refinery in northern Syria run by Islamic State (IS), activists say.

 

Refinery workers and jihadist militants were among those who died in the raid on the facility outside Tal Abyad. One activist group posted a video purportedly showing a fireball rising into the night sky after the attack. Captured refineries and oil fields have played a key role in fuelling Islamic State's advance across Syria and Iraq. Last year, the group may have earned as much as $100m (£66m) from the sale of oil and oil products to local smugglers who, in turn, sell them to the Syrian government and merchants in neighbouring countries. However, US officials say the group's ability to use oil as a source of revenue is now believed to be diminishing due to the air strikes.

 

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9 mars 2015 1 09 /03 /mars /2015 12:45
Daesh et "Globalisation" du califat : le cas de Boko Haram

Mowag Piranha de l'armée nigériane capturé par les combattants de Boko Haram, repris fin 2014 par les forces nigérianes (le cliché choisi ici). Le blindé figure sur plusieurs vidéos de propagande de l'organisation d'Aboubakar Shekau. Sa "saisie" par les soldats nigérians est donc symboliquement importante et peut être considérée comme une petite victoire morale. Victoire qui malheureusement n'a pas été relayée comme elle aurait dû l'être. (Source : réseaux sociaux)

 

8 mars 2015 par Laurent Touchard - CONOPS

 

Boko Haram (Jamaat 'u Ahlis Sunna lidda'Awati wal-Jihad – Groupe Sunnite pour la Prédication et le Jihad) a donc « prêté allégeance » à l’État Islamique. Contrairement à nombre d'experts pour qui « ça n'est pas une surprise », je n'attendais pas ce ralliement avant davantage de défaites des combattants de Shekau face aux troupes tchadiennes, nigériennes, camerounaises et nigérianes qui multiplient les actions offensives depuis le début février 2015. Cette erreur d'appréciation de ma part est pourtant synonyme d'une bonne nouvelle : Boko Haram se révèle donc beaucoup moins puissant que redouté. Non sans le bémol de rigueur : « à condition d'y consacrer les moyens adéquats. »

 

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9 mars 2015 1 09 /03 /mars /2015 11:56
Actualisation de la Loi de programmation militaire

 

09/03/2015 Ministère de la Défense

 

Après les attaques terroristes des 7, 8 et 9 janvier derniers et à la suite de la décision du Président de la République d’engager les travaux d’actualisation de la Loi de programmation militaire, le ministre de la Défense présentera son agenda de travail pour l’année 2015.

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9 mars 2015 1 09 /03 /mars /2015 08:45
Boko Haram : offensive d’envergure lancée par le Niger et le Tchad

 

08-03-2015 Par RFI

 

Les armées du Tchad et du Niger ont lancé dimanche une offensive aérienne et terrestre d'envergure au Nigeria contre Boko Haram, au lendemain de l'annonce par le groupe islamiste de son « allégeance » au groupe Etat islamique.  Une offensive lancée ce dimanche depuis le sud-est du Niger.

 

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9 mars 2015 1 09 /03 /mars /2015 08:30
Yemen: A Nation Divided

 

March 8, 2015: Strategy Page

 

The Shia rebels have declare themselves the legitimate rulers of Yemen, but they only control about a third of it. Shia militiamen occupy nearly half the country but in central Yemen the majority Sunnis are resisting with demonstrations and armed violence. The last elected leaders have set up a new capital in the southern port of Aden. There are now frequent attacks against Shia rebels in Baida, Marib, Ibb and Hadramout provinces. The Shia rebels are now trying to obtain aid, investment and diplomatic support from Russia and China, two countries that have long supported Iran. Over 80 percent of the 77 million people living in the Arabian Peninsula are Sunni and they are heavily armed and, at the moment, violently opposed to Shia Iran (the de facto head of Shia Islam). Over 80 percent of all Moslems are Sunni and the most holy shrines for all Moslems are in Saudi Arabia under the control of a very Sunni monarchy. The Yemeni Shia are aware of this which is why so many of them back making a peace deal with the Yemeni Sunnis and accepting as much as they can get. While the Sunni government in Aden is willing to talk, they are also asking for military assistance from the GCC. Many foreign embassies that had left the capital have now reopened in Aden. The U.S. “embassy” for Yemen is now being run out of the American consulate in the Saudi Arabian Red Sea port of Jeddah. Arab and Western nations are mobilizing economic support for the Aden government.

 

All this Shia success comes from the fact that the Shia rebels from the north allied themselves with former president Ali Abdullah Saleh (who is from a small Shia tribe near the capital) who was forced out in 2012 and refused to leave the country. Saleh supported (secretly at first but now openly) the Shia rebels and now he has called on military officers who were close to him (many of the senior ones were) to get their troops to join the Shia. Many of the Sunni troops refused or simply deserted. With many army bases undermanned Shia rebels have, pro-Hadi tribesmen and AQAP have been scrambling to take as many bases (and the weapons and other supplies they hold) as they can before all have new, and more determined, owners. Saleh’s successor (Hadi) proved unable to reassemble the coalition Saleh relied on for decades to run the country. Then again, when the Arab Spring came along in 2011 the Saleh coalition showed its age and crumbled.

 

The northern Shia have been fighting for years to get back the autonomy they enjoyed for generations. When Saleh was in power, he fought this autonomy movement. Now that Saleh is out of power, he backs his fellow Shia to get, many believe, Saleh back in power. There are still many Yemenis who have a grudge against the government formed after the civil war that ended, sort of, in 1994. That war was caused by the fact that, when the British left Yemen in 1967, their former colony in Aden became one of two countries called Yemen. The two parts of Yemen finally united in 1990, but a civil war in 1994 was needed to seal the deal. That fix didn't really take, and the north and south kept pulling apart. This comes back to the fact that Yemen has always been a region, not a country. Like most of the rest of the Persian Gulf and Horn of Africa region, the normal form of government, until the last century or so, were wealthier coastal city states, nervously coexisting with interior tribes that got by on herding or farming (or a little of both). This whole "nation" idea is still looked on with some suspicion by many in the region. This is why the most common forms of government are the more familiar ones of antiquity (kingdom, emirate or modern variation in the form of a hereditary dictatorship.)

