Connect with us

World

Russian warlord expands activity in Africa on Moscow’s behalf, creating foothold in vital region

Published

on

Russian warlord expands activity in Africa on Moscow’s behalf, creating foothold in vital region

Russia’s mercenary group Wagner, led by warlord Yevgeny Prigozhin, has expanded its actions in Africa, with one suspected direct motion in battle zones and dozens of efforts to assist safe sources throughout the continent. 

“Exterior of Ukraine, [Wagner’s] presence in Africa is essentially the most widespread,” John Hardie, deputy director of the Russia program on the Basis for Protection of Democracies, instructed Fox Information Digital. “It’s actually throughout the continent.”

The U.S. Treasury earlier this yr designated Wagner “a big transnational legal group,” offering Washington the flexibility to sanction people and the group’s assist community “throughout a number of continents.”

Most lately, Wagner has come out of the shadows in Africa after months of rumors that the group was working there. The Central Africa Republic alone has recorded round 1,890 “Russian instructors” supporting authorities troops within the ongoing civil warfare, German information outlet DW reported. 

NEW WORLD DISORDER: CHINA, RUSSIA BLOC SHORES UP INFLUENCE AS COUNTRIES EAGER TO JOIN, INCLUDING US ALLIES

Advertisement

A Russian flag hangs on a monument in Bangui March 22, 2023, throughout a march in assist of Russia and China’s presence within the Central African Republic. (Barbara Debout/AFP by way of Getty Photos)

The group was based in 2014 however discovered latest prominence within the Ukraine invasion as Russian President Vladimir Putin leaned extra closely on the group to bolster his forces following important loses in the course of the early months of the warfare. 

Hardie described Wagner as only one a part of founder Yevgeny Prigozhin’s community, albeit the crown jewel of his operations, together with political technologists, troll farms and different info operations. 

“The community is clearly partly a proxy for the Kremlin, so the place the Kremlin is , Wagner and Prigozhin will comply with,” Hardie mentioned. 

“Wagner can also be a money-making enterprise, in a way. It’s capable of become profitable from mining concessions, and so forth, in Africa in addition to its safety partnerships with guys like Sudan, and so on.” 

Advertisement

RUSSIA ‘CHIEF BENEFICIARY’ IN DEADLY SUDAN CONFLICT AS ATTEMPTED CEASEFIRE FALLS APART

A U.S. cable despatched in January and reviewed by Politico claimed that Wagner stood to achieve $1 billion in mining income from its Central African Republic operations alone, which the group would funnel towards new weapons and fighters, in accordance with a Western official. 

Wagner Group head Yevgeny Prigozhin

Wagner Group head Yevgeny Prigozhin attends the funeral of Dmitry Menshikov, a fighter of the Wagner Group who died throughout a particular operation in Ukraine, at a cemetery outdoors St. Petersburg, Russia, Dec. 24, 2022.  (AP Photograph)

However Wagner could have additionally entered into battle zones. Leaked U.S. intelligence paperwork cited “a profitable unattributed assault in Libya” that “destroyed a Wagner logistics plane,” a part of a wider Wagner fleet, in accordance with The Washington Put up. 

Wagner has operated in at the very least 13 nations, eight of that are in Africa, in accordance with the paperwork. 

One such battle consists of efforts by Wagner in February of this yr, throughout which the mercenaries tried to recruit rebels within the nation of Chad and set up a coaching website for 300 fighters within the neighboring Central African Republic as a part of an “evolving plot to topple the Chadian authorities,” the Put up reported. 

Advertisement

RUSSIA’S DEFENSE CHIEF WANTS TO DOUBLE MISSILE OUTPUT WITH POTENTIAL UKRAINIAN COUNTEROFFENSIVE LOOMING

Sudan additionally performs a big function in Wagner’s plans. The group partnered with Omar al-Bashir after which with the generals who ousted him, offering advisers and riot gear towards a grassroots democracy motion, in accordance america Institute of Peace. 

In return, the Sudanese authorities gave a Wagner-linked shell firm the rights to refine gold-bearing ore and export the ore, untaxed. 

Wagner Group central africa

Demonstrators carry banners in Bangui March 22, 2023, throughout a march in assist of Russia and China’s presence within the Central African Republic. (Barbara Debout/AFP by way of Getty Photos)

Wagner additionally despatched fighters to assist the ruling navy in Mali towards the French-backed authorities forces. 

Rebekah Koffler, president of Doctrine & Technique Consulting and a former Protection Intelligence Company officer, instructed Fox Information Digital Wagner is merely “executing Putin’s Africa technique.” 

