Diamond Member Pelican Press 0 Posted September 11, 2024 Diamond Member Share Posted September 11, 2024 This is the hidden content, please Sign In or Sign Up The US-Russia battle for influence in ******* plays out in Central ******** Republic BANGUI, Central ******** Republic (AP) — Hours after Russian mercenary This is the hidden content, please Sign In or Sign Up Prigozhin This is the hidden content, please Sign In or Sign Up his country’s top military leaders, his private army’s biggest client in ******* panicked, turning for help to his foe in the West. Officials from This is the hidden content, please Sign In or Sign Up , where some 1,500 of Prigozhin’s shadowy This is the hidden content, please Sign In or Sign Up were stationed, wrote a letter that day, requesting to “rapidly” arrange a meeting with a private U.S. security firm to discuss collaboration. Dated June 23, 2023, the day Prigozhin launched This is the hidden content, please Sign In or Sign Up , the letter sparked a series of private meetings, culminating in a deal with the central ******** nation and Bancroft Global Development. That sparked backlash from Russian mercenaries, according to a dozen diplomats, locals, and analysts. The tensions in Central ******** Republic are a window into a larger battle playing out across the continent as This is the hidden content, please Sign In or Sign Up and Washington vie for influence. The This is the hidden content, please Sign In or Sign Up — using success in staving off rebels in this impoverished nation as a This is the hidden content, please Sign In or Sign Up — have long been accused by locals and rights groups of stripping natural resources such as minerals and timber and are This is the hidden content, please Sign In or Sign Up . In the wake of Prigozhin’s rebellion and This is the hidden content, please Sign In or Sign Up , the Russians are recalibrating their ******* operations. The ******* States, which has been largely disengaged from the region for years, is attempting to maintain a presence and stymie Russian gains as it pushes ******** countries to distance themselves from the mercenaries. U.S. officials blame Russia for anti-********* sentiment in the region and say they’re trying to shift the narrative. “If the U.S. can’t regain a foothold, it could give Russia greater economic and political leverage,” said Samuel Ramani of the Royal ******* Services Institute, a defense and security think tank. “If Russia loses Central ******** Republic, its flagship model on the continent, there could be a domino effect in other countries.” Russia’s influence In recent years, Russia has emerged as the security partner of choice for a growing number of governments in the region, displacing traditional allies such as France and the U.S. Moscow aggressively expanded its military cooperation by using mercenaries like Wagner, who have operated in at least half a dozen countries since around 2017. They’re tasked with protecting ******** leaders and in some cases helping ****** rebels and extremists. They’re also plagued by their This is the hidden content, please Sign In or Sign Up . Two years ago in Mali, Wagner and the army were This is the hidden content, please Sign In or Sign Up about 300 men — some suspected of being Islamist extremists, but most civilians — in what Human Rights Watch called the worst single atrocity reported in the country’s decade-long armed conflict. And in Central ******** Republic, mercenaries train the army on ******** tactics, including how to cut hands, remove nails, throw fuel and ***** people alive, according to watchdog The Sentry. A soldier who spoke on condition of anonymity for ***** of reprisal confirmed ******** tactics and told The Associated Press he saw mercenaries put a fellow soldier into a sweltering container as punishment. He said people could stay locked in containers for three weeks, with many dying inside. Central ******** Republic was one of the first places the mercenaries entered. The country has been in conflict since 2013, when predominantly ******* rebels seized power and forced the president from office. Six of the 14 armed groups that signed a 2019 peace deal later left the agreement. Locals and the government credited Wagner with fighting back rebels who tried to overtake Bangui, the capital, in 2021. The Russians soon expanded to Burkina Faso and ******, and have ambitions for further growth. Russia is refurbishing a military base some 50 miles (80 kilometers) from Bangui. Alexander Bikantov, Russia’s ambassador to Central ******** Republic, said the base will improve the country’s security. Fidele Gouandjika, adviser to President Faustin-Archange Touadera, said the base aims to have 10,000 fighters by 2030 to engage with more ******** nations. Some countries see Russia’s influence as a threat to their own, but conflict analysts say weakening it will be challenging if they won’t offer a similar force to pursue armed groups. Wagner is steeped in Central ******** Republic’s security system, and experts say that will likely prevent Touadera from easily diversifying security partners. Touadera’s office didn’t reply to written requests for comment for this story. His adviser to the country’s spy agency declined to be interviewed. Pressure from the ******* States The U.S. had been pushing Central ******** Republic to find an alternative to Wagner for years. A December 2022 private meeting sought ways to improve security without the mercenaries but yielded little tangible progress, according to a U.S. official who is familiar with the talks and spoke on condition of anonymity due to the privacy of ongoing discussions. “We never really got past the confidence-building steps,” he said. “Steps on how XYZ would replace Wagner were abstract, and the door ******** open.” The more assertive U.S. approach came as it faced new setbacks and tried to rework agreements in the region. Its troops left Chad and ******, where they were no longer welcome. Still, the State Department said in a statement early this year that it wasn’t involved in the decision to establish Bancroft Global Development’s presence in Central ******** Republic. But Washington could deny such contracts if it wanted, said Sean McFate, a former contractor in ******* and author of “The New Rules of War.” The U.S. has used private military companies to reduce ********* “boots on the ground” in *******, McFate said, and companies like Bancroft have to play by Washington’s rules if they want future government work. In response to AP questions, the U.S. official who spoke on condition of anonymity said it uses private