 

Many southerners feel they got shortchanged by the 1990 unification deal, and were harshly put down in 1994 when they rebelled. The southern separatists were always disunited and unable mount a strong resistance to government control. The government kept the peace by paying off enough southern dissidents to prevent another civil war. The Shia tribes up north have been demanding more autonomy for decades, and the Sunni tribes up there oppose that for obvious reasons. For centuries the Shia tribes of the north were largely autonomous but in the 1960s that officially ended. The reality was that many of the Shia tribesmen continued to act like they still had their traditional violence and the national government ignored that as much as they could. The Shia violence got worse after 2004 and escalated further when most Yemenis joined the Arab Spring movement in 2011 and removed a long-time government headed by a northern Shia. While the north has several entirely Shia tribes, Sunnis and Shia had lived together peacefully throughout Yemen for centuries and usually used the same mosques (some led by Shia clergy, most by Sunnis). That tradition was now being attacked by Yemeni Sunnis who are using violence or threats of violence to drive Shia from mosques throughout the country. This is a widely unpopular move, but the Sunni Islamic radicals are on a Mission From God not a popularity contest. The Sunni radicals also accuse Yemeni Shia of being agents for Iran which was for a long time only true in a few instances. Until recently the Shia tribes renounced any Iranian connection because they were caught between a Sunni majority to the south and a Sunni (and very anti-Iran) Saudi Arabia to the north. Just across the border there are related Shia tribes in Saudi Arabia, who have long since learned to keep quiet and enjoy the slice of Saudi oil wealth they receive from the government. Moreover the Saudi Shia are a smaller fraction of the population and separated, not concentrated as the Yemeni Shia are. In Yemen Shia are about a third of the 24 million population and most of them live in the north.

 

 It is unclear when the military and the Sunni tribes will succeed in resisting and defeating the growing Shia power. This is far from a sure thing since needs a new coalition to run the country because the one that existed until September 2014 ceased to function long before president Hadi was forced out in January 2015. Once the Shia rebels occupied the capital in late 2014 and then a growing number of cities and provinces to the south it was obvious the Shia would have a lot to say about the next government. Now the Shia claim they are the government and Iranians worry that this will turn into another expensive foreign obligation (like Hezbollah and the military aid efforts in Iraq and Syria, not to mention financial aid to Hamas in Gaza and several similar entanglements). All this military foreign aid is unpopular with most Iranians who would rather see the money spent at home. Iran officially has nothing to do with what is going on in Yemen but Arabs know that the “victory” in Yemen is being celebrated in the streets of Iran (at least in conversation) and increasingly in Iranian media as well. This is humiliating for the GCC (Gulf Cooperation Council, the Arab oil states in the Persian Gulf) members and Sunnis in general. Iran has not directly intervened (but is suspected of supplying the Yemen Shia with cash and advice). Now Iran is officially an ally and supporter of the new Shia government. The Sunni hope and the Shia nightmare is military intervention by the Saudis, but that’s not the Saudi style. The Saudis don’t want to see their armed forces tied down in Yemen, not when Iran remains a major, and growing, threat. Then there is the ISIL threat in Syria and Iraq (and, to a lesser extent, inside Saudi Arabia itself). There is no easy way out of this mess for anyone. The customary way these things are settled in Arabia is by making deals. The Yemeni Shia have made it clear that Iran is their friend and expect help from that direction. Most Yemeni Shia don’t want the religious fanaticism of Iran but are willing to accept aid from Iran and work to make Sunni majority Yemen a “friend“ of Iran (much like the Shia minority has done in Lebanon and Syria). The Saudis and GCC are very hostile to this sort of thing but reluctant to go to war over it. That may change now that the Yemeni Shia rebels have officially declared themselves the rulers of Yemen even though they control only the capital and the north (about a third of the country).

 

And then there’s the oil. Revenue from oil exports in 2014 was $1.67 billion. That’s down from $2.66 billion in 2013.  Falling oil prices and pipeline attacks by angry tribesmen cost Yemen a billion dollars in lost oil income in 2014. Normally Yemen produces 270,000 barrels of oil a day and most of it is exported (accounting, with natural gas, 90 percent of export income). The 320 kilometer long pipeline extends from oil fields in Marib province to the Red Sea export terminal. Such attacks cost the government a billion dollars in lost revenue in 2013. Tribesmen loyal to deposed president Saleh are often blamed. President Hadi caused some bad feeling in Marib when he cut cash payments going to pro-Saleh tribal leaders and instead gave it to those he trusted more. The tribesmen who lost out responded in the traditional way, by attacking the assets of those they saw as responsible; namely the oil fields and pipelines. AQAP has been popular in Marib because the Islamic terrorists will hire local tribesmen and promise a larger share of gas and oil income for the local tribes once AQAP takes control of the country.

 

Marib is where local Sunni tribes have assembled a large force of gunmen to defend or destroy those valuable oil and gas facilities. Worse yet tribal leaders say that if the Shia enter Marib this will mean the shutdown of energy supplies to key power plants that keep the lights on in most of the country. In January tribal leaders called for up to thirty thousand armed tribesmen to gather in Marib to fight the Shia rebels. This buildup was not completed as the Shia rebels quietly agreed to maintain the November peace deal. Back then three of the most powerful tribes in Marib province united and worked out a peace deal with the approaching Shia rebels. In essence the deal guaranteed the safety of Shia in Marib and in return the Shia rebels would not try to enter Marib and take over. The three tribes in Marib are powerful and have a reputation for being determined fighters. The Shia rebels are still nearby but are less likely to advance now that Marib is the assembly point for anti-Shia tribesmen. To further complicate matters tribal leaders in what is locally known as the “Sheba region” (Marib, Baida and Jawf provinces) have apparently united, despite the many feuds and disagreements among them. The Shia are seen as a common threat. Recently the Sunni tribes of Marib closed the border with Baida province, which is largely controlled by Shia rebels.

 

March 1, 2015: For the first time since 1990 a direct flight from Iran landed in Yemen. The transport was carrying medical supplies and arrived in the capital at the same time that Arab countries were moving their embassies south to the port city of Aden, which is not yet under control of the Shia rebels who have been advancing south since 2014. On February 21st the elected president (Hadi) of Yemen fled the capital and, in effect, moved the government to Aden. At the moment the Shia rebels have control of northern Yemen but the Sunni majority, in the form of the armed Sunni tribes, are preventing a Shia advance any farther south. Meanwhile Iran announced that it will now carry out regular (14 flights a week) service between Iran and the Yemeni capital. Iranians have been warned that Sunni Islamic terrorists (ISIL and al Qaeda) are very active in Yemen and will be seeking to kill or kidnap Iranian visitors.

