Since the terrorist attacks on the American homeland on
September 11, 2001, fighting the menace has become the frontier
issue on the U.S. national security agenda. In the case of the
African Continent, the United States has, and continues to accord
major attention to the West African sub-region.
This book:
- Evaluates where we can place West Africa within the broader
crucible of the U.S. war on terrorism
- Establishes the key elements of the U.S. counter-terrorism
policy in West Africa?
- Examines the U.S. counter-terrorism strategies in West Africa,
and evaluates if they are being pursued both at the bilateral and
multilateral levels in the region
- Interrogates the relationship between stability in the
sub-region and the waging of the U.S. war on terrorism.
Specifically, the book examines the crises of underdevelopment
cultural, economic, environmental, political, security and social
in the sub-region, especially their impact on shaping the
conditions that provide the taproots of terrorism. Clearly,
addressing these multidimensional crises of underdevelopment is
pivotal to the success of the U.S. war on terrorism in the
sub-region.
This book will be of great interest to students and scholars of
terrorism, homeland security, African Studies, conflict management,
and political violence.
General
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