In Feature Articles, Multipolarity

By Nick Turse, TomDispatch, Jan 5, 2017

They could be found on the outskirts of Sirte, Libya, supporting local militia fighters, and in Mukalla, Yemen, backing troops from the United Arab Emirates. At Saakow, a remote outpost in southern Somalia, they assisted local commandos in killing several members of the terror group al-Shabab. Around the cities of Jarabulus and Al-Rai in northern Syria, they partnered with both Turkish soldiers and Syrian militias, while also embedding with Kurdish YPG fighters and the Syrian Democratic Forces. Across the border in Iraq, still others joined the fight to liberate the city of Mosul.  And in Afghanistan, they assisted indigenous forces in various missions, just as they have every year since 2001.

Blue and red markers show countries hosting U.S. elite troops (map by Nick Turse, on TomDispatch)

For America, 2016 may have been the year of the commando. In one conflict zone after another across the northern tier of Africa and the Greater Middle East, U.S. Special Operations forces (SOF) waged their particular brand of low-profile warfare. “Winning the current fight, including against the Islamic State, al-Qaeda, and other areas where SOF is engaged in conflict and instability, is an immediate challenge,” the chief of U.S. Special Operations Command (SOCOM), General Raymond Thomas, told the Senate Armed Services Committee last year.

SOCOM’s shadow wars against terror groups like al-Qaeda and the Islamic State (also known as ISIL) may, ironically, be its most visible operations. Shrouded in even more secrecy are its activities — from counterinsurgency and counterdrug efforts to seemingly endless training and advising missions — outside acknowledged conflict zones across the globe. These are conducted with little fanfare, press coverage, or oversight in scores of nations every single day. From Albania to Uruguay, Algeria to Uzbekistan, America’s most elite forces — Navy SEALs and Army Green Berets among them — were deployed to 138 countries in 2016, according to figures supplied to TomDispatch by U.S. Special Operations Command. This total, one of the highest of Barack Obama’s presidency, typifies what has become the golden age of, in SOF-speak, the “gray zone” — a phrase used to describe the murky twilight between war and peace. The coming year is likely to signal whether this era ends with Obama or continues under President-elect Donald Trump’s administration…

Read the full article, with extensive maps and references, at the weblink above. The article is introduced by TomDispatch publisher Tom Engelhardt.

Nick Turse (b 1975) is an American investigative journalist, historian, and author. He is the managing editor of the TomDispatch.com news website and a fellow at The Nation Institute. [Wikipedia] He is the author of the 2013 book ‘Kill Anything That Moves’: A History of Vietnamese Civilian Suffering at the Hands of U.S. Troops During the Vietnam War. You can watch an interview with Nick Turse about that book with Chris Hedges on the Jan 3, 2017 broadcast of RT.com’s  ‘On Contact’, hosted by Chris Hedges. To watch the broadcast, click here, or click the screen below.

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