 

March 7, 2015: The Defense Minister of the elected government fled house arrest in the capital and is believed headed for the new capital in Aden. The Defense Minister was arrested by Shia rebels on February 6th when the rebels took complete control of the capital. In Aden the last elected president (Hadi) declared Aden the national capital and that the traditional capital (Sanna) an occupied (by Shia rebels) city. Hadi declared that five of the countries six regions had pledged allegiance to the Aden government and support for armed opposition to the Shia rebels. There are now frequent attacks against Shia rebels in Baida, Marib, Ibb and Hadramout provinces. Shia living in southern Yemen have held pro-Shia demonstrations, which are not interfered with. The anti-Shia demonstrators often face gunfire and sometimes arrest (which the Sunnis call kidnapping, which is what is sometimes turns into because a large payment is demanded for the release of these demonstrators).

In the south (Ibb province) Shia rebels used gunfire to disperse an anti-Shia protest in the provincial capital. There were casualties among the demonstrators and some were arrested by the Shia.

 

March 6, 2015: A second air freight flight from Iran landed at the airport outside Sanna. Both of these transports were said to contain “humanitarian cargo.” Yemeni Shia envoys in Iran asked Iran to set up cultural centers and a museum of Persian art in Yemen.

 

March 5, 2015:  An Iranian diplomat captured by AQAP (Al Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula) Islamic terrorists in Yemen in 2013 arrived back in Iran. He was freed by Iranian commandos who now operate openly in Sanna. The Yemeni rebels denied that Iranian commandos are in Yemen.

 

March 3, 2015: In the south (Baida province) two AQAP attacks on Shia rebels left three Islamic terrorists and twelve Shia dead. In February the Shia rebels took control of much of Baida province.

 

March 2, 2015: A Saudi diplomat held by AQAP was freed by the unspecified actions of the Saudi intelligence services. Back in August 2012 the captive was to be released after everyone had agreed on a $10 million ransom. But at the last minute al Qaeda leaders changed their mind and demanded $20 million. At that point negotiations stalled. The Saudi diplomat was kidnapped last March. AQAP needed cash to keep its terror campaign going and the Saudis decided to explore other options to get their diplomat back.

 

March 1, 2015: An Iranian commercial flight from Iran landed at the airport outside Sanna. This was the first Iranian aircraft to land in Yemen since 1990.

 

February 28, 2015: In Yemen the Shia rebels in control of the capital and most of the north signed an agreement with Iran to enable, for the first time, commercial air traffic between the two countries.  At the same time the Shia rebels withdrew from UN sponsored talks over the future of Yemen until a location for the talks outside Yemen could be found and agreed on. In the south (Lahj province) Shia rebels fired on an army convoy and wounded nine soldiers. This was believed another attempt to kidnap some soldiers to hold as hostages in an effort to get the army to turn over a nearby army base to Shia control. Elsewhere in the south (Shabwa province) three Islamic terrorists were killed by missiles from an American UAV. This is the fifth such attack in February. These attacks have left at least a fifteen Islamic terrorists and at least one civilian (a 12 year old boy travelling with one of the Islamic terrorists) dead.

 

February 27, 2015: In the south (Lahj province) AQAP ambushed an army truck at night and killed four soldiers.

 

February 26, 2015: The Shia rebel leader openly blamed Saudi Arabia for all the chaos in Yemen. The Saudis have been involved but not nearly as much as Yemeni Sunnis (and Arabian Sunnis in general) would prefer. The Saudis are slow to act but when they do move it is usually with great impact and resolve (as with their current efforts to keep the world oil price low to hurt Iran and Russia).

 

February 25, 2015: In the south (Lahj province) AQAP gunmen shot dead an intelligence colonel. Later in the day two AQAP men were shot dead in a separate incident. 

Shia rebels took control of an army base in the capital and a coast guard base on the Red Sea coast. Soldiers resisted at the army based but surrendered after six hours of fighting and at least ten dead. There was less fighting and no casualties at the coast guard base.

The UN declared that it backed the elected government of president of Abdo Rabbo Mansour Hadi was the only legitimate national government in Yemen. The Shia rebels ignored this.

 

February 24, 2015: In Sanna Shia rebels began arresting many Sunni politicians, especially those associated with the last elected government. The arrests are also the result of many Sunni politicians to join a new Shia controlled “unity government.” Meanwhile there are several anti-Shia demonstrations in Sanna each week. Elsewhere in Sanna a French female employee of the World Bank was kidnapped. Western government have been warning their citizens to stay out of Yemen in general and Sanna in particular.

 

February 23, 2015: In the south president Hadi held a meeting with the governors of most provinces.

Egypt closed its embassy in Sanna. Elsewhere in the city a bomb exploded outside a military facility that had been taken over by the Shia rebels.

 

February 21, 2015: President Hadi fled house arrest in Sanna and made his way to the southern port city of Aden.

 

February 18, 2015: In the south (Hadramout province) Sunni tribesmen attacked a convoy supplying an army base near an oil field, sparking a battle that left eight soldiers and a number of attackers dead. In nearby Baida province a bomb killed one Shia rebel and wounded three others. Further south in Aden gunmen killed an army intelligence officer.

 

February 17, 2015: Three Russian ground attack jet aircraft were delivered to the Shia controlled port of Al Hudaydah. These were bought from Belarus.

In Sanna Shia rebel leaders fired one of their top commanders for failing to settle a long-standing dispute he had with other senior leaders. This is the result of growing disputes within the Shia rebel leadership over whether to seek gaining control of the entire country or negotiating a compromise with the Sunni majority.

In the south (Hadramout province) two gunmen shot dead a police colonel.

 

February 16, 2015: In Yemen the Shia rebels officially claimed to be the only legitimate government of the country. This new Shia Yemeni president was not elected but the Yemeni rebels control the capital and most of the north so they can get away with this. The rebels say they will eventually take the largest city in the country, the port of Aden in the south. That will require defeating a larger number of very angry and heavily armed Sunni tribesmen and some of the armed forces.

In the south (Lahj province) AQAP gunmen shot dead two soldiers. Further south in Aden soldiers and tribal gunmen loyal to president Hadi seized control of government buildings and began setting up checkpoints. There was some fighting with soldiers working for an officer who had pledged loyalty to the Shia rebels.

