The Evidence Never Lies: The Science Behind Africa’s Collective Security

In this episode of Micro Journeys, host Daniel Marrujo sits down with two of the most quietly consequential figures in U.S. military operations in Africa — Lieutenant Colonel Kyle Thomason, Provost Marshal for the Southern European Task Force Africa, and Lydia Benyam, Lab Manager for the Joint Theater Forensic Analysis Center, or JTFAC, located at Camp Lemonnier in Djibouti. Recorded live at the African Land Forces Summit, the conversation pulls back the curtain on a capability most people never knew existed: a small, internationally accredited forensics lab operating in East Africa that is turning physical evidence from some of the world’s most dangerous environments into actionable military intelligence, successful criminal prosecutions, and tools for regional security across an entire continent.


Most people picture forensics through the lens of a television crime drama — DNA swabs, fingerprints, a lab in a major U.S. city. The reality of what Thomason and Biniam’s team does is far broader and far more consequential. Operating across two core categories — the who and the what — the JTFAC handles everything from DNA identification and latent prints to firearms analysis, serial number restoration, chemical detection of explosives and drugs, and full electronic data extraction and reverse engineering. In a region where bad actors are constantly evolving their tactics, techniques, and procedures, the pressure on this team to stay ahead of the threat, while producing evidence that holds up in international courts of law, is constant and unrelenting.


Benyam and Thomason explain how a combination of rigorous science, cross-agency collaboration, and emerging AI technology is allowing their lab to do exactly that — not only keeping pace with a changing threat landscape, but expanding its reach to partner nations across Africa and beyond.