By Jim Garamone
American Forces Press Service
WASHINGTON, April 8, 2014 – Cooperation - internationally
and on the continent - is changing Africa, defense officials said here today.
Partnerships among the nations of the continent, among
international allies and among both groups are giving African nations the
resources and hand they need to prosper, and the Defense Department has a role
in this, said Amanda J. Dory, the deputy assistant secretary of defense for
African affairs.
Dory spoke with Army Gen. David M. Rodriguez, the commander
of U.S. Africa Command during a Pentagon news conference.
"The department's focus in Africa is to foster
stability and prosperity," she said. "And in the security realm, this
means a focus on building partnership capacity, both at the institutional level
and the operational level."
The department has a number of partners across many levels,
Dory said. This starts with individual African states and progresses up to
regional organizations that focus on security and economic matters. It
culminates on the continent, with the African Union. Within the U.S.
government, she added, key partners are the State Department and the U.S.
Agency for International Development. Other agencies - such as the Treasury,
Justice and Homeland Security departments - also play important roles, she said.
"So sometimes when we talk about partnership, it's fair
to ask us, ‘Which partners are you referring to?’ because we have many,"
Dory said.
Partnerships require patience, coordination and hard work,
Dory said, but they do pay off. She pointed to Sierra Leone and Liberia as two
examples of countries that had problems and now are actually providing
peacekeepers for other countries in the region.
But not all on the African continent is brightness and
light, Dory said, as terrorists, criminal organizations, militias, corrupt
officials and pirates continue to exploit ungoverned and under-governed
territory on the continent and in its surrounding waters. "The potential
for rapidly developing threats, particularly in fragile states, including
violent public protests and terrorist attacks, could pose acute challenges to
U.S. interests," she said.
And while the core of al-Qaida has been degraded, affiliates
have expanded into new areas, such as the Maghreb and the Sahel regions, Dory
said. "In our globalized world,” she added, “groups that are viewed as
distant from U.S. territory are able to threaten our interests, citizens, and
personnel in other regions, as well as those of our partners."
More investments are needed on the continent Dory said --
not necessarily military hardware or training, but in State Department and
USAID funds for democracy and governance programs. The money spent now is
"minuscule," she added.
Many African nations have bought into democracy, the deputy
assistant secretary said, but the quality of the elections needs to be
improved.
"These are the types of resources that help in terms of
promoting civic action, freedom of the press, independent electoral commissions
in various countries, and they are absolutely under pressure," she said.
"And I think
from a DOD perspective, we understand that elections - good
elections - serve as a conflict prevention mechanism, in a sense, and where you
don't have that kind of ability for the people to have a voice and for change
of power on some basis, that's where the tensions seem to build, and
occasionally explode."
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