{"id":506609,"date":"2010-04-02T15:17:56","date_gmt":"2010-04-02T19:17:56","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.businessinsider.com\/oil-in-gulf-of-guinea-2010-4"},"modified":"2010-04-02T15:17:56","modified_gmt":"2010-04-02T19:17:56","slug":"in-battle-for-resources-theres-a-new-gulf-war","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/mereja.media\/index\/506609","title":{"rendered":"In Battle For Resources, There&#8217;s A New Gulf War"},"content":{"rendered":"<p><em><img decoding=\"async\" class=\"float_right\" src=\"http:\/\/static.businessinsider.com\/image\/4bb642b67f8b9a2367bc0100\/gulf-of-guinea.jpg\" border=\"0\" alt=\"Gulf of Guinea\" \/>(This is a guest post from <a href=\"http:\/\/www.oilprice.com\/article-tension-builds-in-the-gulf-of-guinea-as-competition-for-economic-resources-increases-247.html\">OilPrice.com<\/a>.)<\/em><\/p>\n<p>The strategic framework and the correlation of forces in the Gulf of  Guinea &mdash; one of the most significant and growing energy resource regions  of the world &mdash; is changing rapidly. A new era in security arrangements  for the region is beginning.<\/p>\n<p>The region is moving from an area of low technology defense and  security systems, and minimal command and control at national levels, to  one of growing sophistication, higher mobility, and the potential for  military confrontation.<\/p>\n<p>The five-year, $250-million Equatorial Guinea maritime security  program &#8211; essentially the build-up of an integrated naval and air  capability &#8211; announced on February 24, 2010, signaled the start of a  re-defined strategic architecture in West Africa. It has brought a  coherent military-security framework into life, highlighting issues  which are vital to the welfare of the regional states in a way in which  some earlier boundary disputes were not.<\/p>\n<p>Given the strategic maxim that military planning must be based to a  large degree on the capabilities, rather than the stated intent, of  neighboring or competing states, the move by Equatorial Guinea serves as  a focus for response and activities by regional strategic planners.  Capabilities take years to develop; intent can change in moments. This  means that Equatorial Guinea&rsquo;s neighbours must address changing  realities.<\/p>\n<p>Gen. Ashfaq Kayani, Pakistan&rsquo;s Chief of Army Staff, is fond of saying  that it takes 30 years to develop an army up to corps level, whereas  political realities can change a nation&rsquo;s intent overnight. This means  that defense planners must develop capabilities over the long term to be  ready for any rapidly-emerging eventuality. In the Gulf of Guinea  context, the Equatorial Guinea Government of Pres. Brig.-Gen. (rtd.)  Teodoro Obiang Nguema Mbasogo, has, in fact, been quietly shaping its  defense capabilities over the past few years, particularly as its  offshore energy assets come on stream and produce revenue surpluses.  This has given Equatorial Guinea profoundly more wealth than, say, two  decades ago. As well, the offshore Equatorial Guinea oil and gas  producing areas are often contestable &mdash; or at least close enough to  cause friction &mdash; with neighbors (Gabon, Nigeria, Cameroon).<\/p>\n<p>Equatorial Guinea, too, has often had a fractious relationship with  its major neighbor, Nigeria, even though Malabo has depended on Abuja  for subsidies and even military training and security coverage.<\/p>\n<p>Equatorial Guinea&rsquo;s contract with the MPRI subsidiary of the US  defense corporation, L3, made public in late February 2010 (but actually  shaping up well before that), highlights the reality that Equatorial  Guinea intends to be a major player in Gulf of Guinea security; that it  has the capacity to influence sea lane security to and from Nigeria and  Cameroon; and that it will not be a passive participant in the region. A  number of incidents have occurred in recent years to indicate that  Equatorial Guinea forces &#8211; components of the Guardia Nacional de Guinea  Ecuatorial (GNGE) &#8211; will take aggressive action with regard to what they  feel might be penetrations or violations of Equatorial Guinea&rsquo;s  sovereign space or economic zone.<\/p>\n<p>Part of this activist stance is based on the reality that there is &#8211;  or has been &#8211; no cohesive and professional command and control structure  in place in Equatorial Guinea, other than personal links between  arbitrarily-ranked colleagues of Pres. Obiang, all of who are ethnic  Fang, as is the President. The ranking of the Minister of Defense,  Antonio Mba Nguema, and the Vice-Minister of Defense, Anthonio Ndong, as  a lieutenant-generals, for example, is arbitrary when the total  manpower strength of the GNGE is only in the neighborhood of 3,500,  including a significant number of foreign nationals in key slots (such  as aircrew and maintenance). The rank of lieutenant-general implies  command of a corps-sized unit, or an Army, with numbers in the region of  20,000 or more.