American Forces Press Service
STUTTGART, Germany, June 12, 2012 – The
United States has no plans to seek permanent bases in Africa, and, in the
spirit of the new defense strategic guidance, will continue to maintain a
“light footprint” on the continent, the top U.S. Africa Command officer said.
“In Africa, I would say a light
footprint is consistent with what we need and consistent with the defense
guidance,” Army Gen. Carter F. Ham told the House Armed Services Committee in
February.
With no troops directly assigned to it,
Africom relies heavily on its service components: U.S. Army Africa based in
Vicenza, Italy; U.S. Air Forces Africa, at Ramstein Air Base, Germany; U.S.
Marine Forces Africa and Special Operations Command Africa, both based here.
“It is that proximity to the theater
that enables the agility we require,” Ham told Congress.
Africom has had its headquarters here
since it initially stood up in 2007 as a subcommand of U.S. European Command
before reaching full operational capability in 2008. Then-Defense Secretary
Robert M. Gates and the first Africom commander, Army Gen. William E. “Kip”
Ward, agreed to defer any decision on its permanent location until 2012.
A congressionally directed review of
alternate basing plans is under way, and is expected to be delivered sometime
this year. None of the plans being developed involves relocating the
headquarters to the African continent, Ham said.
While not expressing his own
preferences, Ham said he believes Africom has “been very well served” by its
Stuttgart headquarters. In addition to good facilities and proximity to an
international airport with direct links to Africa, he noted, Stuttgart offers
the operational advantage of being in the same time zone as many of Africom’s
African partners. “We are on the same daily rhythm,” the general said.
In addition, he said, collocating
Africom with U.S. European Command makes sense, promoting their tradition of working
together as they share forces, resources and capabilities.
Ham also underscored the importance of
Camp Lemonnier, Djibouti, the only permanent U.S. base in Africa. With about
2,000 U.S. personnel deployed there as part of Combined Joint Task Force Horn
of Africa, many from the Army National Guard, it provides a stable platform for
U.S. military operations in a critical part of the world, he said.
“It’s a great strategic location,” he
told American Forces Press Service. “It facilitates not only our operations for
U.S. Africa Command, but also U.S. Central Command and U.S. Transportation
Command. It is a very key hub and important node for us, a good location that
allows us to extend our reach in East Africa and partner with the countries of
East Africa.”
Ham said he recognizes concerns among
some African countries about an increased U.S. presence on the continent, but
emphasized that cost alone would preclude the United States from establishing
more permanent bases there.
Meanwhile, a new initiative that Army
Chief of Staff Gen. Ray Odierno announced last month could increase Africom’s
engagement opportunities with no uptick in permanent staffing.
The Army plans to implement a regionally
aligned force concept next year to better support combatant commanders, Odierno
said. Africom is expected to be the first to receive these rotational forces as
part of the pilot program to begin next year, followed by U.S. Southern
Command, U.S. Central Command and U.S. Pacific Command.
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