Advertisement

“The Kremlin has articulated a model of the good recreation, Putin’s nice recreation in Africa,” Koffler defined. “The targets of Russia in Africa had been declared and codified formally in Russia’s most up-to-date overseas coverage idea that Putin signed simply this previous March.

 

“The way in which they described it’s to simply guarantee commerce and financial cooperation, guarantee assist for Africa and for African international locations, and simply mainly typical propaganda. … However, in actuality, Putin desires to safe and keep the foothold within the japanese Mediterranean, together with naval port entry within the Pink Sea and persevering with to extract pure sources out of Africa. 

“Russia has had ties to numerous international locations in Africa courting again to the us, and now they’re capitalizing.” 

Advertisement
Continue Reading
Advertisement
Click to comment

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

World

Israel moves in on north Gaza Hamas stronghold, pounds Rafah without advancing

Published

on

Israel moves in on north Gaza Hamas stronghold, pounds Rafah without advancing
Israel’s tanks pushed into the heart of Jabalia in northern Gaza on Thursday, facing anti-tank rockets and mortar bombs from militants concentrated there, while in the south, its forces pounded Rafah without advancing, Palestinian residents and militants said.
Continue Reading

World

What to know about how much the aid from a US pier project will help Gaza

Published

on

What to know about how much the aid from a US pier project will help Gaza

A U.S.-built pier is in place to bring humanitarian aid to Gaza by sea, but no one will know if the new route will work until a steady stream of deliveries begins reaching starving Palestinians.

The trucks that will roll off the pier project installed Thursday will face intensified fighting, Hamas threats to target any foreign forces and uncertainty about whether the Israeli military will ensure that aid convoys have access and safety from attack by Israeli forces.

TEMPORARY FLOATING PIER FOR GAZA AID COMPLETED, WILL MOVE INTO POSITION ONCE WEATHER LETS UP: PENTAGON

Even if the sea route performs as hoped, U.S, U.N. and aid officials caution, it will bring in a fraction of the aid that’s needed to the embattled enclave.

Here’s a look at what’s ahead for aid arriving by sea:

Advertisement

WILL THE SEA ROUTE END THE CRISIS IN GAZA?

No, not even if everything with the sea route works perfectly, American and international officials say.

The image provided by U.S, Central Command, shows U.S. Army soldiers assigned to the 7th Transportation Brigade (Expeditionary), U.S. Navy sailors assigned to Amphibious Construction Battalion 1, and Israel Defense Forces placing the Trident Pier on the coast of Gaza Strip on Thursday, May 16, 2024. The temporary pier is part of the Joint Logistics Over-the-Shore capability. The U.S. military finished installing the floating pier on Thursday, with officials poised to begin ferrying badly needed humanitarian aid into the enclave besieged over seven months of intense fighting in the Israel-Hamas war.  (U.S. Central Command via AP)

U.S. military officials hope to start with about 90 truckloads of aid a day through the sea route, growing quickly to about 150 trucks a day.

Samantha Power, head of the U.S. Agency for International Development, and other aid officials have consistently said Gaza needs deliveries of more than 500 truckloads a day — the prewar average — to help a population struggling without adequate food or clean water during seven months of war between Israel and Hamas.

Advertisement

Israel has hindered deliveries of food, fuel and other supplies through land crossings since Hamas’ deadly attack on Israel launched the conflict in October. The restrictions on border crossings and fighting have brought on a growing humanitarian catastrophe for civilians.

International experts say all 2.3 million of Gaza’s people are experiencing acute levels of food insecurity, 1.1 million of them at “catastrophic” levels. Power and U.N. World Food Program Director Cindy McCain say north Gaza is in famine.

At that stage, saving the lives of children and others most affected requires steady treatment in clinical settings, making a cease-fire critical, USAID officials say.

At full operation, international officials have said, aid from the sea route is expected to reach a half-million people. That’s just over one-fifth of the population.

WHAT ARE THE CHALLENGES FOR THE SEA ROUTE NOW?

Advertisement

The U.S. plan is for the U.N. to take charge of the aid once it’s brought in. The U.N. World Food Program will then turn it over to aid groups for delivery.

U.N. officials have expressed concern about preserving their neutrality despite the involvement in the sea route by the Israeli military — one of the combatants in the conflict — and say they are negotiating that.

There are still questions on how aid groups will safely operate in Gaza to distribute food to those who need it most, said Sonali Korde, assistant to the administrator for USAID’s Bureau for Humanitarian Assistance, which is helping with logistics.

