The United States and Morocco yesterday launched the vast annual “African Lion” military exercise, amid heightened tensions between the North African kingdom and neighbouring Algeria.
The exercise, which began in the southern Moroccan region of Agadir and lasts the rest of the month, involves some 7,500 personnel from 10 nations such as Brazil, France and the United Kingdom.
It will include observers from Nato and for the first time, officials from Israel.
Some manoeuvres will take place in Tunisia, Senegal and Ghana, US Africa Command said in a statement.
The “exercise bolsters interoperability among partner nations and supports US military strategic readiness to respond to crises and contingencies in Africa and around the world”, it added.
The Moroccan military’s second-in-command, General Belkhir El Farouk, said yesterday the country needed to tackle “security challenges”.
The kingdom will host land, sea and air phases, a paratrooper landing and a weapons of mass destruction response exercise.
Most will take place in Kenitra, near Rabat, but others will be near further south near the Algerian border, according to the Moroccan military.
There will also be a paratrooper landing and an artillery exercise in the desert.
Deputy Commanding General for Africa and US Army Southern European Task Force-Africa Commander Andrew Rohling delivers a speech at the opening ceremony of the u201cAfrican Lion 2022u201d multinational military exercise in the Moroccan port city of Agadir, yesterday.