President Bush has often stated that history
will be the rightful judge of his legacy. Some academics, such as John Lewis
Gaddis and Fareed Zakaria, have already begun early revisions of the Bush years.
But as historians mark the final score, they must not omit a serious examination
of the administration's policies in Somalia, the consequences of which promise
to reverberate for decades to come. Somalia today is approaching a cataclysm
not seen since the early 1990s. The American role in the intervention, scarcely
understood inside the United States itself, has added in no small part to the
unfathomable misery that once again engulfs the war-weary Horn of Africa nation.
The brutal Ethiopian military occupation that began on Christmas Eve 2006
has sustained heavy losses over the past 20 months. The conflict has strained
Ethiopian resources, and Addis Ababa is currently reviewing its overall strategy.
What remains of the Transitional Federal Government (TFG), barring a massive
new foreign military intervention, teeters on the edge of collapse. In its
place a powerful Islamist insurgency is strengthening rapidly. Warlordism,
criminality, and piracy are also reaching new heights. Meanwhile, the Somali
population remains under siege, caught between the abuses of all sides as a
society literally disintegrates. Underwriting a significant portion
of the bloodshed, however, has been an American administration engaged in expansive
warfare with a preference for covert military operations.
Somalia has long been of strategic interest to American policymakers. The
country sits aside the strait of Bab al-Mandeb, a key oil transit waterway
between the Red Sea and the Indian Ocean – the second closest point between
Africa and the Middle East. Under the Cold War the allied dictatorship of Gen.
Siad Barre was the longtime recipient of generous amounts of American military
and economic largesse. In 1991, after years of unrest, rebellion, and protracted
drought, Barre's regime collapsed into the famine, war, and chaos now virtually
synonymous with the word Somalia. George H. W. Bush ordered American forces
into the country a year later in support of the United Nations relief program,
culminating in the Battle of Mogadishu and the now-famous Black Hawk Down incident.
At the American withdrawal and international disengagement, no single actor
was strong enough to establish and maintain control. Somalia fractured along
semi-permanent tribal lines and warlord fiefdoms that would come to define
the country's social and political landscape. For more than a decade and a
half, the territory was left to fester in ungoverned criminality and violence,
only rarely piercing international headlines.
September 2001 and the wars in the Middle East brought renewed American focus
to the Horn of Africa. For sometime, a diverse group of Islamists, clan leaders,
businessmen, militia heads, and civic actors had been gradually coalescing
into what would in 2005 become the Union of Islamic Courts (UIC), a heterogeneous
movement seeking to establish a semblance of law and order after years
of chaos.
The Courts proved themselves to be well organized, disciplined, and effective
civil administrators. They were popular with average Somalis, even the less
devout, all of whom were desperate for relief from the criminal gangs and brutality
that had long ruled their country. The Islamists also began to challenge the
weak, faction-ridden Transitional Federal Government – the successor to 13
previous failed attempts at creating a central government – which had been
confined to the provincial town of Baidoa, headed by President Abdullahi
Yusuf, a strongman closely linked to Mogadishu's warlords.
Alarmed at the Islamic Courts growing strength and popularity, in early 2006,
the Central Intelligence Agency began supplying significant quantities of arms
and money to a coalition of secular Mogadishu warlords under the name Alliance
for the Restoration of Peace and Counter-Terrorism (ARPCT). The CIA
program had been a poorly conceived attempt to hunt down the small number
of al-Qaeda affiliated individuals involved in the 1998 bombings of the American
embassies in Kenya and Tanzania, then thought to be hiding in Somalia. But
the operation failed disastrously and according to reports
"the payoffs added to an anarchic situation that led many Somalis to turn
to the Islamic Courts for protection."
Recognizing the increasing power of the U.S.-backed Alliance, the Islamists
struck preemptively and decisively, routing the warlords and seizing control
of Mogadishu within a matter of weeks. For six months in 2006, the Union of
Islamic Courts proceeded to establish security and the provision of basic social
services in much of Somalia for the first time in 15 years. The peace provided
by the Islamists also came with more conservative social policies and a type
of sharia law. For average Somalis, however, the security of the Courts brought
a brief respite from their usual suffering.