contractors in ******* to help countries operate more effectively, with U.S. government oversight to ensure accountability. The official said the State Department has overseen Bancroft’s work in Somalia but not Central ******** Republic or elsewhere. Bancroft’s background Washington-based Bancroft is a nonprofit working in nine countries — five of them in *******. Its longest-standing presence is in Somalia, where it’s operated for more than 15 years, in part training troops to ****** the militant group al-Shabab. Bancroft’s involvement in Central ******** Republic has been shrouded in secrecy since signs emerged of its presence last fall. During an AP visit months later, rumors swirled about Bancroft’s activities, fueling speculation the U.S was bringing its own Wagner to oust Russia. But according to Bancroft founder Michael Stock, the group entered at Bangui’s behest. “Touadera felt his Russian partners were underperforming and distracted, focused too much on other lines of effort ranging from breweries to cultural centers, rather than confronting the rebels,” Stock told AP in his first interview since Bancroft began operating there. Touadera thought diversifying partners would prompt Russia to get in line and give the Americans what they wanted, Stock said. Stock received the letter from the presidency within a day of Prigozhin’s mutiny, and the two signed a deal in September, he said. Fewer than 30 Bancroft personnel work there, Stock said, helping Central ******** Republic with intelligence systems, interagency cooperation and law enforcement. Bancroft has invested some $1.4 million there, Stock said. Much of Bancroft’s overall funding has come from U.S. and ******* Nations grants. From 2018 to 2020, it received more than $43 million from the U.S., according to audits required as part of tax forms. Amal Ali, former U.S. intelligence analyst, is among critics who say that despite its yearslong presence in Somalia, Bancroft hasn’t contributed to any real eradication of terrorism. Stock dismissed such comments as uninformed and said the Somali and U.S. governments “agree Bancroft has done a great deal to damaging ******** armed groups and developing the capacity of the government to perform its national defense functions professionally.” Backlash on the ground Rights groups say a lack of transparency about Bancroft’s operations has fostered an atmosphere of distrust in a country already rampant with armed actors. Wagner, a U.N. peacekeeping mission and Rwandan troops are all on the ground to try to quell *********. “Operating in a vague and nontransparent way in the Central ******** Republic only leads to suspicion,” said Lewis Mudge, of Human Rights Watch. Stock defended Bancroft’s work and policies. “It is perfectly normal for a government not to publicize how it is defending the people and the state,” he told AP. Last fall, as reports of possible collaboration with Bancroft emerged, Stock said he positioned a staff member at a hotel in Bangui to wait for Russia’s reaction. “We expected Russia to freak out, so for our lone staff member in Bangui we chose a Russian speaker, who was tasked to do nothing but sit in the hotel garden reading a book all day, waiting for Russians to show whether they wanted to be cooperative, hostile, or ignore us,” Stock said. Stock said that weeks later, in January, the employee was detained and questioned for hours by Russian forces and released only when Touadera stepped in. Officials in both Central ******** Republic and Russia didn’t respond to requests for comment on any such incident. Bikantov, Russia’s ambassador to Central ******** Republic, has said Bancroft’s presence had no effect on cooperation with Russia’s military. In the following months, aggression toward Americans and U.S. entities continued. Several ********* citizens were detained and had their passports confiscated, a diplomat who dealt with their cases said on condition of anonymity because he wasn’t allowed to speak to reporters. Rare anti-********* protests erupted outside the U.S. embassy in Bangui, and local youths formed the Committee to Investigate U.S. Activities to monitor Bancroft’s movements. Gouandjika, the presidential adviser, said the government has no problem with Americans and those denied entry lacked proper paperwork. Unclear future As the U.S. and Russia jockey for power, ******** governments say they want to make their own choices. Central ******** Republic officials approached Bancroft, which shows that these governments haven’t become Russian puppets, said Jack Margolin, an expert on private military companies. But, he added, Russia’s reaction to Bancroft could hurt Moscow’s standing with other nations. After Prigozhin’s ******, Russia moved quickly to take control of Wagner’s assets, and the This is the hidden content, please Sign In or Sign Up where Wagner operated that it would take over. The country and its military intelligence arm have taken a more direct role in ******* operations, deploying more official detachments from its army. Russia is trying to rebrand the mercenaries, creating ******* Corps, a parallel group that could absorb Wagner, said John Lechner, a Wagner expert. In Central ******** Republic, it’s still unclear how much sway the Russian state has with the mercenaries, who are beloved by many and embedded in society, brewing ***** and visiting markets. Still, they largely keep to themselves, walking through streets with faces covered and driving in unmarked cars. For many, Prigozhin was a national hero. Standing at a downtown monument of Russian soldiers, people lay flowers at its feet paying respects, a year after his ******. For most people here, there’s little interest in squabbles among foreign nations. “There are problems between the Americans and Russians, but that doesn’t matter to us,” said Jean Louis Yet, who works at Bangui’s market. “We are here working, trying our best to make a living. “All we want is security.” ___ AP reporters James Pollard in New York; Michael Biesecker in Washington; Dasha Litvinova in Tallinn, Estonia; and Jean Fernand Koena in Central ******** Republic contributed to this report. This is the hidden content, please Sign In or Sign Up #USRussia #battle #influence #******* #plays #Central #******** #Republic This is the hidden content, please Sign In or Sign Up This is the hidden content, please Sign In or Sign Up Link to comment https://hopzone.eu/forums/topic/123594-the-us-russia-battle-for-influence-in-africa-plays-out-in-central-african-republic/ Share on other sites More sharing options...
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