Evansville Vanderburgh Public Library

AFRICOM at 5 years, the maturation of a new U.S. combatant command, David E. Brown

Label
AFRICOM at 5 years, the maturation of a new U.S. combatant command, David E. Brown
Language
eng
Bibliography note
Includes bibliographical references (pages 88-111)
resource.governmentPublication
federal national government publication
Illustrations
illustrations
Index
no index present
Literary Form
non fiction
Main title
AFRICOM at 5 years
Nature of contents
bibliographydictionaries
Oclc number
855778604
Responsibility statement
David E. Brown
Series statement
The Letort papers
Sub title
the maturation of a new U.S. combatant command
Summary
The U.S. Africa Command (AFRICOM), newest of the six U.S. Department of Defense geographic combatant commands (CCMDs), was created in 2007 amid great controversy in both Africa and the United States over its location and mission. Over the last 5 years, AFRICOM has matured greatly, overcoming much of the initial resistance from African stakeholders through careful public messaging, and by addressing most of the U.S. interagency concerns about the Command's size and proper role within the U.S. national security/foreign policy community. This Letort Paper describes the geostrategic, operational, and intellectual changes that explain why AFRICOM was created, and debunks three myths about AFRICOM: that it was created to "exploit" Africa's oil and gas riches, "blocks" China's rise in Africa, and that France "opposes" AFRICOM. The author concludes by raising five issues that are important to AFRICOM's future: 1) allocated forces to carry out short-term training engagements in Africa; 2) preference to emerging democracies in the selection of the Command's partner-nations; 3) the desirability of regional approaches in Africa, including helping the African Union and its Regional Economic Communities to establish standby brigades; 4) the location of the Command's headquarters, which should remain in Stuttgart, Germany, for operational efficiency; and, 5) the need to carry out a top-down "right-sizing" exercise at AFRICOM during a time of severe budget constraints and a real risk for the United States of "strategic insolvency."
resource.variantTitle
Africa Command at five yearsMaturation of a new US combatant commandMaturation of a new United States combatant command
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