AFRICOM proposes using African terrain as battle labs for joint all-domain warfare testing
Summary
AFRICOM General Dagvin Anderson proposed using Africa's open terrain as battle labs to test modern warfighting capabilities including drones, electronic warfare, cyber operations, and joint all-domain operations. The concept aims to help the U.S. and partners develop adaptive kill webs and mosaics that disrupt adversaries, while signaling deterrence to China and Russia. The article explores how Africa's vast, uncluttered terrain offers unique opportunities for testing next-generation warfare integration across multiple domains.
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Key quotes
· 3 pulledIn his 2026 posture statement to Congress, United States Africa Command (AFRICOM) General Dagvin Anderson proposed a novel idea: using open terrain in Africa for battle labs that test modern warfighting capabilities while signaling competitors including China and Russia.
Advantage is increasingly defined by how a military integrates drones and missile salvos with cyber, space, electromagnetic spectrum operations, and information effects to create adaptive kill webs, or mosaics, that disrupt adversaries.
Africa's open terrain could become the proving ground for next-generation warfare, helping the U.S. and partners test drones, electronic warfare, and joint all-domain operations while signaling deterrence to China and Russia.
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