<\/p>\n<p>The substance of the latest agreement with MPRI\/L3, however, is  significant, especially as MPRI &#8211; which is undertaking the latest  Equatorial Guinea military expansion &#8211; had been called in, at the  insistence of the then US Administration of Pres. Bill Clinton, in 2000  to &ldquo;democratize&rdquo; and &ldquo;professionalize&rdquo; the Nigerian Army, even while it  was working on a contract initiated with Equatorial Guinea in 1998 to  help train the Equatorial Guinea military. The MPRI training package  with the Nigerian Army did not go well, especially as the Nigerian Army  had just emerged from successfully fighting a range of wars and  peacekeeping operations in Africa with few resources and yet remarkable  success.<\/p>\n<p>[Lt.-Gen. Victor Leo Malu, the Nigerian Chief of Army Staff,  questioned MPRI&rsquo;s plan to reduce the size of the Nigerian military from  100,000 to 50,000, and MPRI&rsquo;s need to have access to sensitive military  information. GIS\/Defense &amp; Foreign Affairs has first-hand knowledge  that the then-Nigerian Government of Pres. Olusegun Obasanjo was warned  at the time, by external advisors, that MPRI had questionable  capabilities and motives, as well as ill-suited background, for training  the Nigerian Army, and the Nigerian Government was warned as well of  MPRI&rsquo;s legally questionable r&ocirc;le in providing actual combat operational  command to Croatian forces engaged in ethnic cleansing in the Krajina  area of what is now Croatia, during the Yugoslav break-up in the 1990s.  Nonetheless, Pres. Obasanjo, unwilling to alienate the Clinton  Administration, dismissed Gen. Malu rather than resist the MPRI  demands.]<\/p>\n<p>Now, however, MRPI is engaged in helping a state which has, arguably,  potential concerns with Nigeria, making it difficult for MPRI to  re-engage in Nigeria, even if the Nigerian Army was so inclined.<\/p>\n<p>But the new MPRI\/L3 initiative with Equatorial Guinea is &#8211; as its  title suggests &#8211; maritime-oriented. Even though the MRPI contract with  Equatorial Guinea was announced in March 2010, the company was  recruiting for former US military personnel in December 2009 to meet the  contract. It sought personnel in security, search and rescue, detainee  processing, information technology, logistics\/maintenance, and  administration, with hirings to begin in &ldquo;the early months of 2010&rdquo;.  Experience in maritime security, with a background of employment in the  US Navy or Coast Guard was desired, along with some trainer skills.<\/p>\n<p>L3&rsquo;s announcement on February 24, 2010, was that MPRI had been  awarded a $58-million firm-fixed-price task order with the Government of  Equatorial Guinea to establish a Maritime Security Enhancement Program  (MSEP). This task order was the first part of a multi-year contract,  with a potential value of approximately $250-million. The MSEP was  designed to provide nationwide coastal surveillance coverage for  Equatorial Guinea.<\/p>\n<p>Jim Jackson, general manager for MPRI&rsquo;s International Group, noted:  &ldquo;This important contract award represents a strategic opportunity to  contribute not only to the vital maritime security of Equatorial Guinea,  but also provides a thoughtful approach toward establishing long-term  stability for the entire region.&rdquo;<\/p>\n<p>The MSEP contract envisions completion of a surveillance site network  and operations centers in Equatorial Guinea within three years. This  would be followed up by two years of sustainment and maintenance support  for an estimated contract total of five years.<\/p>\n<p>In fact, the emphasis of the contract &#8211; given the hiring pattern &#8211;  implies a greater emphasis on physical security, rather than merely the  integrated surveillance system, although that is clearly part of the  program. GIS\/Defense &amp; Foreign Affairs sources in Malabo said that  new Equatorial Guinea program would include AIS (automatic  identification system), radar, and command and control. The program  could expand to include L3&rsquo;s Raytheon\/Beech King Air-based aerial  surveillance systems, as well as light patrol vessels. MPRI was also to  train oil workers in anti-piracy tactics as part of the contract.<\/p>\n<p>Significantly, the new Government of Nigeria under Acting Pres.  Goodluck Jonathan is known to have begun looking at an integrated  national surveillance and response system, linked through a command and  control function with all the Armed Services, the Intelligence Community  (IC), Police and Customs. The concept had been proposed a year earlier,  but the Government of Pres. Umaru Musa Yar&rsquo;Adua was even then becoming  paralyzed politically for a number of reasons.<\/p>\n<p>Equatorial Guinea, Nigeria, Gabon, and S&atilde;o Tom&eacute; and Pr&iacute;ncip&eacute; all  recognize that they have common security threats, quite apart from any  potential friction between them, and with other neighbors such as  Cameroon (with which Nigeria recently concluded a difficult dispute over  the sovereignty of the Bakassi Peninsula).