Japan shut down its embassy in Sanna.

 

February 15, 2015: The UN demanded that the Shia rebels return control of the capital and the government to the elected officials. The Shia ignored this, pointing out that Hadi won an election in which he was the only candidate and that most Shia boycotted.

 

February 14, 2015: In the south (Baida province) fighting between Shia rebels and Sunni tribesmen left at least 26 dead.

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8 mars 2015 7 08 /03 /mars /2015 17:45
Bamako, Gao puis Kidal: preuves, s'il en faut encore, que l'insécurité est endémique au Mali


08.03.2015 par Philippe Chapleau - Lignes de Défense
 

On se souviendra des déclarations du Français Hervé Ladsous d'octobre dernier sur la situation au Mali. "Ça n'est plus un contexte de maintien de la paix", avait alors reconnu le chef des opérations de maintien de la paix de l'Onu. Effectivement, la situation n'est pas stabilisée au Mali. Dans l'est, les attaques se poursuivent contre les forces françaises (la dernière date du 24 février) et onusiennes (28 tués et 75 blessés en 2014). Le pseudo accord de paix de la semaine dernière n'a rien résolu et samedi matin, un attentat a eu lieu à Bamako.

 

Revendication. Le groupe Al-Mourabitoune de l'Algérien Mokhtar Belmokhtar a revendiqué l'attaque de Bamako qui a fait cinq tués (voir ci-dessous l'article de notre correspondant à Bamako paru ce matin dans Dimanche Ouest-France).
"Nous revendiquons la dernière opération de Bamako menée par les vaillants combattants d'Al-Mourabitoune pour venger notre prophète de l'Occident mécréant qui l'a insulté et moqué, et notre frère Ahmed Tilemsi", déclare un porte-parole dans un enregistrement audio diffusé par l'agence privée mauritanienne Al-Akhbar. Tilemsi était un chef du groupe tué par l'armée française en décembre dernier (voir mon post ici).

 

rihouay.jpg

 

Tirs sur Kidal. Ce dimanche matin, la ville de Kidal, dans le nord du Mali, a été, une fois de plus, la cible de tirs d'obus et de roquettes (une trentaine de munitions). La base de la Minusma était visée dans cette attaque. Selon la Minusma, le premier bilan fait état de la mort d'un casque bleu, et de 8 autres soldats blessés. Les tirs ont également atteint des citoyens de Kidal à l’extérieur du camp, 2 morts et 4 blessés seraient à dénombrer.

 

Attaque à Gao. Deux poseurs de bombes présumés ont été lynchés à mort et brûlés samedi par la foule à Gao. "Les deux jeunes avaient posé des bombes non loin de la police fluviale de Gao. Ils voulaient les actionner à distance, quand ils ont été surpris par des habitants de Gao qui les ont brûlés", selon une source policière à Gao. Sur les réseaux sociaux, ont circulé samedi des images des dépouilles présumées des deux Arabes lynchés et brûlés par la foule.

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8 mars 2015 7 08 /03 /mars /2015 17:45
photo Minusma

photo Minusma

 

8 March 2015 BBC Afrique

 

A rocket attack on a United Nations base in northern Mali has killed three people and wounded at least 12 others.

 

A peacekeeper died when about 30 rockets struck the base in the desert town of Kidal, said the UN mission. Some rockets missed their target, killing two civilians. It is not clear who carried out the attack. Islamist militants are active in the area. Meanwhile an al-Qaeda-linked group said it carried out an attack in the capital which killed five people on Saturday. Al-Murabitoun, an Islamist group led by Algerian militant Mokhtar Belmokhtar, said the attack on a bar in Bamako was a "revenge operation" against the "infidel West". A gunman opened fire at La Terrasse bar, killing a French national, a Belgian security official working for the EU and three Malians.

 

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8 mars 2015 7 08 /03 /mars /2015 17:30
FDA Chevalier Paul - photo Marine Nationale

FDA Chevalier Paul - photo Marine Nationale

 

4 mars 2015 par Portail des Sous-Marins

 

Depuis le 23 février, le Porte-Avions Charles de Gaulle a rejoint la coalition qui lutte contre le groupe État islamique dans le golfe Persique. Mais il n’est pas parti seul. Un sous-marin et un navire, la FDA Chevalier Paul, veillent en permanence sur sa sécurité. France 2 a pu embarquer à bord de la frégate.

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8 mars 2015 7 08 /03 /mars /2015 17:30
IAF Practice fighting Aerial Terrorism

 

03.03.2015 Shani Poms / Eden Sharon - IAF

 

Aerial terrorism is always on the agenda and demands constant attention. IAF simulated various scenarios as part of a multiplayer training exercise

 

IAF soldiers took part in a large, multiplayer training exercise, which aimed to simulate a highly sensitive and complicated aerial terrorism scenario. It included a large number of participants, both from the IAF and outside of it. "This is the only training exercise training exercise that combines all units that take part in protecting Israel's skies - the IAF, IDF Operations Division, Department of Transportation and different Intelligence platforms", says Major Ilan from Aerial Defense Department in the IAF Operations Division.

 

Not once throughout the year, IAF's units and squadrons practice air defense scenarios in the face of aerial terrorism. Nevertheless, this time was different mainly because of the number of participants and the extreme scenarios involved. "The definition of aerial terrorism is actually an attempt to perform a terror attack using a civilian aircraft. It can be a small "Cessna", an executive jet or 400-seat airliner, which is defined as an extreme scenario", he says.

 

Aerial terrorism poses some unusual dilemmas. "The problem with these missions is the involvement of civilians. When you want to remove that kind of threat, people might be affected. The dilemmas with such scenarios are much more complex and therefore managed by higher-ranking officers".

 

It took three months of preparations which climaxed with a conference Call of the senior decision-making officers, including IAF Commander, IDF Chief of Staff and civilian government leaders. "The training exercise introduces the decision-makers with the missions, because the real-time decisions are complex and difficult", said Major Ilan. "The exercise was highly successful. Bring these scenarios into awareness is by itself extremely important".

