Washington (AFP) - US President
Barack Obama will deploy up to 300 military personnel to Cameroon for
intelligence, surveillance and reconnaissance operations against
militant Boko Haram insurgents, he informed Congress on Wednesday.
In a letter released by the White House, Obama said
90 personnel had already been deployed, marking a modest but
significant escalation of US involvement in the fight against the
Islamic State-allied group.
Washington
has largely shied away from engaging its vast military assets to combat
Boko Haram, with policymakers wary of fueling militant recruitment or
fusing the group's ties with Middle Eastern Islamists.
In
making Wednesday's announcement, the White House was at pains to stress
that personnel would not take part in combat operations and would be
armed only for self-defense.
The onus, US officials said, would
still be on a regional coalition that has tried to keep a once regional
Muslim anti-colonial movement from metastasizing into a regional
jihadist threat.
"It will be part of a broader regional effort to
stop the spread of Boko Haram and other violent extremist organizations
in West Africa," said White House spokesman Josh Earnest.
The mission will last "until their support is no longer needed," Obama's letter said.
The White House decision comes as Boko Haram steadily expands operations beyond its traditional base in northern Nigeria.
An
uptick in violence is expected in the coming weeks with the end of the
rainy season and amid growing resistance to a nascent multi-national
joint task force.
Cameroon has been among those coalition countries hit.
Twin suicide blasts on Sunday killed at least nine people and injured 29 in far northern Cameroon.
Nine people died when one of two suicide bombers detonated a
device in a tiny milk and donut restaurant in the village of Kangaleri.
The second suicide bomber killed only herself, a local authority official said.
"Like
northern Nigeria, northern Cameroon is predominantly Muslim and it is
also a part of the country that has historically been somewhat
marginalized," said John Campbell, a former US ambassador to Nigeria,
now with the Council on Foreign Relations.
The dual suicide attack came a day after triple explosions in Chad left 41 dead.
Both countries are part of a regional coalition that has been fighting the militants.
Nonetheless, Campbell described the White House decision as "surprising."
"We
are not talking about a very large force, but I do think that the
American appetite for involvement in yet another Muslim civil war in a
part of the world that is pretty remote from American concern is
surprising."
It may also come
as a surprise in Abuja, where successive Nigerian governments have asked
for US assistance in fighting Boko Haram.
Recently
elected President Muhammadu Buhari has been feted by the White House,
but has not received significant US military support amid concerns about
military abuses, including the alleged use of cluster munitions.
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