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Joseph Kony Hunt: U.S. Special Forces Assist In Hunt For One Of World's Most Wanted Warlords

By DAVID RISING 04/29/12 05:37 PM ET AP

Joseph Kony
Joseph Kony, leader of the Lord's Resistance Army during a meeting with a delegation of 160 officials and lawmakers from northern Uganda and representatives of non-governmental organizations in this Monday, July 31, 2006 file picture in the Democratic Republic of Congo near the Sudan border. (AP Photo, File)

OBO, Central African Republic -- Deep in the jungle, this small, remote Central African village is farther from the coast than any point on the continent. It's also where three international armies have zeroed in on Joseph Kony, one of the world's most wanted warlords.

Obo was the first place in the Central African Republic that Kony's Lord's Resistance Army attacked in 2008; today, it's one of four forward operating locations where U.S. special forces have paired up with local troops and Ugandan soldiers to seek out Kony, who is believed likely to be hiding out in the rugged terrain northwest of the town. For seven years he has been wanted by the International Criminal Court for war crimes and crimes against humanity after his forces cut a wide and bloody swath across several central African nations with rapes, abductions and killings.

Part of the LRA's success in eluding government forces has been its ability to slip back and forth over the porous borders of the Central African Republic, South Sudan and Congo. But since late last year, U.S. forces have been providing intelligence, looking at patterns of movement, and setting up better communications to link the countries' forces together so that they can better track the guerrilla force.

Sent by President Barack Obama at the end of 2011, the 100 U.S. soldiers are split up about 15 to 30 per base, bringing in American technology and experience to assist local forces.

Exact details on specific improvements that the American forces have brought to the table, however, are classified, to avoid giving Kony the ability to take countermeasures.

"We don't necessarily go and track into the bush but what we do is we incorporate our experiences with the partner nation's experiences to come up with the right solution to go out and hopefully solve this LRA problem," said Gregory, a 29-year-old captain from Texas, who would only give his first name in accordance with security guidelines.

The U.S. troops also receive reports from local hunters and others that they help analyze together with surveillance information.

"It's very easy to blame everything on the LRA but there are other players in the region – there are poachers, there are bandits, and we have to sift that to filter what is LRA," he said.

Central African Republic soldiers largely conduct security operations in and around the town, while Ugandan soldiers, who have been in the country since 2010, conduct longer-range patrols looking for Kony and his men.

Since January, they have killed seven LRA fighters in the area and captured one, while rescuing 15 people abducted by the group including five children, said their local commander, Col. Joseph Balikuddembe.

There has been no contact with the LRA since March, however, according to Ugandan Army spokesman Col. Felix Kulayigye, who said the LRA now is in survival mode. The LRA is thought to today number only around 150 to 300 die-hard fighters.

"They're hiding," he said. "They are not capable of doing."

But with Kony still around, there are wide ranging-fears that the LRA will be able to rebuild.

"There's periods of time when the LRA will lie low when the military pressure is too high or where there's a threat that they don't understand such as the American intervention," said Matthew Brubacher, a political affairs officer with the U.N.'s mission in Congo, who was also an International Criminal Court investigator on the Kony case for five years.

"But then after a while after they figure it out, if they have the opportunity they'll try to come back, so it's just a matter of time they'll try to come back. Kony always said `if I have only 10 men, I can always rebuild the force."

Right now, expectations are high of the Americans serving in Obo and Djema in the Central African Republic, as well as those in Dungu in Congo and Nzara in South Sudan.

"For all the communities, the U.S. bases in Obo and Djema means one, Kony will be arrested, and two, there will be a lot of money for programs, humanitarian programs," said Sabine Jiekak of the Italian humanitarian aid agency Coopi.

Central African Republic Deputy Defense Minister Jean Francis Bozize said it's been difficult for the poor country's small military to deal with Kony in the southeast as well as several other militant groups in the north.

An African Union mission expected to begin later this year should help expedite the cross-border pursuit of the LRA.

In the meantime, Bozize said the American forces could make a big difference.

"The involvement of U.S. forces with their assistance in providing information and intelligence will allow for all forces to operate from the same base-level of intelligence ... (giving) better coordination with better results," he told reporters in the capital, Bangui.

But the military mission is not a simple one.

