Pentagon is planning for re-education and redeployment of troops stationed in Africa, with strategic mass pullout being in the offing.

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Defense Secretary Mark Esper has ordered the drastic measure as a major step towards getting out of "endless and unnecessary" wars across the globe.

President Donald Trump has been keen to reduce the budget meant for troops working outside the US, something that could define his re-election in 2020.

West Africa is the most targeted operation base where the US troops have been helping French troops in Niger, Mali, Burkina Faso and other allied nations.

The shock move, New York Times reported, will be effected by as soon as January, as part of significantly reducing the number of troops.

“We’ve begun a review process where I’m looking at every theatre, understanding what the requirements are that we set out for, making sure we’re as efficient as possible with our forces,” Esper told reporters this month.

US troops under African Command account for between 6,000 and 7,000, most of them deployed ostensibly to provide secondary support to local troops.

The troops are part of the global effort in the fight against Boko Haram, ISIL and Al-Qaida, whose threat in West Africa is said not to be dangerous to the US.

Esper has given Africa Command until January to draft a withdrawal plan, as well as a plan for redeploying troops.

The Defense Secretary is also considering significant cuts in the Middle East. In the coming months in Iraq, officials said, Esper may cut American presence to 2,500 troops from 5,000. 

He has already conveyed a desire to withdraw about 4,000 of the nearly 13,000 troops now in Afghanistan.

But the Pentagon’s proposed drawdown in West Africa also runs at cross-purposes with a new State Department initiative to combat a resurgent Islamic State there.

“ISIS is outpacing the ability of regional governments and international partners to address that threat,” Secretary of State Mike Pompeo said last month at a meeting of nations fighting the terrorist group.

However, the strategic plan will not immediately affect Somalia, a country which has been struggling with decades of civil war and Al-Shabaab menace.

Currently, at least 500 elite US troops operate in Somalia, where they closely work with Somalia National Army in waging onslaught against the militants.