Niger's government granted American forces permission last
November to arm their drones but neither side had previously
confirmed their deployment. Before that, U.S. drones had only
been used for surveillance.
The U.S. military presence in Niger has expanded in recent years
to an 800-strong force that accompanies Nigerien troops on
intelligence gathering and other missions, reflecting U.S.
concerns about rising militancy in West Africa's Sahel region.
An ambush by a local Islamic State affiliate in western Niger
last October killed four U.S. soldiers. Jihadist groups based in
neighboring Mali have also struck military and civilian targets
as far afield as Ivory Coast.
"In coordination with the Government of Niger, U.S. Africa
Command has armed intelligence, surveillance, and reconnaissance
(ISR) aircraft already in Niger," a spokesperson for United
States Africa Command (AFRICOM) said in an email.
"As a matter of operational security, we do not discuss where
strike platforms originate from, nor current or future
operations."
The drones are currently being flown out of a base in the
capital Niamey while the military completes construction of a
$100 million drone base in the central city of Agadez.
The military views the drones as a cost-efficient way to counter
the militants but critics fear that drone strikes will cause
civilian casualties and trigger blowback from the local
population.
(Reporting by Edward McAllister; Writing by Aaron Ross; Editing
by Peter Graff)
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