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![]() By Sylvie Lanteaume with Philippe Agret in Tunis Algiers (AFP) Oct 1, 2020
US Secretary of Defense Mark Esper on Thursday visited Algeria to strengthen Washington's alliance as the North African state tries to mediate in war-ravaged Libya and Mali while battling extremists at home. Esper, the first American defence chief to visit Algiers since 2006, hopes "to deepen cooperation with Algeria on key regional security issues such as the threat posed by extremist groups," a senior US military official said. The defence chief, on a North Africa tour, arrived in Algiers after talks in neighbouring Tunisia and was scheduled to travel on to Morocco. He was to meet Algeria's President Abdelmadjid Tebboune and the chief of staff, General Said Chanegriha, after having laid a wreath at the country's independence war memorial overlooking Algiers. "It's a great honour for me to lay a wreath today at the Memorial of the Martyrs and to honour their sacrifice to pursue the liberation of their country," Esper said at the monument. He said Algeria and the United States had been "friends and partners for many years" and that he hoped his visit "will help build upon that cooperation and will continue those shared interests, that shared history that we have today". He is the first US defence minister to visit Algeria -- an ally of Russia, which supplies most of its weapons, and China -- since Donald Rumsfeld almost 15 years ago. But ties between Washington and Algiers go back centuries and have been strengthened by their common aim to counter Islamist militants. "Algeria is a committed counter-terrorism partner," General Stephen Townsend, head of US Africa Command, said on a recent visit to Algiers. "Strengthening this relationship is very important to us," Townsend said. "Degrading violent extremist organisations... and enhancing regional stability is a mutual must." - 'Pivotal state' - Algeria is trying to reactivate its role on the regional diplomatic scene, including as a mediator in the conflicts in Mali and Libya. Jihadist groups in Libya and the wider Sahel region have become an increasing concern since a NATO-backed uprising toppled and killed longtime dictator Moamer Kadhafi in 2011. Conflict in Libya since then has sucked in multiple nations backing opposing forces, including Turkey and Egypt. Mali, supported by France and UN peacekeepers, is struggling with an eight-year-old Islamist insurgency that has claimed thousands of lives. "The Americans want to reposition themselves in the region, which has seen the arrival of new players like Turkey," said Algerian political scientist Mansour Kedidir. "Algeria has always been considered by the Americans as a 'pivotal state' whose vulnerability can engulf the whole region if it is affected by jihadists." The US and Algeria have historic ties -- a treaty of friendship was signed in 1795 -- while during Algeria's 1954-1962 war of independence from colonial rulers France, Washington reportedly pressured Paris to negotiate with Algerian nationalists. "The United States has a strong bilateral security relationship with Algeria that dates at least to the early days of the Global War on Terror," said Michael Shurkin, from the California-based RAND Corporation policy think-tank. The US relationship is crucial for another reason, Shurkin noted. "The US role must also be seen in the context of Algeria's reluctance to work with France, which makes the US necessary for France with respect to French hopes for an integrated regional response to jihadism," Shurkin said. France has 5,100 soldiers deployed across the Sahel as part of its anti-jihadist Operation Barkhane. Washington is also likely interested in selling weapons to Algeria, which currently receives some 90 percent of its military supplies from Russia. Just ahead of Esper's visit, Chanegriha met with a top Russian military delegation for discussions on the state of "military cooperation between the two countries", Algeria's defence ministry said.
![]() ![]() Tracing the babies who died in France's camps for Algerian fighters Perpignan, France (AFP) Sept 23, 2020 "It's here," says the employee, quietly, at the vast Perpignan cemetery in southern France. Standing in front of two small mounds of earth in the Muslim section - graves six and eight, rows 22 and 25 - Abessia Dargaid collapses in tears. "So, so sorry!" she sobs, gently placing her hand on the piled-up earth marking the burial site of her baby brothers. Fifty-seven years ago, twins Yahia and Abbas died shortly after being born in a camp housing pro-French Algerian soldiers, 12 kilometres ( ... read more
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