US counterterrorism policies and support for the
Ethiopian-backed Transitional Federal Government (TFG) in Somalia have helped
create an increasingly desperate humanitarian and security situation in the
East African nation, whose population has become increasingly radicalized and
anti-US, according to a new report by a major US human rights group.
The report, authored by Ken Menkhaus, a Davidson College professor who is regarded
as one of the foremost US experts on the Horn of Africa, calls for a thorough
reassessment of US policy, including its support for the TFG and the primacy
it has given to its "war on terrorism" in Somalia.
"US counterterrorism policies have not only compromised other international
agendas in Somalia, they have generated a high level of anti-Americanism and
are contributing to radicalization of the population," concluded the report,
entitled "Somalia: A Country in Peril, a Foreign Policy Nightmare."
"In what could become a dangerous instance of blowback, defense and intelligence
operations intended to make the United States more secure from the threat of
terrorism may be increasing the threat of jihadist attacks on American interests,"
the report stressed.
The 17-page report, released by ENOUGH, a group launched last year by the Brussels-based
International Crisis Group (ICG) and the Washington-based Center for American
Progress (CAP), was released amid continuing violence in Somalia that has forced
some one million people to flee their homes since December 2006, when US-backed
Ethiopian and TFG forces swept the Islamic Courts Union (ICU) out of the capital,
Mogadishu, and other major cities and towns.
The UN recently estimated that, barring substantial improvement in the security
situation, some 3.5 million Somalis will be dependent on humanitarian aid by
the end of this year.
"The (current) crisis is fundamentally different and fundamentally worse
than the situation of the last decade and a half," said Chris Albin-Lackey,
a Horn of Africa specialist at Human Rights Watch (HRW), who appeared with Menkhaus
at the report's release at a conference sponsored by at the Woodrow Wilson International
Center for Scholars here Wednesday.
Albin-Lackey, who has conducted some 80 interviews of Somali refugees in East
Africa in the past month, said ongoing violence, including almost daily artillery
bombardments by Ethiopian army and TFG forces on the one hand and opposition
militias, including the Islamist Shabaab on the other, as well as assassinations
carried out by both sides, have added to the insecurity.
"People have nowhere to turn for security," he said, adding that
search operations by TFG forces, while nominally for the purpose of arresting
suspected insurgents, had become "an excuse for murder, rape and looting
on an incredibly large scale." As a result, he said, Mogadishu has become
"largely depopulated" with about two-thirds of the population or
about 800,000 people having left their homes there over the past 18 months.
Menkhaus described last month's signing by the TCG and the opposition Alliance
for the Reliberation of Somalia (ARS) of the "Djibouti Agreement"
negotiated between moderate leaders of both sides with the help of UN Special
Representative Ahmadou Ould-Abdulla last June as an "important step"
toward reconciliation but warned that hard-liners in both camps could derail
it.
The agreement, which has been rejected by the Shabaab and was only agreed to
by the hawkish TFG president, Adullahi Yusuf, under heavy pressure from Ethiopian
President Meles Zenawi, calls for a cessation of hostilities, deployment of
a UN peacekeeping force, and the subsequent withdrawal of Ethiopian forces.
"The hope is that any agreement that facilitates the withdrawal of Ethiopian
forces will open the door for an end to the insurgency," according to the
report.
But the implementation of the agreement faces "steep challenges,"
warned Menkhaus, not least because "the moderates [who negotiated the accord]
don't control any of the armed groups." While the Shabaab have already
denounced the ARS leaders as "apostates," he noted, hard-liners in
the TFG know that they can stay in power "if and only if the Ethiopians
stay."
Only by reinforcing the moderates can the international community, including
the US, enhance the chances for the agreement's successful implementation
and, with it, the chances for reconciliation, according to Menkhaus. But that
will require major changes in US and western policies, which have "actually
worked to strengthen and embolden hardliners" over the past two years.
In that respect, the US emphasis on counterterrorism has been particularly
destructive, not only in supporting the Ethiopian offensive in December, 2006,
but, more recently, in placing the Shabaab on its list of designated terrorist
groups last March. That step not only isolated opposition moderates from their
own coalition but also gave the Shabaab "even more reason to sabotage"
ongoing peace talks.
At the same time, Washington has provided "robust financial and logistical
support to armed paramilitaries resisting the command and control of the TGF,
even though they technically wear a TFG hat" to both fight the Shabaab
and track down suspected terrorists.
"To the extent that these security forces also deeply oppose...reconciliation
efforts with the opposition, the US counterterrorism partnerships have also
undermined peace-building efforts by emboldening spoilers in the government
camp," according to the report.
Washington has not been alone in supporting the hard-liners, however. As part
of their state-building agenda, other western donors have also provided direct
support to TGF security forces under the control of the hawks. Despite the UN's
role as a supposedly neutral broker between the TFG and the opposition, the
UN Development Program, has also provided security assistance to the TFG.
The Tomahawk missile attack that killed Shabaab leader Aden Hashi Ayro in May
the latest in a series of similar strikes against armed Islamists in
Somalia, allegedly tied to al-Qaeda resulted in a sharp radicalization
in the group, which announced at the time that it would strike against US and
western targets, including aid workers, as well as Ethiopian and TFG forces,
compounding an already dramatic humanitarian crisis.
"Somalia today is the most dangerous place in the world for humanitarian
aid workers," according to Menkhaus. More than 20 humanitarian workers
have been killed since January, while some 30 more have been kidnapped.
"The situation in Somalia today exceeds the worst-case scenarios conjured
up by regional analysts when they first contemplated the possible impact of
an Ethiopian military occupation," according to the report. "Over
the past 18 months, Somalia has descended into terrible levels of displacement
and humanitarian need, armed conflict and assassinations, political meltdown,
radicalization and virulent anti-Americanism."
"We've gotten the exact opposite of what we set out to achieve,"
Menkhaus noted, including a "population radically angry at us and very
fertile ground for al-Qaeda."
(Inter Press Service)