How do you find small groups of seasoned fighters hidden deep in the jungle, who have eluded authorities for decades? How do you prevent brutal reprisal attacks on civilians? How can you bring together several countries' troops to cooperate on cross-border pursuits?

The LRA usually attacks late at night, then melts back away into the jungle. Seasoned bush fighters, they employ many techniques to elude pursuit – walking along rocks or along streams to avoid leaving tracks, for example, and sometimes even marching backward to fool trackers.

Kony has reportedly stopped using radios and satellite phones for communications, instead relying on an elaborate system involving runners and multiple rendezvous points.

Key to his capture is good information from local residents – which they will only give when they can be sure of their own safety, according to American commanders.

"The population have to believe that they are secure and once they believe they are secure from the LRA, you start to deny the LRA the opportunity to attack villages to get people, to get food, to get medicine," Gen. Carter Ham, the head of U.S. Africa Command, told reporters in Stuttgart.

That may take some time in Obo, a town of some 15,000 where around 3,500 people have sought refuge to escape LRA violence in the area.

Rural farmers and others stick to within 5 kilometers (3 miles) of the village for safety – originally the area that Central African Republic soldiers were able to patrol but now more a rule of thumb followed by the locals.

They've started recently to venture out farther, emboldened by the presence of the Ugandans and Americans to help the government forces, but are too nervous to stray too wide from the safety of the village.

"They're still scared, they're still wary because Joseph Kony is still out there," said Mayor Joseph Kpioyssrani, looking at the jungle behind him.

Kony's LRA sprung up in 1986 as a rebel movement among the Acholi people in northern Uganda to fight against the Kampala government, but has for decades been leading its violent campaign without any clear political ideology.

Emmanuel Daba, 33, was one of 76 people abducted in the first LRA raid on Obo in 2008 and forced to fight for the guerrillas for two years before managing to escape.

"We were trained to kill – forced to kill – otherwise we'd be killed ourselves," he said outside the tiny radio station where he now works broadcasting messages to try and encourage others with the LRA to defect or escape. "I still have dreams – nightmares."

This year, the U.S. Defense Department is committing $35 million to efforts to find and fight Kony.

Since 2008, the U.S. State Department has sent some $50 million in funds to support the Ugandan military's logistics and non-lethal operations against the LRA, including contracting two transport helicopters to ferry troops and supplies. Another $500 million has been given over that time for the broader northern Uganda recovery effort in the aftermath of Kony's presence there.

In Stuttgart, Ham keeps a "Kony 2012" poster hanging on his office door.

Though he isn't committing to the goal of the viral YouTube campaign to see Kony neutralized by the end of the year, he does define success as either capturing or killing the LRA leader eventually.

"I'm confident that the mission will be successful, but I can't give you a timeline when that's going to occur..." Ham said. "It is one of those organizations that if you remove the senior leader and the small number of those who surround him, I believe this is one of those organizations that will not be able to regenerate."

