Jerusalem - Israel’s inroads into Africa continues, as Chad – which has suddenly found itself on the front lines in the battle against Islamic extremists – is expected to be the next majority-Muslim African state to re-establish ties with Jerusalem, The Jerusalem Post has learned.

Guinea and Israel announced the re-establishment of ties on Wednesday, and Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu – who visited four east African countries earlier this month – said that another African country would soon follow suit.

Chad severed ties with Israel in 1972 after coming under intense pressure from its Arab neighbors, Libya and Sudan.  The Post reported earlier this month that delegations from Chad and Mali, both countries in northern Africa, were in Israel recently. Chad, like Guinea, is a member of the 57-nation Organization of Islamic Cooperation.

US Brig. Gen Donald C. Bolduc, the commander of the US military’s special Operations in Africa, was quoted in April in the New York Times as saying that the “Lake Chad basin is ground zero” in the fight against militant Islam in Africa.

In April, an arms shipment believed to be from Islamic State fighters in Libya was confiscated near the Libya-Chad border. It was headed for the Lake Chad area, apparently intended for Boko Haram, raising concerns that the two terrorist organizations were now cooperating closely. Boko Haram is active in Nigeria, Cameroon, Niger and Chad.

Diplomatic officials said that a major impetus for the surge in African interest in better ties with Israel has to do with a desire to tap into Israel’s expertise regarding how to...read more at VIN