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The U.S. withdrawal from Niger has been seen as part of a broader trend playing out across the region, where military regimes have ousted Western troops while welcoming in Russian forces that analysts fear will fuel spiraling insecurity in the region.

“My concern is that if the Russians come in … they continue to make the terrorism problem worse, not better, and then when they're done extracting what they want to extract, they're going to pack up and go home, and this place is going to look like a nightmare,” said Colin P. Clarke, the director of research at the Soufan Group, a global intelligence and security consultancy.

Although Biden administration officials have repeatedly said they do not want to make African leaders choose among competing powers, the move underscores how the plurality of players vying for influence in Africa, where both Russia and China are seeking to make inroads, complicates U.S. security assistance efforts.

Among the equipment unloaded by Russian troops arriving in Niger was an anti-aircraft battery, according to reports in Russian and Nigerien state media. As local militant groups pose no threat from the skies, the move was widely regarded as a shot across the bow at U.S. drone operations in the country.

https://foreignpolicy.com/2024/04/26/niger-military-withdrawal-us-counterterrorism-russia/

150 posted on 04/27/2024 3:40:17 AM PDT by AdmSmith (GCTGATATGTCTATGATTACTCAT)
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Niger’s Military Coup Triggers Child Marriages, Sex Work in Neighboring Countries

https://reliefweb.int/report/niger/nigers-military-coup-triggers-child-marriages-sex-work-neighboring-countries


151 posted on 04/27/2024 6:06:33 AM PDT by AdmSmith (GCTGATATGTCTATGATTACTCAT)
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Niger selling uranium to Iran would likely cripple Niger's economy by inviting sanctions and significantly reducing the uranium it has to export. Regional sanctions after the July 2023 coup alone forced the junta to significantly cut the government budget by 40 percent and default on debt payments of more than $500 million.[10] The 300 tons of yellowcake involved in the deal would also be nearly half the 700 tons the junta has stockpiled.

The junta would struggle to replenish this loss given that sanctions would lead the French mining company currently operating the mine to stop production, forcing the junta to find a new provider willing to evade international sanctions. The company has already halted production since September to start routine maintenance earlier than planned after sanctions affected logistics.[11] This would severely limit the uranium Niger has to sell, which makes up 75 percent of its total exports.[12] The junta is already trying to speed up the opening of an alternative mining site currently owned by a Canadian company.[13]

https://www.understandingwar.org/backgrounder/africa-file-may-2-2024-iran-pursues-economic-and-military-influence

153 posted on 05/02/2024 11:52:09 PM PDT by AdmSmith (GCTGATATGTCTATGATTACTCAT)
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