<\/p>\n<p>Freedom Onuoha, a research fellow at the African Centre for Strategic  Research and Studies at the National Defence College in Abuja, writing  in African Security Review, Vol. 17, No. 3, published by the South  Africa-based Institute for Security Studies in 2008, cited a &ldquo;recent  study commissioned by Royal Dutch\/Shell&rdquo; as saying that between  100-million and 250-million barrels of oil was stolen each year by  bunkerers or vandals, putting the cost, at an average US$60 a barrel, at  around US$15-billion a year. This was, he said, in addition to other  costs to the Nigerian State due to oil pipeline sabotage, and other  related activities. As well, the Nigerian Government Inter-agency  Maritime Security Task Force on Acts of Illegality in Nigerian Waters  (IAMSTAF) was told on December 5, 2008, by President of the Nigerian  Trawler Owners Association (NITOA), Mrs Margaret Orakwusi, that the  rising spate of piracy, sea robberies, poaching, bunkering, and other  illegal operations in Nigeria&#8217;s territorial waters and seas (with the  exception of illegal oil bunkering in the Niger Delta region) have cost  the country more than N25-billion in less than four years. Mrs Orakwusi  told the task force that the country&rsquo;s fishing industry had witnessed at  least 293 documented sea robberies and pirate attacks between 2003 and  2008, which she said had culminated in loss of lives and destruction of  vessels and trawlers.<\/p>\n<p>Significantly, and without any increase in budget, the Nigerian Navy  literally &ldquo;bootstrapped&rdquo; its way back into a reasonable operational  capability over recent years, rebuilding ships which had been thought to  have been beyond salvage. As a result, and without fanfare, the  Nigerian Navy has re-emerged as a factor in the Gulf of Guinea region.<\/p>\n<p>Nigeria, however, faces a far greater challenge than Equatorial  Guinea. Its coastline and offshore facilities are in a far more complex  situation than those of Equatorial Guinea, and the volume of facilities,  pipelines, and traffic are far greater. Moreover, Nigeria continues to  address a militant, armed opposition force &#8211; MEND: the Movement for the  Emancipation of the Niger Delta &#8211; which has fractured into a number of  groups in the oil- and gas-producing Niger Delta region. Acting Pres.  Jonathan, as a former Governor of Bayelsa state, one of the major  energy-producing Niger Delta states, is highly aware that the legacy of  his brief Administration (until the April 2010 Presidential elections)  must be to address and bring under control the Niger Delta crisis.<\/p>\n<p>Whereas the Equatorial Guinea forces have been growing, commensurate  with the financial surpluses generated by energy exports, the Nigerian  Defence Forces have faced growing constraints. Former Pres. Olusegun  Obasanjo, although once a military head-of-state in Nigeria and a former  Army general, had, as an elected President, fully embraced the US  Clinton Administration&rsquo;s view that the Nigerian military should be  suppressed and kept on a reduced budget. Even so, the Nigerian Armed  Forces, as with the Navy&rsquo;s example, were able to adapt to the situation.<\/p>\n<p>The new security paradigm, however, implies that the Nigerian  Government will now be forced to act rapidly if it is to contain its own  security concerns and also retain its dominance of the Gulf of Guinea.  The Nigerian National Security Advisor during the Obasanjo  Administration, Lt.-Gen. (rtd.) Aliyu Mohammed Gusau (who is now back in  that role with the Jonathan Administration) successfully draft the  framework for a Gulf of Guinea Commission to begin developing offshore  security modalities from the immediate Gulf of Guinea region down to  Angola and South Africa.<\/p>\n<p>Abuja may now need to revive that, while it also deals with its own  approach to development a strategic asset protection program to  safeguard pipelines, installations, sea routes, and so on. This will be  significantly larger in scale and in conceptual thinking than the  Equatorial Guinea approach.