French success in Mali may herald ‘war of the shadows’

Malian people watch French troops in Diabaly on 23 January 2013

It is not exactly blitzkrieg in the desert, but French commanders can be well-pleased with the way their operation in Mali has played out so far.

Pressed to intervene when the Malian army was at the point of collapse, French air power and special forces have helped to stabilise the situation on the ground, while French troops have secured vital staging areas to enable African troops to begin to deploy.

Retaining the initiative, the French have pushed northwards. Along with Malian troops, they have over-run the town of Gao and they have also captured the airport on the outskirts of Timbuktu.

Securing population centres and destroying the militant Islamists’ logistical bases is clearly a crucial French goal.

The French drive northwards, spear-headed by lightly armoured formations (a French army spokesman says even parachutists are being used), is something that the militant groups cannot really counter.

Confronted by well-equipped ground units and air power, they are seeking to preserve as much of their forces as they can, hoping that they can “disappear” into the vastness of northern Mali’s empty spaces – an area larger than metropolitan France.

France clearly intends to do as much damage to these groups as possible before handing over routine security duties to Mali and its African allies, who have pledged a sizeable force.

But it will take considerable assistance from outside with logistics, communications and intelligence to enable these troops to do anything more than simply garrison towns.

Regional upheaval

This then is the war you can see. But there is potentially another war that as yet has really not been joined.

This could be a “war of the shadows” – bomb-attacks, raids, assassinations.

Islamist forces have simply melted away in the face of the French advance. But one concern is that they may take refuge in mountainous and inaccessible areas near to the country’s porous borders, seeking to mount hit and run attacks to challenge the Malian authorities’ control.

A fire burns fields in the wake of the French-Malian offensive near Diabaly on 23 January 2013
French warplanes have bombed northern areas in a bid to destroy militant bases

Fighting such a war would require very different skills and equipment, with the onus very much on intelligence gathering and the ability to strike fleeting targets rapidly.

Such a war could be more akin to the way the US military has used drones in Yemen and Pakistan.

And that is a form of warfare for which France alone does not have the necessary capabilities.

 

BBC has the full article

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