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8 mars 2015 7 08 /03 /mars /2015 12:30
Procurement: Sudan Can Get You Whatever You Need

 

March 6, 2015: Strategy Page

 

Over the last decade a growing number of weapons used by African rebels, warlords and nations under arms embargoes have been traced to Sudan. A lot of ammunition (especially grenades and bullets for AK-47s) has been made in Sudanese factories and shipped all over Africa, to anyone who could pay or whose goals coincided with those of Sudan. Many more weapons were from China and Iran but shipped via Sudan. A lot of this stuff ended up in Gaza. Some of this stuff made headlines when Israel intercepted shiploads of it being smuggled into Gaza and put the captured material on display for the world to sea. Sudan denies everything but has become notable as the only nation on the planet run by a man who is an indicted war criminal.

 

Sudan was also found to be the source of weapons purchased by Qatar and delivered by Sudan to rebels in Syria. This gives Sudan the distinction of being an ally and arms distributor for Iran as well as some Arab nations on the other side of the Persian Gulf who are threatened by Iranian aggression.

 

Israel always saw this Sudanese effort as a direct threat and has attacked Sudan several times in an effort to stop or slow down the arms smuggling going through Sudan. Thus in late 2012 Sudan reported that one of their ammunition factories blew up and blamed an Israeli air raid. Many Sudanese believe the bombed factory actually belonged to Iran. Sudan says they have proof it was an Israeli attack, in the form of fragments of Israeli missiles. Israeli officials refused to comment. Earlier in 2012 a local businessman in Port Sudan, Sudan died when his vehicle exploded. The dead man turned out to be a major arms smuggler (to Egypt and eventually Gaza) and the Sudanese government blamed his death on Israel. Sudan denies that it allows weapons to be smuggled into Egypt, but the Egyptian government believes otherwise. Israel denied any involvement with the Port Sudan explosion, as well as with similar events in the past. Egypt has since made it more difficult for Sudanese weapons to travel through Egypt.

 

Israel has been attacking the Iranian weapons pipeline via Sudan since at least 2008. The 2012 attack was documented by subsequent satellite photos showing large craters, like those made by large (one ton and half ton) bombs. The Israelis were apparently aiming for specific targets, like a number of shipping containers that had recently arrived from Iran. Two buildings in the factory compound were destroyed and 21 structures damaged. Not only are the Israelis bombing Sudan, but they are getting good information about what is where and when. This sort of thing has been going on for some time.

 

For example, in January 2009, Israel sent warplanes down the Red Sea to attack a convoy of trucks, near the Egyptian border in Sudan, carrying Iranian long range rockets destined for Gaza. Iran brings the rockets (and other weapons) in through Port Sudan, and then trucks them to Egypt. Sudan does not interfere. Egypt is not a friend of Iran but the border police can be bribed. The 2009 attack destroyed 17 truckloads of weapons and killed the 39 drivers. Since then the smugglers resorted to individual trucks and the use of small boats moving up the Red Sea coast.

 

In a 2011 incident a car travelling north, from Sudan towards Egypt, exploded. One of the dead was a Hamas official. Sudan blamed Israel for this, claiming that an Israeli aircraft must have fired a missile. No proof was offered, other than fragments from a Hellfire missile. But these could have been obtained from any number of Islamic terror groups who have lost members to Hellfire attacks. The Sudanese claimed that a U.S. AH-64 Apache helicopter gunship was used for the attack. The helicopter was said to have flown in from the sea.

 

In November and December 2011, Israeli aircraft bombed truck convoys carrying weapons from Sudan to Egypt. The Sudanese military refused to admit that Israeli aircraft were operating over northern Sudan but the Sudanese don't really have the means to prevent it.

 

In 2012 Israel and the newly independent South Sudan became allies, an arrangement sealed by a visit by the South Sudan president to Israel. For years Israel quietly aided the South Sudan rebels, who are largely Christians or animists. In 2011 South Sudan became a separate state, and Israeli aid, via Kenya, increased as a result. Israeli has long been on good terms with Kenya and most non-Moslem African nations. Israel and non-Moslem African nations have a common enemy in Islam, and especially radical Islam. As Islamic radicals have become more active in the past four decades, these alliances with Israel have become more popular in Africa.

 

Sudanese weapons and ammunition were recently found in use by Moslem rebels in the Central African Republic and by Moslem rebels in other nations all the way to the Atlantic coast. Islamic terrorists in Somalia have often been caught using Sudanese made ammunition. Libyans complain of Sudanese aircraft flying in with tons of munitions on a regular basis. These transports have been seen all over Africa for years and the cargo was often weapons or ammunition. While the Israeli attacks on Sudanese weapons movements gets a lot of attention, all these other Sundanese weapons smuggling activities do not. Overall Sudan has become a major source of weapons for terrorists and others who mean to do bad things to a lot of people. Sudan, as always, denies all and if the evidence is too compelling blames that on Israel.

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8 mars 2015 7 08 /03 /mars /2015 08:20
souce Philippe Couillard TW

souce Philippe Couillard TW

 

7 mars 2015 par Bastien Duhamel - 45eNord.ca

 

Lors de la 18e édition des «rencontres alternées» entre les chefs de gouvernements québécois et français, les premiers ministres respectifs Philippe Couillard et Manuel Valls ont annoncé une nouvelle coopération franco-québécoise contre la radicalisation djihadiste.

 

Bien qu’il ne fût pas au programme de la rencontre annuelle, le thème de la sécurité face aux menaces islamiste s’est invité aux discussions entre les deux représentants gouvernementaux. Tous deux s’accordant sur le fait que l’endoctrinement et la radicalisation des jeunes occidentaux constituaient un «enjeux majeur».

«Nos gouvernements, nos services doivent collaborer de façon constante» a affirmé M. Couillard. «C’est la responsabilité primordiale des États d’assurer la sécurité de leurs citoyens. Nous sommes contents d’être engagés avec la France dans une nouvelle collaboration encore plus forte en cette matière.

Même son de cloche de la part de son homologue Français qui assure que «nous sommes face à un défi majeur pour nos sociétés. Le Québec et la France l’appréhendent ensemble, avec détermination».

À la coordination entre les deux Etats déjà à l’œuvre en matière de cybersurveillance devrait donc s’ajouter «une nouvelle coopération» apportant avec elle une série d’accord dans les mois à venir.

La rencontre entre le ministre de l’intérieur français M. Bernard Cazeneuve et la ministre de la sécurité publique du Québec Lise Thériault, prévue le 10 mars prochain, devrait permettre d’esquisser les premières étapes de cette nouvelle coopération.

