Photo: CJTF-HOA
The face America should present to those who are in need of economic development and humanitarian assistance should be of an aid worker with a baseball cap, not a soldier or marine with a helmet.
Jim Bishop, InterAction
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In a key briefing to Congress on 13 March, General William “Kip” Ward, head of the US Command for Africa, AFRICOM, devoted only 15 seconds of his four-and-a-half minute opening remarks to a possible humanitarian role.
Focusing instead on military training, security and counter-terrorism, his remarks came in sharp contrast to a year ago when officials announced that the command would concentrate on humanitarian assistance, alarming many aid agencies, which were concerned that US military involvement in humanitarian aid would undermine their neutrality. Ward told the US House of Representatives Armed Services Committee: "Our forces also support humanitarian efforts. US military programmes complement the US Agency for International Development [USAID]." US forces had also conducted de-mining activities and promoted HIV/AIDS awareness programmes in African militaries, he said.
Even with the switch in focus, however, many NGOs remain wary of AFRICOM’s potential humanitarian dimension. Linda Poteat, director for disaster responses at InterAction, a US-based coalition of non-profit organisations, said she was still waiting to hear what the mandate was, noting that the command's mission statements had still not been issued. InterAction’s president for humanitarian policy and practice, Jim Bishop, has had extensive discussions with US officials on AFRICOM’s mandate. Last month, he said AFRICOM continued to assert that it was going to be engaged in activities that were more appropriately the responsibility of civilian branches of the US government and NGOs.
"The face America should present to those who are in need of economic development and humanitarian assistance should be of an aid worker with a baseball cap, not a soldier or marine with a helmet," he told IRIN, after a formal discussion on the militarisation of aid with the Senate Foreign Relations Committee in February. J Stephen Morrison, director of the Africa Programme for the Center for Strategic and International Studies (CSIS), and co-author of a recent CSIS report on AFRICOM, said there had been a change of emphasis. "They haven’t walked away from the notion that, certainly on public health and emergency relief matters, the US military has some special capacities that can be brought to bear.
"What they’re tiptoeing around is … they don’t want to be seen as seeking in any way to displace or usurp civilian agencies that carry out humanitarian or development work. They want to refocus a lot of their energies on the kind of bilateral security partnerships that they do best, their core business," he added. Ever since AFRICOM was launched as a separate US military command for a continent that had previously been divided between the European, Central and Pacific commands, it has raised concern over the emphasis put on its humanitarian and developmental dimensions. It has more diplomats and aid experts than other headquarters. Last month, Ambassador Mary Yates, deputy to AFRICOM’s Commander for Civil-Military activities, told IRIN the new structure was more concerned with planning for operations and logistics at headquarters.
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