menu_open Columnists
We use cookies to provide some features and experiences in QOSHE

More information  .  Close

Failed U.S. Military Effort in Africa is on the Chopping Block

9 5
11.01.2026

The U.S. attack on Venezuela and abduction of its president Nicolás Maduro was proof that after months of threats, the Trump administration’s talk of hemispheric hegemony isn’t just bluster. The administration is clearly reorienting the U.S. military toward power projection in the Western Hemisphere, as it plots a reorganization that would make it easier to launch strikes across the Americas.

President Donald Trump has touted the “Donroe Doctrine” — a bastardization of the 1823 Monroe Doctrine. Whereas President James Monroe’s policy sought to prevent Europe from colonizing and meddling in the Western Hemisphere, Trump views his as license for America to do exactly that. The new U.S. National Security Strategy, released last month, decrees the “Trump Corollary” to the Monroe Doctrine a “potent restoration of American power and priorities,” rooted in the “readjustment of our global military presence to address urgent threats in our Hemisphere … and away from theaters whose relative import to American national security has declined in recent decades or years.”

With this reshuffling of American military priorities in mind, senior War Department officials have developed a plan to downgrade several of the U.S. military’s major overseas combatant commands and curtail the power of their commanders. The revised Unified Command Plan would shrink the number of geographic combatant commands, combining Northern and Southern Commands into a single American Command, or AMERICOM, and would merge the European, Central, and African Commands into a single International Command, according to three government sources. Indo-Pacific Command would remain a standalone command. (The proposed reorganization was first reported by the Washington Post.)

One of the government officials said that the new plan would “streamline” U.S. military efforts abroad while “reorienting” U.S. combat power to bring it into line with the new National Security Strategy, which makes clear that the U.S. will be “avoiding any long-term American presence or commitments” in Africa and “avoiding the ‘forever wars’ that bogged us down in” in the Middle East.

Related

After Two Decades of U.S. Military Support, Terror Attacks Are Worse Than Ever in Niger

After 9/11, as the U.S. fought brutal and costly wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, it also ramped up military efforts across the African continent. The number of troops, programs, operations, exercises, bases, low-profile Special Operations missions, deployments of commandos, drone strikes, proxy wars, and almost every other military activity in Africa jumped exponentially. At the same time, terrorism took firmer root and spread across the continent, with fatalities caused by terror groups jumping nearly 100,000 percent over two decades, according to the Pentagon.

In the wake of this abject failure, experts told The Intercept that reconfiguring America’s military posture and swapping interventions in Africa for those in the Western Hemisphere is likely to result in the same types of setbacks, stalemates, and failures due to what Erik Sperling, the executive director of Just Foreign Policy, termed “Washington’s persistent disinterest in understanding the societies it purports to protect and its reliance on a one-size-fits-all, militarized approach.”

The U.S. military has a dismal record in........

© The Intercept