Photo Information

U.S. Marines and U.K. Royal Marine Commandos teach Nigerian sailors weapons handling skills and marksmanship, Oct. 22, in Sekondi, Ghana. U.S. Marines and U.K. Royal Marine Commandos trained the Nigerian sailors as part of the Africa Partnership Station, which is a U.S. Naval Forces Africa initiative that aims to increase the maritime safety and security capacity of African partners through collaboration and regional cooperation through engagement exercises that build toward self-sustained African security of the maritime domain. The training came at the request of U.S. Naval Forces Africa and U.K. Royal Navy to support NAVAF’s APS missions in the Gulf of Guinea. Six U.S. Marines and one U.S. Navy sailor from Special-Purpose Marine Air-Ground Task Force Crisis Response-Africa took part in the training, alongside their U.K. Royal Marine Commando counterparts, which also included visit, board, search and seizure (VBSS), immediate action drills, patrolling and combat lifesaver training. The APS also made stops in Ghana, Angola and Togo.

Photo by Navy Lt j.g. Jason Bond

US, UK build West African partners’ maritime security capabilities

19 Nov 2015 | Staff Sgt. Bryan Peterson The Official United States Marine Corps Public Website

U.S. Marines and sailors and U.K. Royal Marine Commandos recently completed partner-nation training in multiple countries in Africa during Africa Partnership Station.

The Marines and sailors with Special-Purpose Marine Air-Ground Task Force Crisis Response-Africa spent Oct. 2 to Nov. 14, with their U.K. counterparts, in Angola, Ghana, Nigeria and Togo, building the countries’ maritime capacity to counter piracy and illicit trafficking.

The service members travelled to each country aboard the U.K.’s HMS Lancaster during the APS mission. The U.S. Naval Forces Africa mission began in 2007 and evolved into an international initiative that increases the maritime safety and security capacity of African partners through collaboration and regional cooperation through engagement exercises.

The U.S. and U.K. militaries trained each country’s Navy and its special forces in visit, board, search and seizure (VBSS), infantry maneuver drills, weapons handling, marksmanship and combat lifesaver training.

The region has seen a significant spike in piracy and illicit trafficking that has disrupted the economies of these Gulf of Guinea countries, according to an article posted on Defence Web, a South African news portal.

In 2011 oil tanker-hijacking increased 42 percent throughout the international shipping routes for oil-producing countries, such as Nigeria, Angola, Gabon, Ghana and Equatorial Guinea, according to a 2012 Bloomberg article.

The U.S. Naval Institute reports that oil-tanker hijacking rates declined since 2011 due to “heightened naval patrols and vessel security measures,” and, in 2013, African nations working together to intercept would-be hijackers.

U.S. Marine 1st Lt. Kristan Volk, the SPMAGTF-CR-AF team officer in charge, said service members from each country during the month and a half long APS mission have, in some way, been involved with anti-piracy and counter-illicit trafficking operations and always want to learn more to minimize risks.

“Even though we worked with each country’s Navy with more or less the same type of training, they all have one common goal and that is to provide a safe and secure passage way for ships and its crews in these waters,” said Volk. “This past month has been filled with groups of professional, dedicated and brave service members who are willing to go in harm’s way and fight back against these issues to provide stability in the region.”