U.S. and international organizations including the U.S. government’s USAID and the Oxfam, Save the Children and International Rescue Committee nonprofits say Israeli officials haven’t meaningfully improved protections of aid workers since the military’s April 1 attack that killed seven aid workers with the World Central Kitchen organization.

Talks with the Israeli military “need to get to a place where humanitarian aid workers feel safe and secure and able to operate safely. And I don’t think we’re there yet,” Korde told reporters Thursday.

Advertisement

Meanwhile, fighting is surging in Gaza. It isn’t threatening the new shoreline aid distribution area, Pentagon officials say, but they have made it clear that security conditions could prompt a shutdown of the maritime route, even just temporarily.

The U.S. and Israel have developed a security plan for humanitarian groups coming to a “marshaling yard” next to the pier to pick up the aid, said U.S. Vice Admiral Brad Cooper, deputy commander of the U.S. military’s Central Command. USAID Response Director Dan Dieckhaus said aid groups would follow their own security procedures in distributing the supplies.

Meanwhile, Israeli forces have moved into the border crossing in the southern city of Rafah as part of their offensive, preventing aid from moving through, including fuel.

U.N. deputy spokesman Farhan Haq said that without fuel, delivery of all aid in Gaza can’t happen.

WHAT’S NEEDED?

Advertisement

U.S. President Joe Biden’s administration, the U.N. and aid groups have pressed Israel to allow more aid through land crossings, saying that’s the only way to ease the suffering of Gaza’s civilians. They’ve also urged Israel’s military to actively coordinate with aid groups to stop Israeli attacks on humanitarian workers.

“Getting aid to people in need into and across Gaza cannot and should not depend on a floating dock far from where needs are most acute,” U.N. deputy spokesman Farhan Haq told reporters Thursday.

“To stave off the horrors of famine, we must use the fastest and most obvious route to reach the people of Gaza — and for that, we need access by land now,” Haq said.

U.S. officials agree that the pier is only a partial solution at best, and say they are pressing Israel for more.

Advertisement

WHAT DOES ISRAEL SAY?

Israel says it places no limits on the entry of humanitarian aid and blames the U.N. for delays in distributing goods entering Gaza. The U.N. says ongoing fighting, Israeli fire and chaotic security conditions have hindered delivery.

Under pressure from the U.S., Israel has in recent weeks opened a pair of crossings to deliver aid into hard-hit northern Gaza. It said a series of Hamas attacks on the main crossing, Kerem Shalom, have disrupted the flow of goods.

Continue Reading

World

Slovakian ministers blame media and opposition for attack on PM Fico

Published

on

Slovakian ministers blame media and opposition for attack on PM Fico

Slovakia’s interior minister refrained from specifying the motivation behind the attack on Prime Minister Robert Fico but pointed fingers at media outlets and the opposition, urging them to reflect on how they present information.

ADVERTISEMENT

Slovakian authorities charged a man with attempted premeditated murder on Thursday after he shot Prime Minister Robert Fico five times in the central town of Handlova.

The assault left the longstanding leader in a serious but stable condition.

“The attempt on Fico’s life was politically motivated,” Slovakia’s Interior Minister Matuš Šutaj-Eštok said during a news conference on Fico’s shooting.

Eštok said the suspect, believed to be 71, was a “lone wolf” and did not belong to any political party but had previously taken part in anti-government protests.

The minister did not specify what the motivation was, but blamed media outlets and the opposition.

Advertisement

“It was information that you have recently presented. The way you presented them, on that I think each of you can reflect,” he said.

Slovakia’s President-elect Peter Pellegrini said he had only been allowed to speak with Fico for a few minutes “because his current condition really requires peace and quiet without any other external distractions.”

Pellegrini wished Fico “a great deal of strength in the struggle ahead of him because he is facing a very difficult period indeed.”

The president-elect called on political parties to suspend or scale back their campaigns for European elections, which will be held June 6-9.

The populist leader had been attending a political event in Handlova when the shooting took place, sending shockwaves through the central European country.

Advertisement

Fico has long been a divisive figure in Slovakia and beyond. His return to power last year on a pro-Russian, anti-American message led to even greater worries among fellow European Union and NATO members that he would abandon his country’s pro-Western course – particularly on Ukraine.

At the start of Russia’s invasion, Slovakia was one of Ukraine’s staunchest supporters. Fico halted arms deliveries to Ukraine when he returned to power, his fourth time serving as prime minister.

Continue Reading
Advertisement

Trending