Africa

West Africa: Blinken Pledges $45m to Boost Coastal West Africa Security

todayJanuary 24, 2024 1

Background
share close

[ad_1]

U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken on Tuesday pledged $45 million in additional financing to help fight conflict and bring stability to coastal West Africa, where insecurity linked to jihadist insurgencies has increased in recent years.

Blinken is on the second stop of a four-nation tour of Africa, taking him to Cape Verde, Ivory Coast, Nigeria, and Angola from January 21-26.

The purpose of the trip is to discuss U.S.-African partnerships over trade, climate, infrastructure, health, security, and other issues.

It follows a summit in Washington with African leaders in December 2022.

Security challenges in West Africa, the fallout of a coup in Niger last year, and Russia’s growing influence in the region are among key topics during Blinken’s trip.

He arrived in Ivory Coast’s financial capital, Abidjan, on Monday evening and met President Alassane Ouattara on Tuesday morning, after which he announced the extra financing at a joint press briefing.

Ivory Coast is one of several coastal West African countries impacted in recent years by Islamist insurgencies that took root in Mali in 2012 and spread across the Sahel region despite costly, internationally backed military efforts to contain it.

“We spent a lot of time discussing mutual security challenges,” Blinken said. “We appreciate Ivory Coast’s leadership in the fight against extremism and violence.”

The funding will supplement the 300 million dollars the U.S. has already invested in coastal West Africa over the past two years.