By Jim Garamone
American Forces Press Service
WASHINGTON, Dec. 23, 2013 – The commander of U.S. Africa
Command is repositioning forces in East Africa in an effort to attain maximum
flexibility to respond to State Department requests, Pentagon spokesman Army
Col. Steve Warren told reporters here today.
Warren also told reporters that three of the four U.S.
personnel who were wounded Dec. 21 when they attempted to evacuate Americans
from the town of Bor, South Sudan, will be evacuated to Landstuhl Army Hospital
in Germany. The fourth will be evacuated when his condition stabilizes.
The four injured U.S. service members are currently in a
hospital in Nairobi, the Kenyan capital. They were hit by small-arms fire when
their Osprey aircraft attempted to land in Bor.
Based on the current situation in South Sudan, Army Gen.
David M. Rodriguez, the commander of Africom, moved elements from the
Special-Purpose Marine Air-Ground Task Force Crisis Response from Moron, Spain,
to Camp Lemonnier, Djibouti.
“By positioning these forces forward, we are able to more
quickly respond to crisis in the region, if required,” a defense official said.
The Djiboutian government fully agrees with the movement.
The moves are precautionary, and there is risk associated
with this or any other military operation, the colonel said.
“As everyone would expect, the combatant commander is
repositioning forces in the region in an effort to give himself the maximum
flexibility to respond to any follow-on request from the Department of State,”
Warren said.
Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel has been following the
situation very closely, and is in nearly continuous communication with the
combatant commander, the official said.
There has been no discussion about the U.S. military helping
reposition United Nations forces, Warren said.
Defense Department and other government contracted aircraft
have evacuated more than 300 personnel out of South Sudan’s capital of Juba
including about 100 yesterday.
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