Currently 2,000 GIs are based in the former French colony, along with blackened helicopters outfitted with encrypted communications equipment designed for special operations. U.S. Special Forces have been conducting bombing exercises in the country’s mountains using Marine Harrier jets.
U.S. and British special forces have also been training 200 army troops in Yemen, just across the Arab-Persian Gulf from Djibouti. According to the Financial Times, the Pentagon has set up an office that will organize training and equipping Yemen’s military.
A preview of what to expect of U.S. military operations in the region came last November when the CIA used Djibouti to launch an unmarked Predator drone over Yemen that fired missiles on a car carrying "terrorist suspects," killing six people.
Operated by remote control, the Predator drones were used by the U.S. military over Bosnia in the mid-1990s and as part of the bombing assault against Afghanistan. They were deployed in early October over the "no-fly zone" in southern Iraq.
Washington’s new military outpost in Djibouti marks another step in its moves to elbow its French imperialist rival out of its way in Africa. Currently some 2,700 French troops are stationed in Djibouti, which formed the base of operations for French forces during the 1990-91 war against Iraq.
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