Clara Usiskin has spent eight years investigating the "War on Terror" and its effects in the East and Horn of Africa, documenting hundreds of cases of rendition, secret detention and targeted killings. As a result of her work exposing abuses carried out by regional governments and their international partners, Clara was deported from Kenya and Uganda and is currently persona non grata in both countries.
Her book sets out the historical background to today's covert war, including the early Somali jihads and British repression in colonial Kenya, through to the 1998 US Embassy Bombings in Nairobi and Dar es Salaam, and President Clinton's early rendition programme. America's Covert War in East Africa then looks at the US Military's new Africa Command, with its emphasis on counterterrorism, alongside increasing use of targeted killings by security forces in the region, and continued renditions and secret detention.
Finally, Usiskin investigates the shorter and longer term consequences of such intensive militarisation, and the proliferation of surveillance and other technologies of control in East Africa and its surrounding waters, focussing in particular on their impact on vulnerable ethnic and religious groups in a highly volatile region.
Author(s): Clara Usiskin
Publisher: Hurst & Co.
Year: 2019
Language: English
Pages: xii+282
Contents
Acknowledgements
List of Abbreviations
Introduction
1 A Zanzibar Ghost
2 The Spider’s Web
3 A Giant Footprint and a String of Pearls
4 ‘We Forgive You: Just Accept You Met Osama Bin Laden’
5 Goodbye Africa
6 Rule by Law
7 East Africa’s ‘phoenix Programme’
8 Death Squads
9 Where There Is a Sea
10 Civil Society Stifled
11 Motifs of Exclusion
12 Cyber Wars
13 Big Brother Inc.
14 Between Two Fires
15 Endings
Appendix 1 Appendices of Documents
Appendix 2
Notes
Index