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War clouds over Somalia

by reposted from MERIP
Middle East Research and Information Project Press Information Note 87,
"War Clouds Over Somalia," by Dan Connell, March 22, 2002.)
War Clouds Over Somalia
Dan Connell
March 22, 2002

After two months out of the media spotlight, the war-ravaged country of
Somalia is once again the subject of speculation about the next theater of
George W. Bush's "war on terrorism." In comments to the Senate Armed
Services Committee on March 19, CIA director George Tenet named Somalia as
an "environment [where] groups sympathetic to al-Qaeda have offered
terrorists an operational base and potential haven." Two days later, the
Pentagon sheepishly retracted an earlier statement that a handheld Global
Positioning System device found by US Special Forces combing caves in
eastern Afghanistan had belonged to an American soldier killed in the 1993
Mogadishu firefight depicted in the Hollywood film "Black Hawk Down." Though
the press first reported this discovery as a link between Somalia and
al-Qaeda, subsequent investigations revealed that a different soldier had
lost the device in the heat of Operation Anaconda in early March.

Less widely reported was the recent four-day visit to the Horn of Africa by
Gen. Tommy Franks. Franks heads the US military's Central Command, which
runs the war in Afghanistan and is responsible for the Middle East, Central
Asia and the Horn of Africa -- the region made up of Eritrea, Ethiopia,
Sudan, Djibouti and Somalia. Together with Kenya, these states are joined in
a regional organization called the Intergovernmental Authority for
Development (IGAD). These same states -- minus Somalia -- were characterized
by Franks in a BBC interview as "front-line nations" in the buildup for a
possible US intervention in Somalia. US ships are now patrolling the Red
Sea. German reconnaissance planes fly over the Somali coastline for ten
hours each day. Ground fact-finding teams have also traveled in and out of
Somalia in recent weeks. The US may be laying plans for a major operation,
though likely not on the scale of the intervention in Afghanistan.

TROUBLED HISTORY

Most Americans associate Somalia with the "humanitarian intervention" in
1992-1993 that climaxed with the deaths of 18 US Army Rangers during an
abortive attempt to arrest Somali warlord Mohammed Farah Aideed. These are
the events heavily fictionalized in "Black Hawk Down." But US involvement in
Somali affairs has a longer and more troubled history.

The first US client state in sub-Saharan Africa was Ethiopia, whose armed
forces served in US-led missions in Korea and the Congo in the 1950s and
1960s. For nearly a quarter-century, more than half of all US aid to Africa
went to Ethiopia, which gave the US basing rights in the newly annexed
territory of Eritrea in exchange. But soon fierce contention between the two
superpowers across the region produced some of the most bizarre and cynical
geopolitical maneuvers of the era.

Coups d'etat in 1969 brought pro-Soviet military regimes to power in Somalia
and Sudan, under Siad Barre and Jaafar Nimeiri, respectively. In response,
the US moved to further strengthen ties with Ethiopia, as that country slid
deeper and deeper into a brutal counterinsurgency war in Eritrea, where a
national liberation movement was challenging its claims on the territory. To
support the war effort, Washington sent Ethiopia the first supersonic
fighter aircraft to appear on the continent, along with Green Berets to
train Ethiopian troops in the latest anti-guerrilla techniques. Israel also
provided military aid and training.

In 1974 a coup in Ethiopia brought the military to power, but the US
remained deeply involved. The National Security Agency maintained one of the
largest overseas spy bases in the world in Eritrea. A large Soviet naval
base dominated the Somali port of Berbera.

Then, in 1977, the superpowers traded places. Ethiopia ousted the US and
invited the Soviets to come in. When the USSR accepted the offer, Somalia,
then at war with Ethiopia over its disputed southeastern Ogaden region,
kicked the Soviets out of Mogadishu and invited the US to take their place.
Meanwhile, with the USSR in disfavor in Khartoum for backing an abortive
Communist Party-led coup, Nimeiri welcomed the US to Sudan. The US also
built up its military and diplomatic presence in Kenya and on the Indian
Ocean atoll of Diego Garcia as part of a broad strategy of encirclement
targeted at the Soviet posture in Ethiopia. Over the next decade, the USSR
poured more than $10 billion in arms into Ethiopia, while the US dumped
billions more into Sudan and Somalia. These weapons and the wars they fueled
were a major cause of the horrific famine in the mid-1980s, and they still
drive the local conflicts in the region today.

