"Algeria, which has paid a heavy toll to terrorism, will never bow in front of this scourge," Algerian Foreign Minister Ramtane Lamamra said at the opening of strategic talks between the two countries.
"Terrorism knows no boundaries, has no creed, no religion and targets all nations," he added.
But he called for more intelligence sharing from the United States in the fight against Islamist militancy, and greater coordination among regional law enforcement agencies as well as for border monitoring.
But militants have also struck in Niger, Tunisia and Algeria itself, where they overran a desert gas plant last year triggering a bloody four-day siege in which some 40 hostages were killed.
Lamamra said his country was committed to working with all its partners "to stand in the way of this peril, and to eradicate this scourge".
One of Algeria's major concerns was the situation in the Sahel, where "terrorism, human-trafficking, drug-trafficking and all kinds of criminal activities have woven their webs," he said.
Kerry, who arrived late yesterday amid tight security, said Washington wanted to partner with Algeria to build a more robust defence relationship and help secure and strengthen borders in the region.
He also vowed that the United States would work with Algeria to try to stem the unrest in the lawless Sahel region, which stretches across several north African nations.
"We are grateful, very grateful, for Algeria's efforts in Mali and Niger, which underscore Algeria's constructive role in regional stability not only in the east, but to the south."
"Those who offer the violence that comes with terrorism, don't offer jobs, they don't offer education, they don't offer health care, they don't have a programme to pull a country together."
Such terror groups are in direct "confrontation with modernity," he warned.
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