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7 mars 2015 6 07 /03 /mars /2015 23:35
source komplettie

source komplettie

 

March 6, 2015: Strategy Page

 

The U.S. recently revealed that in October Afghan and American commandos raided a remote village where a much-sought al Qaeda leader was reported to be hiding out. The raid was a success, but even more important than the al Qaeda leader was the capture of his laptop computer, intact. After years of fighting Islamic terrorists the U.S. has learned the importance of quickly examining such finds and exploiting information found.

 

For over a decade now the U.S. Department of Defense has urged American firms for help in developing better tools for quickly analyzing captured electronic data (cell phones, storage devices, and specialized military electronics). Since 2006 the military has been using similar tools developed for police departments. For example, in 2007 troops began taking a hacker analysis tool (COFEE, or Computer Online Forensic Evidence Extractor) with them on raids in Iraq. Microsoft developed COFEE for the police and military, followed by a similar tool that enables a non-hacker to analyze wireless network activity and determine which targets can be attacked with a variety of hacker tools and weapons. Since the late 1990s DARPA (Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency) has been developing similar technologies. Details don’t get released, as that would aid potential targets.

 

In addition to data extraction and analysis devices the troops can carry with them on raids, there has also been an increase in the intel analysis capabilities at all levels (battalion up to the very top). This was the result of adapting tools (mainly software) and techniques from the commercial BI (Business Intelligence) industry, which has developed a lot of powerful research and marketing tools that have direct military application. This is all very geeky but the simple description is software that can quickly find patterns to huge quantities of data or activity. Thus the urgency with which troops grab enemy laptops or even large piles of paper records (even al Qaeda keeps lots of records). The troops know that quickly putting this stuff through a scanner followed by translation and analytics software will usually produce some new suspects to go after and often a current address as well.

 

The October raid was apparently rapidly exploited using these analysis tools in conjunction with huge databases of known Islamic terrorists and their methods. This led to a noticeable increase in similar raids for the rest of 2014. The military kept quiet about what was behind this spike and were relieved when most media pundits decided this was the result of a decision by the U.S. government to “unleash” American special operations troops in Afghanistan. When the military finally revealed the real reason behind all those additional raids they also described the October laptop as nearly as valuable as the computers and documents seized in the 2011 Osama bin Laden raid.

 

After October the data in that laptop led to more raids on al Qaeda and Taliban targets, mainly because the data identified a lot of key al Qaeda people and what they did. That provided links to the Taliban and other terrorist organizations. The people identified were usually already known and there was existing data on where they were. By using the BI tools on the new data a lot of new connections were uncovered which also provided a list of people who had key jobs (and probably carried around valuable information in their heads or in their electronics devices.) Capturing these people alive was particularly important because the October laptop contained data that made it easier to interrogate the captured terrorists (because the interrogators already knew the answers to many of the questions they were asking and thus could quickly determine if the subject was lying.)

 

Finally, the capture of this laptop came right after a new president was elected in Afghanistan, who quickly lifted all the restrictions his predecessor had placed on night raids. The laptop also contained a lot of data on al Qaeda operations in Pakistan and that led to more UAV reconnaissance and missile attacks on key al Qaeda personnel there.

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7 mars 2015 6 07 /03 /mars /2015 22:45
credits Carnegie Endowment

credits Carnegie Endowment

Recent attacks in Libya by the so-called Islamic State, including the brutal slaughter of Egyptian Copts, the Corinthia Hotel attacks, car bombings in Qubbah that killed at least 45 people, and an attack on the Iranian embassy, have brought the spread of extremism in Libya to the forefront. While the Islamic State has intensified its activity in recent weeks, its spread into Libya began early in 2014 as Libyan jihadists began to return from Syria.

Jihadi groups in Libya were already deeply fragmented and localized, but the rise of the Islamic State in Iraq and Syria in 2013 and 2014 sparked new debates, eventually dividing the Libyan jihadis between supporters of the Islamic State and supporters of al-Qaeda and its regional affiliates—mainly al-Qaeda in the Islamic Maghreb (AQIM) in North Africa and the Nusra Front in Syria.

 

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7 mars 2015 6 07 /03 /mars /2015 22:45
Au Nigéria, Boko Haram prête allégeance à l’État islamique

 

7 mars 2015 par Nicolas Laffont - 45eNord.ca   

 

Le groupe islamiste nigérian Boko Haram a prêté allégeance au groupe armé État islamique (EI) qui contrôle depuis l’été dernier de vastes territoires en Irak et en Syrie.

 

Dans un message audio d’un peu plus de huit minutes, le chef de la secte islamiste Boho Haram déclare: «De votre frère [Abubakar Shekau] au Calife des Musulmans Abou Bakr al-Baghdadi,  nous vous annonçons l’obéissance à la parole d’Allah le Très Haut», commence ainsi le chef de Boko Haram, précisant ensuite prêter «allégeance au calife […] que nous écouterons et auquel nous obéirons dans la facilité et la difficulté, dans ce qui nous plaît et nous déplaît […] et de ne pas disputer le pouvoir a ses détenteurs sauf si nous voyons une mécréance claire…», indique encore Abubakar Shekau.

 

Les militants de l’Etat islamique (EI) appellent depuis plusieurs mois tous les musulmans à se joindre à eux et à prêter allégeance à leur calife Abou Bakr al Baghdadi.

 

Si cette allégeance n’est pas une surprise, elle représente toutefois le ralliement le plus important à l’EI depuis la proclamation de leur «Califat» en juin dernier.

 

En plus d’être présent en Irak et en Syrie, l’EI peut donc compter sur trois branches importantes: dans le Sinaï avec le groupe Ansar Beït al-Maqdess, en Libye et au Nigéria.

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7 mars 2015 6 07 /03 /mars /2015 22:30
Irak: poursuite de l'offensive militaire dans la région de Tikrit

 

07-03-2015 Par RFI

 

Lundi dernier, les forces irakiennes, avec 30 000 hommes mobilisés, ont lancé une offensive pour reprendre Tikrit, à 160 km au nord de Bagdad, aux mains des jihadistes de l'organisation Etat islamique. Une reconquête difficile et lente, qui soulève aussi des inquiétudes au sein des partenaires occidentaux de l'Irak.