The Bush administration, seeing Somalia and the Islamic Courts through the
lens of its War on Terror and having botched the earlier warlord program, began
stepping up aid to longtime ally and neighboring Ethiopian autocrat Meles Zenawi.
Zenawi has held power in Ethiopia since the early 1990s and his regime is less
than democratic. During a crackdown
against popular protests after fraudulent elections in 2005, Zenawi's security
forces massacred nearly 200 people, injured 760 more, and arrested an additional
20,000, among them opposition leaders, foreign aid workers, and journalists.
Nonetheless, since 2002, Ethiopia has
received nearly $25 million in overt U.S. military assistance while at
least 100 American military personnel currently work
inside the country in advisory positions as part of what the Pentagon characterizes
as a "close working relationship" with the Ethiopian military.
Less than two weeks before the invasion, mid-December 2006, Assistant Secretary
of State for African Affairs Jendayi Frazer publicly
declared that "The Council of Islamic Courts is now controlled by
al-Qaeda cell individuals, east Africa al-Qaeda cell individuals." The
claim was dubious, and the Assistant Secretary of State provided no evidence.
Horn of Africa specialist Ken Menkhaus notes
that the Islamic Courts "movement as a whole was far from an al-Qaeda
front. Only three foreign al-Qaeda operatives were said by the U.S. to be in
hiding in Mogadishu, a number far lower than those suspected of residing in
neighboring Kenya."
Frazer went on to warn of "a risk al-Qaeda may take up bases in Somalia"
but denied the United States would take military action against the Courts.
Similarly, then-United Nations Ambassador John Bolton had told
reporters days earlier "The United States strongly believes that a
sustainable solution in Somalia should be based on credible dialogue between
the [Transitional Federal Government] and the UIC, and we continue to work
with our African and other partners toward that end."
Behind the scenes, Gen. John Abizaid, at the time U.S. Centcom commander,
had already visited Addis Ababa to express some last-minute reservations to
Prime Minister Zenawi. The decision had been made, though, and ultimately Washington
lent its support to the invasion.
The Ethiopian military crossed the Somali border on Dec. 24, 2006, and reports
indicate that "CIA agents traveled with the Ethiopian troops, helping
to direct operations." The United States also provided important satellite
intelligence and other battleground information from unmanned Predator drones.
"A lot of what we taught them was used to fight that global War on Terror,"
observed an American
military adviser who had trained Ethiopian soldiers now fighting in Somalia.
In terms of weaponry, he noted, "They got what they needed."
American Special Forces also conducted periodic operations
inside Somali territory, possibly moving out of a rumored CIA
base in eastern Ethiopia. The full extent and exact type of activities
is not known, but reports of their movements have been confirmed by Somali
officials. As TFG Prime Minister Nur Hassan Hussein explained
to reporters in February of this year, "the presence of the CIA, the presence
of [U.S.] troops, is not a big issue. We like that they are here. But right
now they don't have a permanent military presence. They come in and out."
U.S. warships moved into position off the coast of Somalia in anticipation
of coming operations. Acting on intelligence from the ground, Washington ordered
bombing raids targeting what it believed to be Islamic militants. American-piloted
AC-130 gunships and cruise missiles have blasted Somali territory at least
a half dozen times since January 2007. The first of these air raids killed
what turned out to be 70 Somali goat herders whom the Pentagon had initially
claimed were Islamic fighters. After several other attempts, in May 2008, the
bombings finally succeeded in killing the leader of the al-Shabaab militia,
Aden
Hashi Ayro. Here too, the strike also demolished the surrounding
homes, killing 10 others and leading to anti-American protests
throughout the village.
On the ground, the Ethiopian military captured Mogadishu before New Year's
Day 2007. The most powerful army in the region devastated organized UIC forces.
But the remaining militants fled and quickly melted back into the larger civilian
population. As predicted, the collapse of the Islamic Courts and the subsequent
Ethiopian occupation has led to a relentless Iraq-style insurgency – one that
has been rapidly gaining strength.