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OBO, Central African Republic -- Deep in the jungle, this small, remote Central African village is farther from the coast than any point on the continent. It's also where three international armies ha...
OBO, Central African Republic -- Deep in the jungle, this small, remote Central African village is farther from the coast than any point on the continent. It's also where three international armies ha...
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TurnToTheLeft
We have nothing to lose but our chains.
03:42 PM on 05/02/2012
I am confident President Obama will deliver the head of Congo Kony.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
King7David
Hoo Yah!!!!!!!
05:26 PM on 05/01/2012
Wow, we can send troops a half a world away to track down a group, and we have those living in the USA (Aryan Nation/Klan) living in the open in compounds......Amazing.....
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Captsharky1
Capt. Merchant Marines
08:48 AM on 05/01/2012
I cannot believe the U.S. is wasting my money hunting for this animal. Who cares! As long as he stays in Africa, dont waste my tax dollars looking for him.
02:28 AM on 05/01/2012
This is 2012,no one should be killing,raping,or being racist.He deserve to die,I should've been on that mission.......(no prisoners)
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
talari
Be Good...
02:15 AM on 05/01/2012
Great. Let's spend another trillion dollars in borrowed money to finance this!
01:12 AM on 05/01/2012
Sheeple... Look at the behind the scenes action. This is all smoke and mirrors.
This is an excuse for the U.S.A. to set-up shop in Africa. Natural resources ...BIG...BIG...MONEY...!!! The Cronies are using the military power as hitmen and bouncers to secure the area. Let the raping of the land begin. $$$$$$$$$
China is already there dealing with Africa. Banksters and Big Corps will be reaping the $$$$$$ ...!!! Let the American tax payers foot the bill for the military cost. The Cronies will be the profiteers...!!! WAKE-UP...!!! SHEEPLE...!!!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
ponz111
Chess Master
07:15 AM on 05/01/2012
You are making a whole lot of assumptions here. I think your assumptions very wrong.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Gigi1217
It's not me. It's you.
04:22 PM on 05/01/2012
Why would the US go through all of this to "set-up shop" in Africa? If the US was going to do that, they would've did it a long time ago.
11:53 PM on 04/30/2012
How about sending special ops to the chicago Housing projects and kill the War Lords there, that will bring peace ...
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
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11:36 PM on 04/30/2012
uhh why should i care about koney? ther're are people in my country losing everything..jobs ,homes ,etc yet my gov't spends tax dollers on this?
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CHARLIE X
Yield to the logic of the situation.
12:27 AM on 05/01/2012
you have your priorities, the president has his. arresting a few thugs in this country doesn't get much play on the news!
-swift
Can you put your country before your party?
08:32 AM on 05/01/2012
You should care for two reasons. First, thousands of people killed, kidnapped, and raped is just wrong. Second, we live in a global, high tech, economy. Instability in Africa and other parts of the world leads to shortages and volatile markets. Read a little about coltan:

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Coltan

So we have a chance to do some good, make people's lives better, and have better access to resources we don't have here.
11:12 PM on 04/30/2012
Find this man and his compadres and kill them all. It will only improve the world.
12:24 AM on 05/01/2012
Someone will just take his place. Never ending...see Mexico's drug kingpins.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
ponz111
Chess Master
07:17 AM on 05/01/2012
If this warlord is caught and destroyed it will send a very big message. It will not be never ending.

Not an anology to our failed War on Drugs
-swift
Can you put your country before your party?
08:34 AM on 05/01/2012
Actually, like the article says, if he and a few of his comrades are removed, his whole operation will disappear. But assisting and training the governments of the countries involved will go a long way to preventing that.
10:54 PM on 04/30/2012
wow, you need to ask yourself why this is taking place. If you do you might not like the answer.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
ponz111
Chess Master
07:18 AM on 05/01/2012
I see good or possible good comming out of this effort--not bad.
08:39 PM on 04/30/2012
we go after the red man,yellow man, then on to the brown man, now again to the black man....soon it will be the red, white and blue man....and his family
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
ponz111
Chess Master
07:19 AM on 05/01/2012
We are coming against a very bad black man.
07:11 PM on 05/01/2012
if he is not dead....we always need a boogey man.....wait and see if there is a body...without the shakey, blurred pics
07:11 PM on 04/30/2012
It's all Bush's fault.
07:09 PM on 04/30/2012
I would rather seen drone attacks on cartels in mexico, and special forces on smuggling routes at the border, than to see them in africa.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Leon Holston Sr
06:49 PM on 04/30/2012
send george zimmerman he is good at killing.,oh wait he only kill unarmed kids.
07:18 PM on 04/30/2012
maybe spike lee can tweet where kony is and save us the hunt, oh wait, we would end up at the wrong place
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Leon Holston Sr
05:02 PM on 05/01/2012
so are you saying you have spike lee money?if not shame on you for hating on him.
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Enrique Iglesias
THE CHINA GAME
07:28 PM on 04/30/2012
You know why you only have 40 fans? Because you always post on the wrong board...
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Leon Holston Sr
05:01 PM on 05/01/2012
how many fans do you have einstein? i am not looking for fans, but the truth and fair treatment of all citizens.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Leon Holston Sr
06:48 PM on 04/30/2012
sometimes i think we give out to much information.i know we have a right to know certain things but we endanger our troops when we talk to damn much.
-swift
Can you put your country before your party?
08:37 AM on 05/01/2012
In this case, it's not a secret mission. Our forces are assisting the local government forces. If they had known where Kony was hiding, it would have been a drone strike and everyone would have found out after it happened. This is not just about finding Kony. It's about training local troops to prevent this sort of thing.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Leon Holston Sr
04:55 PM on 05/01/2012
ok ill give you this one.