 

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7 mars 2015 6 07 /03 /mars /2015 21:55
Des hélicoptères de l’ALAT et de la Gendarmerie nationale à Dammartin vendredi 9 janvier. photo Michel Spingler/AP

Des hélicoptères de l’ALAT et de la Gendarmerie nationale à Dammartin vendredi 9 janvier. photo Michel Spingler/AP


28.02.2015 EchoRadar -  Le Fauteuil de Colbert
 

EchoRadar souhaite continuer à vous livrer quelques commentaires sur les événements ayant eu lieu lors de la semaine du 7 janvier 2015. Nous avons toujours une pensée pour toutes les victimes.
 

Aujourd’hui, nous vous proposons de revenir sur les opérations menaient entre les 7 et 9 janvier. Non pas que nous prétendions décrire avec exhaustivité toutes les opérations et manœuvres des forces de l’ordre. Mais très modestement, nous souhaitons proposer quelques remarques sur le niveau d’engagement, son ampleur, notamment géographique et le dispositif actuel de prévention.

A la suite de nombreux attentats et de prises d’otages ayant eu lieu de par le monde – de la prise d’otage de l’école de Beslan en 2004 à celle d’In Amenas en 2013 en passant par le détournement de l’Airbus en 1994 – nos forces de Police et de Gendarmerie travaillaient, notamment, mais pas seulement, sur le scenario d’une Prise d’Otages Massive (POM). Les gardiens de la paix prévoyaient de contrer ces hypothèses structurantes par l’intervention conjointe de toutes les unités spéciales. Au fil des reportages, il apparaissait même des coopérations ponctuelles, tout du moins pour l’enrichissement des formations, entre les forces spéciales des Armées et les unités spéciales des forces de Police et Gendarmerie. Le dispositif « contre-POM » se doit de contrer une ou des équipes de terroristes prenant massivement des otages en quelque lieu que ce soit (site industrielle, TGV, avion, métro, etc.).

 

Lors des attentats du 7 au 9 janvier, nous les observions affronter une « variante » de ce scénario. Cet attentat « dynamique » était mené par très peu de moyens humains et matériels. Sans présumer des résultats des enquêtes des services judiciaires et de renseignement, il y aurait eu au moins trois auteurs et un éventuel soutien logistique.

 

Ce qui revient à remarquer que ces unités poursuivaient avec plusieurs dizaines d’hommes seulement deux individus entre Paris et le Sud de la Picardie. Ce dispositif se devait d’être dynamique pour partir à la chasse d’un binôme. Il a pu avoir recours à des enveloppements verticaux via l’utilisation d’hélicoptères de manœuvre et légers. Et il s’appuyait aussi sur un quadrillage serré du terrain par la Police nationale et la Gendarmerie. Est-ce bien courant d’observer une telle opération « militaire » sur le sol national ?

 

Allier nos meilleurs unités de sécurité intérieure à une telle aéromobilité ce n’est que constater la faiblesse de nos moyens. Non pas qu’ils soient faibles par nature. Mais utiliser un dispositif exceptionnel – utilisation bien forcée – pour seulement deux hommes, c’est poser la question de ce qui serait nécessaire s’il y avait eu plus d’une équipe. Comment réagir si une autre commet ses forfaits par exemple à Rennes et une troisième à Clermont-Ferrand ?

 

Ce dispositif contre-POM peut être dilué en combien de divisions ? Combien d’hélicoptères de manœuvres peuvent être fournis dans l’urgence ? Ceux des Armées sont très sollicités (doux euphémisme) et ne sont pas forcément en Europe (puisque la France est un archipel globale). L’attentat qui frappait la Norvège en 2011 démontrait que, même dans le pays le plus fourni au monde en hélicoptères moyens et lourds (pour le secteur pétrolier), il n’était pas aisé pour les forces de police de réquisitionner dans l’urgence quelques voilures tournantes.

 

Autre chose, nous nous devons de considérer ce qui peut apparaître, par l’observation, des problèmes de génération de forces. Le plan VIGIPIRATE, étendu par l’opération Sentinelle, met sur le terrain plus de 10 000 hommes de l’Armée de Terre pour seulement 300 réservistes engagés. Le problème est-il le même pour la Police nationale et la Gendarmerie ? Toutes ces forces produisaient l’effort nécessaire à la hauteur des enjeux. Mais quelque soit la hauteur de l’engagement individuel ou de celui des organisations, il y a besoin, à un moment ou un autre, de régénérer les forces. C’est-à-dire que pour conserver autant d’hommes et de femmes sur le terrain, il faudra toujours des phases de relève et de repos. Et si nous devons craindre à l’avenir un contournement du dispositif déployé contre les attentats des 7-9 janvier, alors de futurs criminels pourraient tenter de diviser ce même dispositif.

 

Comment allier un dispositif exceptionnel de commandos de chasse, appuyé par des moyens aéromobiles militaires, sur un terrain quadrillé par les forces de police sans renouveler les réserves de force ? Comment faire durer un tel quadrillage de la France par la Police nationale et la Gendarmerie dans des proportions extraordinaires ? Les budgets actuels tendent les hommes et les femmes. Ne pas leur offrir des dispositifs temporaires de forces et de matériels pourraient devenir rapidement problématique tant notre pays est adulé dans certaines parties du monde. Faut-il évoquer une Garde nationale ? Une Garde républicaine ? Une juste répartition des besoins au sein même des administrations (que chaque zone police et zone gendarmerie reçoivent hommes et matériels en fonction des chiffres du ministère, par exemple) ? Autre chose : comme par exemple la répartition de l’effort dans le budget de l’Etat ? La problématique matérielle montre aussi le besoin, peut-être futur, de pouvoir soit projeter, soit disperser des matériels, tant aériens que terrestres. C’est aussi un des volets du besoin de « réserves » sur tous les territoires nationaux. Les menaces nous dictent leur tempo, nous ne pouvons que nous y adapter.

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7 mars 2015 6 07 /03 /mars /2015 21:45
Nigeria's Boko Haram pledges allegiance to Islamic State

The audio message is believed to be by Boko Haram leader Abubakar Shekau

 

7 March 2015 BBC Africa

 

Nigerian militant group Boko Haram has pledged allegiance to Islamic State (IS), according to an audio statement.

 

The message, which was not verified, was posted on Boko Haram's Twitter account and appeared to be by the group's leader, Abubakar Shekau. Boko Haram began a military campaign to impose Islamic rule in northern Nigeria in 2009. The conflict has since spread to neighbouring states. It would be the latest in a series of groups to swear allegiance to IS. In the past Boko Haram is thought to have had links with al-Qaeda. IS took control of large swathes of territory in eastern Syria and across northern and western Iraq last year. The group aims to establish a "caliphate", a state ruled by a single political and religious leader according to Islamic law, or Sharia. Its leader, Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi, is known to his followers as Caliph Ibrahim. In the audio message posted on Saturday, the Boko Haram leader purportedly said: "We announce our allegiance to the Caliph... and will hear and obey in times of difficulty and prosperity."