<\/p>\n<p>But, as noted above, Equatorial Guinea has expanded its military  capabilities considerably in recent years, relying heavily on foreign  contractors and mercenary military personnel. During the past decade,  the Guardia Nacional de Guinea Ecuatorial (GNGE)&rsquo;s Naval Division has  obtained two lightly-armed (Typhoon G mounting of an Oerlikon 20mm  cannon with electro-optical guidance) 24.8m (LOA) Shaldag Mk.II fast  patrol vessels (acquired 2005) from Israel Shipyards Ltd.; the Air Wing  has obtained at least two new Enstrom 480B Guardian turbine helicopters  which are used on maritime duties (delivered 2007); the Air Wing has  also acquired a steady supply (now totaling six) of Ukraine-surplus Mil  Mi-24V Hind helicopter gunships (deliveries in 2001, 2004, and 2007),  and at least one Mil Mi-172 utility helicopter; the Air Wing has also  obtained four Su-25 strike aircraft variants (two Su-39s, Su-25TM second  generation variants, transferred from Ukraine and possibly carrying  Kopyo (Russian: Spear) radar for air-engagement combat, along with  RVV-AE\/R-77 air-to-air missiles, and Kh-31 and Kh-35 anti-shipping  missiles), along with two Su-25UB trainers. The Air Wing also obtained  one Antonov An-32 twin-turboprop VIP transport, which was lost, with all  hands, in April 2008; it has two Czech Aero L-39 advanced jet  trainer\/strike aircraft, and possibly one An-26 transport aircraft. The  Presidential flight has one Agusta A109 VIP helicopter, a Dassault  Falcon 50 and\/or a Falcon 900, a Yak-40 executive jet, and the one  Mi-172 helicopter, and an Embraer ERJ145EP executive jet. Virtually all  of these rely on foreign aircrew and maintenance personnel, and mostly  operate from Malabo airfield, where the bulk of the Air Wing operates.<\/p>\n<p>One helicopter, at least, is based at the airfield at Bata, the  northernmost of the two major towns on the mainland coast.<\/p>\n<p>Much of the Equatorial Guinea hydrocarbon wealth has been derived  from fields around Bioko Island, the seat of Government and the capital,  Malabo. However, the mainland region &mdash; until recently fairly neglected  apart from its timber resources &mdash; borders at the Atlantic on areas  claimed by Cameroon and Gabon. A dispute between Cameroon and Equatorial  Guinea over an island off the mouth of the Ntem River in Cameroon  remains unresolved. A dispute with Gabon over sovereignty over the  Gabon-occupied Mbane area and its associated islands is under United  Nations mediation. The potential for disputes over rights to the coastal  waters remains high, and could lead to confrontation in the oil and gas  producing Corisco Bay area.<\/p>\n<p>Equatorial Guinea faces a significant geographic challenge to its  limited, albeit growing, maritime and air forces. It is a challenge  which can only be met through the application of tight coordination and  high technology. As well, it will require significant support from  Equatorial Guinea&rsquo;s very limited policy planning and diplomatic  resources. Indeed, the lack of forward-looking planning and diplomatic  resources makes the likelihood of clashes over disputed areas and assets  more likely, particularly if accidental or provocative cross-border  movements by neighbors stimulate reaction by Equatorial Guinea forces.<\/p>\n<p><em>[Significantly, Bioko, the main island territory of Equatorial  Guinea, and R&iacute;o Muni, the mainland territory, were never historically a  single country. Spain, which was the colonial power controlling both  territories, brought the two areas under a single administration, as two  provinces, in 1956. The United Nations asked Spain, in 1963, to grant  independence to the provinces, and this was done in 1968. At the time,  Spain did not wish to give separate independence to each of the two  provinces, because Madrid was in the throes of attempting to push  Britain into handing Gibraltar over to Spanish control. To have allowed  self-determination in Bioko and R&iacute;o Muni separately was perceived to  have opened the door to Britain allowing the Gibraltans to entertain a  separate vote on whether to opt for Spain or opt for sovereign  independence. The Fang population, which now controls Equatorial Guinea,  is from R&iacute;o Muni, and has gradually subordinated and reduced the Bioko  population, comprised mostly of Bubi ethnicity. Some Fang migration to  Bioko began in 1924, when a labor shortage caused the Catholic Church to  indent workers from the mainland for cocoa production. The Fang  migrants proved unsuitable, but a significant Fang population remained  on Bioko.]<\/em><\/p>\n<p>Nigeria, by contrast, has a more concentrated area of concern around  the Niger Delta, but still has a large exclusive economic zone (EEZ) to  monitor &mdash; as does Equatorial Guinea and Cameroon &mdash; with regard to  illegal fisheries. But the Nigerian situation has greater challenges  because of the complexity of the onshore energy assets, including  pipelines, coupled with an historical pattern of ethnic and political  differences, both within the Niger Delta region and with regard to the  Delta states&rsquo; relationship with the Nigerian Federation.<\/p>\n<p>Nigeria, unlike Equatorial Guinea, has developed a defense and  security framework over five decades of independence and a century of  modern military structures as a component of the British military  system. The current dynamic, however, has been characterized by rising  capabilities and ambitions by the Equatorial Guinea forces, and severely  constrained capabilities in the Nigerian Armed Forces due to budgetary  constraints and Continent-wide military responsibilities in  peacekeeping.