DISINTEGRATED STATE

The end of the Cold War presaged the virtual disintegration of Somalia as a
functioning state in 1991. The country's ethnic and religious homogeneity
did not prove sufficient to hold it together once the superpowers pulled
back and the Siad Barre regime collapsed under the weight of economic
disaster and multiple military and political challenges from clan-based
warlords. Somalia faced the onset of severe famine in 1992, a condition that
led to a US-UN "humanitarian intervention" that year and to the Black Hawk
debacle in 1993. The country remains desperately poor, more so after the
Bush administration's closure of the al-Barakat money transfer offices by
which Somali emigrants send cash home to relatives. International distrust
of the group of Somalis calling itself the Transitional National Government
(TNG) means that about 80 percent of the UN's $30 million request for
Somalia remained unfunded by member governments in 2001.

Today, there are two mini-states -- Somaliland and Puntland -- in the
northern portion of Somalia, once under the colonial rule of Britain. Most
of the east and south, once Italian Somaliland, is ungoverned by any central
authority. This part of Somalia is most open to Islamist penetration, and
much of it has for years been under the influence, if not the actual rule,
of a group known as al-Ittihad al-Islamiyya (Islamic Unity) that was tied to
Osama bin Laden's network in the 1990s. However, in the latter half of the
decade, Ittihad was repeatedly attacked by Ethiopia, whose forces drove deep
into Somalia several times, and its power and influence are declining today,
Ethiopian claims to the contrary. While Franks was in Addis Ababa, Ethiopian
Prime Minister Meles Zenawi told reporters that Ittihad members had
infiltrated the 245-person legislature of the TNG, as well as the fledgling
national army.

SOMALIA AND ETHIOPIA

The TNG was set up at a conference in Djibouti in 2000 with the support of
all IGAD states but one, Ethiopia, which has a large ethnic Somali minority.
Comprised of Somali elders, businessmen, military officers, representatives
of civil society and some warlords, the TNG is the only nation-building
effort currently underway in the country. Its new army, made up of 90 women
and 2,010 men, was equipped March 21 with guns and armed wagons surrendered
to the TNG by private parties in exchange for money, according to TNG
officials. TNG president Abdulkassim Salat Hassan instructed the recruits to
use the weaponry to "pacify Mogadishu and other parts of Somalia by fighting
bandits, anarchists and all forces that operate for survival outside the
law." But the TNG holds sway over only one sector of the Somali capital;
rival warlords control the rest of the country.

One rival, Musa Sudi Yalahow, accused Libya of sending the arms to battle
any US troops who might eventually land in Somalia, an accusation hotly
denied by the TNG. Yalahow belongs to the loose Ethiopian-backed grouping
known as the Somali Restoration and Reconciliation Council (SRRC). The TNG
says that Ethiopian troops train Somali militiamen in the SRRC stronghold of
Baidoa in the south of the country. Ethiopia also shelters the leader of the
SRRC, Hussein Mohammed Aideed, the son of Mohammed Farah Aideed, who has
denounced the equipment of soldiers by the TNG as a violation of the UN arms
embargo imposed in 1992. The SRRC nearly splintered in the second week of
March, and has little holding it together today beyond Ethiopian support.
Factional fighting reportedly continues to rage in Mogadishu.

TICKING WAR CLOCK

US policy in sub-Saharan Africa is built around the concept of "anchor
states." These states are the main focus of US aid and diplomacy and serve
as hubs through which the US seeks to influence events in surrounding
sub-regions. Three countries carry this designation today: South Africa,
Nigeria and Kenya. Ethiopia long occupied a similar place in the pantheon of
US allies and clients in Africa -- except during the Soviet period -- and it
is now apparently slouching back into an "anchor" position. Since September
11, the main thrust of US initiatives in the Horn of Africa has been to
strengthen relations with Ethiopia, stepping up military cooperation with
Addis Ababa despite its unresolved conflict with neighboring Eritrea. At the
same time, the US is exploring the possibility of a thaw in relations with
Sudan and assessing entry points for a direct intervention in Somalia. The
Washington Post reported March 22 that the State Department was convening an
inter-agency meeting to evaluate US-Ethiopian suspicions of Ittihad
infiltration into the ranks of the TNG, which the Bush administration does
not recognize.

If the US were to move to strengthen the TNG's capacity to police its own
territory and to reassemble the country, while restraining Ethiopia from
intervening in Somalia's internal affairs, such action might be a
significant contribution to stability and development in the Horn of Africa.
But the war clock in Washington appears to be ticking ever faster,
foreclosing the possibility of such constructive engagement. If US ships and
German overflights are indeed gathering intelligence for Washington planners
of military action in Somalia, the questions are: when, under whose
auspices, at what level, for how long and with what specific objectives?

(Dan Connell, a contributing editor of Middle East Report, is author of
Rethinking Revolution [Red Sea Press].)
by canuck
canadians like myself remember Somalia and the early 90s because it was then we discovered our own troops had tortured and killed a Somalian youth. I still remember the snapshots they took to remember their tour in Somalia. what the west is doing to somalia is criminal and barbaric and has been for a very long time.
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