 

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7 mars 2015 6 07 /03 /mars /2015 18:35
photo EMA

photo EMA

 

6/3/15 LaCroix.com

 

Jeudi 5 mars, une vingtaine d’anciens interprètes de l’armée française ont manifesté à Kaboul pour réclamer d’être accueillis en France.

 

Récemment tous ces interprètes ont vu leur demande de visa rejeté. Contacté par La Croix, l’un d’eux indique que l’ambassade française reste floue pour expliquer ce refus. Paris ne fait pas de commentaires. Vus comme des traîtres en Afghanistan à cause de leur ancienne activité auprès de l’armée française, qui a quitté le pays en décembre 2014, ces interprètes sont menacés de morts par les talibans.

 

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7 mars 2015 6 07 /03 /mars /2015 13:45
Note de veille "Afrique" n°5 - 2015



06/03/2015 IRSEM

 

Les notes de veille « Afrique » de l’IRSEM proposent une sélection des analyses de chercheurs sur l’actualité africaine du mois écoulé en matière de sécurité et de défense.
Elles sont réalisées par Sonia le Gouriellec, chargée d’études Afrique à l’IRSEM.

 

Note de veille "Afrique" n°5 - 2015

- Transitions politiques
- Violence, conflits et terrorisme

Notes de veille "Afrique" 2014

Note de veille "Afrique" n°4 - 2014

- Transitions politiques
- Violence, conflits et terrorisme
- Forum pour la Paix et la Sécurité en Afrique

 

Note de veille "Afrique" n°3 - 2014

- Transitions politiques
- Violence, conflits et terrorisme
- Politique étrangère

 

Note de veille "Afrique" n°2 - 2014

- Relations bilatérales
- Violence, conflits et terrorisme
- Enjeux du secteur de la sécurité

 

Note de veille "Afrique" n°1 - 2014

- Maintien de la paix
- Violence, conflits et terrorisme
- Transition politique
- Virus Ebola

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7 mars 2015 6 07 /03 /mars /2015 11:30
Daesh pushed out of Al Baghdadi

 

March 06, 2015 CJTF - Operation Inherent Resolve News Release

 

SOUTHWEST ASIA - Combined Joint Task Force-Operation Inherent Resolve delivered precise and effective airstrikes on enemy positions in and around Al Baghdadi, in support of the Iraqi Government's fight against ISIL. Iraqi Security Forces and Tribal Fighters from the Anbar region have successfully cleared Al Baghdadi of ISIL, retaking both the police station and three Euphrates River bridges. The bridges have been held by ISIL since last September. Furthermore, the Iraqi Security Forces with Coalition support, succeeded in pushing ISIL from seven villages northwest of Al Baghdadi on the road to Hadithah.

 

From Feb. 22 - March 6, in support of the Government of Iraq's (GOI) campaign to defeat ISIL, the Coalition executed 26 airstrikes to facilitate the maneuver of the Iraqi Security Forces and their successful attacks. In addition to airstrikes, the Coalition supported the operation with surveillance assets and Advise and Assist teams who provided operational and intelligence assistance to Iraqi Security Force Headquarters Elements, which helped to enable them to successfully conduct the offensive operation.

 

The CJTF-OIR Coalition will continue supporting efforts on behalf of all Iraqi Security Forces and the GoI, to attack and defeat ISIL. Iraqi Security Forces now hold the gains they have made and are postured to retake additional territory from ISIL in the Anbar region.

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6 mars 2015 5 06 /03 /mars /2015 21:45
L'Union africaine entérine la création d'une force régionale contre Boko Haram

 

06 mars 2015 Romandie.com (AFP)

 

Addis Abeba - L'Union africaine a annoncé vendredi avoir entériné la création d'une force régionale de lutte contre le groupe islamiste nigérian Boko Haram, qui comprendra jusqu'à 10.000 hommes et sera basée à N'Djamena.

 

Cette force, dont le principe avait été adopté le 29 janvier lors d'un sommet des chefs d'Etat de l'UA, a pour mandat d'empêcher l'expansion des activités de Boko Haram et d'autres groupes terroristes et d'éradiquer leur présence.

 

Des pays membres de la Commission du Bassin du Lac Tchad (CBLT) --Tchad, Nigeria, Cameroun, Niger-- ainsi que le Bénin se sont engagés à fournir jusqu'à 8.700 soldats, mais l'UA a porté les effectifs de cette force jusqu'à 10.000 hommes, selon des conclusions du Conseil de paix et de sécurité de l'organisation panafricaine.

 

Cette force sous commandement africain aura la possibilité d'opérer librement dans une zone déterminée pour y mener des opérations militaires et des patrouilles, selon le communiqué de l'UA, qui ne précise pas le périmètre de cette zone.

 

Un diplomate de l'UA a toutefois affirmé à l'AFP que cette zone d'opération autour du bassin du lac Tchad ne comprend pas le territoire du Nigeria. Le Nigeria a un problème d'image de puissance régionale à entretenir et accepte très mal que des troupes étrangères puissent venir sur son sol, a-t-il expliqué. Des troupes tchadiennes combattent le groupe armé en territoire nigérian.

 

Aucune confirmation à ce sujet n'a pu être obtenue auprès de l'UA.

 

Sans la possibilité d'intervenir au Nigeria, dont le nord-est est le fief des insurgés, cette force africaine ne pourrait que compter sur l'armée nigériane pour la traque des combattants islamistes en territoire nigérian.

 

Pour financer cette force, l'UA compte sur le soutien de l'ONU et demande au Conseil de sécurité d'adopter de toute urgence une résolution qui entérine (son) déploiement. La présidente de la Commission de l'UA, Nkosazana Dlamini-Zuma, a demandé la création d'un fonds spécial de l'ONU pour soutenir cette force.

 

Le Nigeria et ses voisins, le Tchad, le Niger et le Cameroun, tous frappés par les attaques meurtrières des insurgés islamistes, ont déjà engagé depuis février une campagne militaire conjointe sans précédent contre Boko Haram.

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