<\/p>\n<p>Nigeria has, in the past decade, begun a process of using technology  in its civil sector &#8211; particularly telecommunications &#8211; to leapfrog  moribund and paralyzed structures. Nigeria&rsquo;s revived approach to  integrated, national-level real-time security intelligence coupled to  command and control would, if it is adopted, help re-assert Abuja&rsquo;s  strategic leadership in the region. Despite its population size &mdash; at  around 150-million &#8211; Nigeria has, like most sub-Saharan African states,  devoted relatively little of its GDP to defense.<\/p>\n<p>The following comparative statistics [derived from World Bank and  GIS\/Defense &amp; Foreign Affairs archives] &mdash; while not entirely  like-for-like &mdash; are significant in helping shape a balanced view of the  region:<\/p>\n<p><span style=\"text-decoration: underline;\">Cameroon: <\/span>Population  est. (2008) 18.9-million; GDP (2008) $23.4-billion; Defense expenditure  (2001) $211.1-million.<\/p>\n<p><span style=\"text-decoration: underline;\">Equatorial Guinea:<\/span> Population est. (2008) 660,000; GDP (2008) $18.53-billion; Defense  expenditure (2004) est. $126.2-million.<\/p>\n<p><span style=\"text-decoration: underline;\">Gabon: <\/span>Population  est. (2008) 1.45-million; GDP (2008) $14.43-billion. Defense expenditure  (1996) $91-million.<\/p>\n<p><span style=\"text-decoration: underline;\">Nigeria:<\/span> Population  est. (2008) 151.32-million; GDP (2008) $212.08-billion; Defense  expenditure (2007) $979.3-million.<\/p>\n<p><span style=\"text-decoration: underline;\">S&atilde;o Tom&eacute; and Pr&iacute;ncip&eacute;:<\/span> Population est. (2008) 160,000; GDP (2008) $170-million; Defense  expenditure (2004) est. $126.2-million.<\/p>\n<p>These are static snapshots, and do not reflect the dynamics of the  region, the respective economic potential versus overhead  responsibilities of each society, or the relative inertia of each  government, but they do indicate latent capability to some extent. What  is emerging, because of the evolving discovery and exploitation of  hydrocarbon deposits in the region, is a more strategically mobile and  competitive framework. Many of the old boundary issues, as well as the  prospect for the movement of societies as a result of wealth  opportunities (not evenly distributed), mean that stability can no  longer be guaranteed.<\/p>\n<p>A more competitive regional environment, in which very tangible  economic resources such as hydrocarbon deposits are at stake, coupled  with growing wealth, will demand the kind of increasing reliance on  technological solutions to security challenges which are now beginning  to emerge.<\/p>\n<p><strong>Analysis from GIS sources in Malabo and elsewhere in the  region.<\/strong><\/p>\n<p><a href=\"http:\/\/www.businessinsider.com\/oil-in-gulf-of-guinea-2010-4#comments\">Join the conversation about this story &#187;<\/a><\/p>\n<p><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" src=\"http:\/\/feeds.feedburner.com\/~r\/TheMoneyGame\/~4\/OrjTugijkFQ\" height=\"1\" width=\"1\"\/><\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>(This is a guest post from OilPrice.com.) The strategic framework and the correlation of forces in the Gulf of Guinea &mdash; one of the most significant and growing energy resource regions of the world &mdash; is changing rapidly. A new era in security arrangements for the region is beginning. The region is moving from an [&hellip;]<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":5864,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"closed","ping_status":"closed","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"footnotes":""},"categories":[7],"tags":[],"class_list":["post-506609","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","hentry","category-news"],"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/mereja.media\/index\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/506609","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/mereja.media\/index\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/mereja.media\/index\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/mereja.media\/index\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/5864"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/mereja.media\/index\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/comments?post=506609"}],"version-history":[{"count":0,"href":"https:\/\/mereja.media\/index\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/506609\/revisions"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/mereja.media\/index\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=506609"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/mereja.media\/index\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/categories?post=506609"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/mereja.media\/index\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/tags?post=506609"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}