Men in blue overalls haul on the ropes alongside American crewmen sporting hardhats shaped as Stetsons and decorated in the stars and stripes.
“Pull harder! Coil the ropes!” one of the Americans barks at the “ship riders,” a term used for the West African sailors aboard the US amphibious landing vessel as she slips her moorings in the port of Dakar.
This is a floating academy, part of an effort by the US military to train local navies and coast guards to combat rising instability in the Gulf of Guinea — an increasingly important source of oil and other raw materials for Western markets which has drawn huge international investment.
The US says the destabilizing effects of piracy, drug smuggling, and illegal fishing in the area are also costing West and Central African coastal economies billions of US dollars each year in lost revenues.
“You have an area that is traditionally a landward-focused region which is awakening to the impact of the
maritime domain,” said Captain Cindy Thebaud, commander of the US Navy’s Destroyer Squadron Six Zero and head of the project.
After two weeks of training in Senegal, the African officers and deckhands will spend a week at sea
on the USS Gunstall Hall alongside their US counterparts learning skills ranging from basic navigation to anti-piracy techniques.
The training is part of US efforts to make Gulf of Guinea maritime security more robust but, with navies often coming low in the pecking order in African militaries, there is a need for increased investment in boats and
other equipment.
“There are challenges with resource allocations everywhere in the region,” Thebaud said. “But the education and the visibility is continuing to increase and, bit by bit, we are seeing increases in allocations in resources.”
The Gulf of Guinea, which runs down from West Africa through Nigeria and Angola, is important because of its vast potential energy reserves.
Ghana will soon join traditional Gulf of Guinea oil producers Nigeria, Angola, Gabon, Equatorial Guinea and Cameroon, while Liberia and Sierra Leone have also made offshore energy finds.
Critics say US policy is purely in self-interest, as the world’s top consumer will rely on the region for a quarter of its oil supplies within the next five years.
But sailors said countries in the region were keen on the project as they understood the threat insecurity posed to governance and economic growth.
Piracy in the Gulf of Guinea “is not the same level as Somalia but it could have the same consequences,” said Lieutenant Commander Emmanuel Bell Bell, a Cameroonian officer onboard.
Earlier this month Cameroon partly blamed piracy for a 13 percent fall in oil production last year.
“In Cameroon we have shipping and oil. The slightest act of piracy creates an atmosphere of fear. It could lead to things shutting down,” Bell Bell added.
The training is part of Africom, the US command center for Africa, but European nations have begun to take part in an effort to broaden the program and cooperation.
Commander David Salisbury, a British naval officer, said a thwarted hijacking of a ship off Benin and a Ghanaian raid on a fishing vessel in December were evidence of improvements. But he warned that threats were “huge and had been largely ignored” and “we should talk about progress in decades”.
The size and power of the USS Gunston Hall — a heavily armed ship that can deploy smaller landing vessels, machine gun-mounted speedboats and hundreds of soldiers — is far cry from the kit most of the sailors onboard are used to.
“We are working with grandpa zodiacs with 42 horse power motors,” said Blawah Charles of Liberia’s newly established Coast Guard.
Some navies in the region are so limited in boats and fuel that their patrols cannot venture far out to sea and pose little threat to illegal fishing vessels or smugglers.
Instability in the Gulf of Guinea has also attracted the interests of private military contractors.
US private security company MPRI earlier this year announced it had won a multi-year contract worth US$250 million to improve maritime security for Equatorial Guinea.
Some fear this pointed to increased competition and the potential for military confrontation. But Thebaud said private military companies’ involvement would be “complementary.”
There is a Chinese Communist Party (CCP) plot to put millions at the mercy of the CCP using just released AI technology. This isn’t being overly dramatic. The speed at which AI is improving is exponential as AI improves itself, and we are unprepared for this because we have never experienced anything like this before. For example, a few months ago music videos made on home computers began appearing with AI-generated people and scenes in them that were pretty impressive, but the people would sprout extra arms and fingers, food would inexplicably fly off plates into mouths and text on
On the final approach to Lanshan Workstation (嵐山工作站), logging trains crossed one last gully over a dramatic double bridge, taking the left line to enter the locomotive shed or the right line to continue straight through, heading deeper into the Central Mountains. Today, hikers have to scramble down a steep slope into this gully and pass underneath the rails, still hanging eerily in the air even after the bridge’s supports collapsed long ago. It is the final — but not the most dangerous — challenge of a tough two-day hike in. Back when logging was still underway, it was a quick,
From censoring “poisonous books” to banning “poisonous languages,” the Chinese Nationalist Party (KMT) tried hard to stamp out anything that might conflict with its agenda during its almost 40 years of martial law. To mark 228 Peace Memorial Day, which commemorates the anti-government uprising in 1947, which was violently suppressed, I visited two exhibitions detailing censorship in Taiwan: “Silenced Pages” (禁書時代) at the National 228 Memorial Museum and “Mandarin Monopoly?!” (請說國語) at the National Human Rights Museum. In both cases, the authorities framed their targets as “evils that would threaten social mores, national stability and their anti-communist cause, justifying their actions
In the run-up to World War II, Admiral Wilhelm Canaris, head of Abwehr, Nazi Germany’s military intelligence service, began to fear that Hitler would launch a war Germany could not win. Deeply disappointed by the sell-out of the Munich Agreement in 1938, Canaris conducted several clandestine operations that were aimed at getting the UK to wake up, invest in defense and actively support the nations Hitler planned to invade. For example, the “Dutch war scare” of January 1939 saw fake intelligence leaked to the British that suggested that Germany was planning to invade the Netherlands in February and acquire airfields