Donald Trump vows to end Africa's 'vicious' conflicts
- Published
The US leader says "few would understand" Africa's problems
US President Donald Trump has vowed to help end "vicious and violent" conflicts on the African continent.
"Africa right now has got problems like few people would even understand," he said at a Nato summit press conference.
"It is so sad, it is so vicious and violent," he said, promising that his goal was to build up the US military and bring peace to the world.
The US is active in counter-terrorism operations and training African troops to fight jihadists in the Sahara.
The 72-year-old US leader was speaking after a two-day summit in Brussels, where he said Nato allies had agreed to increase their military spending.
'We want peace in Africa'
His comments about Africa's problems came after a Tunisian journalist expressed gratitude for US efforts in North Africa, where various Islamist militant groups operate.
The president said the continent had "got things going on there that nobody could believe in this room".
"If you saw some of the things that I see through intelligence - what's going on in Africa - it is so sad, it is so vicious and violent," he said.

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"We want peace for Africa. We want peace all over the world. That's my number one goal - peace all over the world and we are building up a tremendous military because I really believe through strength you get peace."
Mr Trump said that the US was "going to have a military like we never had before".
But his remarks have drawn some criticism on social media - and come seven months after he was alleged to have used the word "shithole" to describe African nations. He denied that he was racist.
Commentators on Twitter suggested he was reinforcing Western stereotypes of the continent, with one Kenyan journalist implying he was naive not to realise that Africa had 54 countries.
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Another tweeter suggested that an American school shooting was as vicious as any conflict in Africa.
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BBC Africa correspondent Alastair Leithead says the US has about 7,000 military personnel in Africa and 34 individual bases or staging posts across the continent - and probably many more secret facilities.

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Last year, four members of the US special forces were killed in an ambush in Niger.
It was the largest loss of American military life in Africa since the "Black Hawk Down" killings in Somalia 25 years ago.
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