http://www.wired.com/dangerroom/2013/01/mali-heavy-firepower/The French-led international assault on Islamist-held northern Mali is about to get a lot more explosive. With a big assist from the U.S., U.K. and other allies, Paris is deploying heavier vehicles, high-tech artillery pieces and its most sophisticated helicopter gunship, the Tiger.
The reinforcements reflect France’s surprise at discovering that Mali’s rebels possess some dangerous weaponry of their own.
“The defense minister has recognized that the enemy resistance was tougher than initially envisioned,” Joseph Henrotin, a French analyst and military academy instructor, tells Danger Room. When French ground troops counter-attacked towards the battleground town of Konna in central Mali on Jan. 15, they encountered rebels equipped with “technical” trucks. Photos have depicted militants riding in a wide variety of these improvised, gun-armed pickups, long a mainstay of African warfare.
“Our enemies were well-armed, well-equipped, well-trained and determined,” an unnamed French diplomat told Ireland’s RTE News.
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/worldnews/africaandindianocean/mali/9818699/To-Malians-al-Qaeda-is-a-foreign-invader.htmlThe refugees came home on board a canoe, paddling across a verdant swamp forming a cool oasis in the wastes of the Sahel. As they disembarked, I asked why they felt safe enough to return to their town in central Mali, barely five days after fleeing its capture by radical Islamists.
“Because the French have come,” replied Mahmadou Djire. “They are here to save us.” Nearby, the first Tricolours were flying in Diabaly, welcoming a French military column with a blaze of blue, white and red.
Anyone who saw the recapture of this town of 35,000 people after its brief occupation by al-Qaeda in the Islamic Maghreb (AQIM) had no doubt that they were witnessing a liberation.
http://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/africa/mali-troops-retake-strategic-town-of-douentza-8461217.htmlMalian forces have regained control of the strategic town that was under extreme Islamist rule for four months, as the French-led military intervention pushed northwards in its second week.
Douentza had been the outer edge of Islamist rebel control until the militants surged southwards earlier this month. While far from the capital, Douentza is only 120 miles (190km) from Mopti, which marks the line of control held by the Malian military.
Yesterday, French and Malian troops arrived in Douentza to find that the Islamists already had retreated from the town, local adviser Sali Maiga told The Associated Press.