U.S. committed to deepening bilateral security cooperation with ECOWAS: Envoy

The U.S. government is committed to deepening bilateral security cooperation with ECOWAS.

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The U.S. government is committed to deepening bilateral security cooperation with ECOWAS.

Maj.-Gen. Kenneth Ekman, U.S. Africa Command (AFRICOM), West Africa Coordination Element Lead, Department of Defence, stated this during a media roundtable in Abuja.

The roundtable was for Gen. Ekman to explain the purpose of his visit to Nigeria and the outcome of his engagements with government officials.

He stressed that the U.S. shares the bloc’s concerns about spiraling violent extremism and democratic governance decline in the subregion.

“With regards to how ECOWAS proceeds, as they proceed, the U.S. military and broader, the U.S. government, do share the concerns that they have expressed.

“That is, with regards to the decline in democratic governance that is playing out particularly in the Sahel, which ultimately comes down to ECOWAS.

“Where we can help ECOWAS, however they choose to proceed, is bilateral security cooperation with ECOWAS members, so that’s our  approach,” he said.

The U.S. Air Force General explained that countering terrorists militarily was tantamount to merely addressing the symptom of a problem.

According to him, the best approach is to identify and deal with the underlying causes and the foundational reasons that cause terrorism to exist and perpetuate.

He listed some of the causes to include issues of governance all the way down to the local level, access to services, competition for limited resources, and climate change.

“The military component of what we do here with our partners sits on a solid foundation of U.S. diplomacy, of U.S. mutually beneficial trade and investment, and on top of development humanitarian assistance, which continues throughout.

“And so, when you look at the AES, the so-called AES states in the Sahel, although they are currently being led by coup governments, there’s been no reduction in our humanitarian assistance going to the people in those countries.

“That’s just reflective of our continued commitment to work on the underlying causes,” he said.

Gen. Ekman said that following the withdrawal of U.S. military forces from Niger Republic, his country was working to address the challenges by redistributing them among other ECOWAS member states.