The insurgents have successfully used roadside bombs, hit-and-run attacks,
and targeted assassinations against government officials to assault the TFG
and its Ethiopian backers. Increasingly, however, they have been able to rout
Ethiopian and TFG military forces in direct confrontation, moving to capture
and hold entire swathes of territory for extended periods of time.
Ethiopian and TFG forces, for their part, responded with a ferocious campaign
to root out militants in Mogadishu and surrounding areas. The vicious counterinsurgency
has seen the regular shelling of densely populated urban neighborhoods. Distinction
between civilians and insurgents is often irrelevant to security forces that
frequently prey on the Somali population. Looting, rape, torture, mutilation,
and cutting the throats
of victims are regular tactics of Ethiopian and TFG forces. These are, as it
were, the same methods the Ethiopian military has used to suppress another
ongoing insurgency
in the Ogaden desert.
The most recent report from Amnesty
International recounts episodes too horrific to quote from here.
Thus it is that Somalis remain caught in the crossfire between Ethiopian and
TFG security forces, insurgents, warlords, criminals, and on occasion American
gunships. The "more common complaint among ordinary Somalis," according
to reporters, however, "is that the Ethiopians are 'indiscriminate'
in their reprisals – and that this is why Mogadishu has been emptied of people."
The human cost has been staggering. The forces of war and drought are rapidly
converging on the Horn of Africa nation in a perfect storm against the Somali
population. The civilian death
toll since the invasion is fast approaching 10,000. More than a million
people have fled their homes, including half of Mogadishu, and are now living
in squalid, makeshift refugee camps.
The food and fuel crisis that has affected international markets has combined
with the disruption of fighting, looting, inflation, and a failure of the seasonal
rains to push Somalia to the absolute brink. The country now stands on the
verge of famine on a scale not seen since the early 1990s, when an estimated
300,000 Somalis starved to death. Recent UN
estimates hold that more than 3.25 million people, nearly half the population,
are currently in need of food aid. International officials have long been calling
the situation the most
horrific humanitarian disaster on the African continent.
As in Iraq, the War on Terror in Somalia has become a self-fulfilling prophecy.
It has sewn the increasing radicalization and anti-Westernization of an entire
population of poor Third World people. In recent months there has been new
evidence for the first time of foreign fighters inside Somalia – decidedly
not the case when Jendayi Frazer declared two weeks prior to the invasion that
Somalia was "now controlled by al-Qaeda cell individuals."
While the leadership of the Islamic Courts was originally a mix of moderate
and conservative Islamic actors, the insurgency no longer maintains this character.
A peace agreement between the former moderate elements of the Courts, now called
the Alliance for the Re-Liberation of Somalia, and the TFG has already concluded
to no effect. The old leaders of the Courts no longer control the insurgency.
Battle-hardened al-Shabaab militants, perhaps poised to succeed the Transitional
Federal Government, espouse a far more radical and anti-Western Islamic ideology.
For the moment, the intervention in Somalia appears to be dreadfully coming
full circle. In September, two Somali men in their early 20s were arrested
at a German airport on suspicion of planning terrorist attacks somewhere in
the West. They were released due to insufficient evidence – but German intelligence
officials believe the men were arrested too early.
Somalia has indeed been a third front in the War on Terror. A quiet front,
but a front nonetheless. Six months after the Ethiopian invasion, Defense Department
spokesman Bryan Whitman told
reporters, "The very nature of some of our operations, as well as
the success of those operations, is often predicated on our ability to work
quietly with our partners and allies." Now, almost two years into the
occupation, few can still maintain delusions of success in the Horn of Africa.
Much about the affair recalls the disastrous American interventions in the
Congo and Angola during the Cold War. But perhaps most troubling is that the
current episode must be seen against the background of the recent creation
of Africom and the larger militarization of U.S. foreign policy in Africa.
What becomes of Somalia remains to be seen. What is certain is that we have
taken a group of the world's most destitute, desperate, and brutalized people,
and brutalized them some more. We might expect to see many more angry young
Somali men bringing violence to the West in the future. Whether we know it
or not, we have certainly brought it to them. This is the Bush administration's
legacy and it will be with us for a long time to come.