Issue 368
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Lee
Wengraf analyzes the situation in Somalia after Ethiopian forces have
withdrawn
February 9, 2009
U.S.-BACKED Ethiopian troops withdrew from their remaining positions in
Somalia at the end of January, bringing an end to a two-year occupation
carried out in the guise of the "war on terror."
The Ethiopian Army invaded Somalia in December 2006, overthrowing the
Union of Islamic Courts (UIC) government and installing the Transitional
Federal Government (TFG). Two years later, approximately 10,000 people
have lost their lives, and 1.1 million Somalis were turned into
refugees, the victims of Ethiopian occupiers and an ongoing civil war.
From the beginning, the TFG, though backed by the U.S., was weak,
maintaining control in only a small area of the capital of Mogadishu,
and some regions of western Somalia. Several thousand African Union
troops--including U.S.-trained Ugandan forces--ostensibly bolster the
TFG, to little effect. The U.S. also intervened directly in Somalia with
sporadic air strikes.
After the Ethiopian invasion, sections of the UIC and other opposition
forces regrouped in the Alliance for the Re-Liberation of Somalia (ARS),
with others coalescing around the fundamentalist al-Shabab group and
other armed factions.
Ethiopian troops withdrew after a unity agreement between the TFG and
the ARS, now the major opposition faction. Sheik Sharif Ahmed, the ARS
leader and head of the UIC government in 2006, was elected president of
the TFG on January 31.
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
SOMALIA IS located in the strategically crucial Horn of Africa on the
eastern edge of the continent--adjacent to the Red Sea, Suez Canal and
key commercial waterways. Somalia and neighboring Sudan have been
targeted for oil exploration by U.S. companies, but China, India and
other countries have also gotten their foot in the door with development
contracts.
Competition past and present is behind the U.S. government's concern
with Somalia. The U.S. has variously engaged in direct intervention (as
in the infamous "Black Hawk Down" Marine invasion of 1992-3), backed
different warlord factions and supported proxy armies (such as
Ethiopia).
Actually, the history of Western intervention in Somalia and the Horn of
Africa extends back throughout the 20th century, during which time
colonial powers and the Cold War superpowers waged proxy battles in
constantly shifting alliances and conflicts. Somalia's civil wars--like
those in Darfur and southern Sudan--must be seen as a direct result of
the U.S. and the former USSR arming different sides with billions of
dollars, all while famines raged.
The so-called humanitarian intervention by U.S. Marines in Somalia in
1992–93 was merely a continuation of this policy with a different name.
Along with "fighting terror," humanitarian intervention became a
watchword for the Clinton administration and the Bush administration
after it--providing a cover for Washington's pursuit of economic and
military aims, and justifying U.S. military deployment in the region.
In 2003, while the U.S. was invading and occupying Iraq, the U.S.
military built a major base in Djibouti, a tiny but strategically
located country next to Somalia and across the Red Sea from Yemen. The
U.S. used its Camp Lemonier to train Ethiopian forces in the lead-up to
the December 2006 invasion of Somalia.
As Mike Whitney pointed out it on the Counterpunch Web site: "The Bush
administration invoked the 'war on terror' to justify its involvement in
Somalia, but its claims are unconvincing. The UIC is not an al-Qaeda
affiliate or a terrorist organization. In fact, the UIC brought a level
of peace and stability to Somalia that hadn't been seen for nearly two
decades."
Political analyst James Petras made a similar point:
The UIC was a relatively honest administration, which ended warlord
corruption and extortion. Personal safety and property were protected,
ending arbitrary seizures and kidnappings by warlords and their armed
thugs.
The UIC is a broad multi-tendency movement that includes moderates and
radical Islamists, civilian politicians and armed fighters, liberals and
populists, electoralists and authoritarians. Most important, the Courts
succeeded in unifying the country and creating some semblance of
nationhood, overcoming clan fragmentation.
But Bush didn't let this relative stability under the UIC get in the
way. According to a Chicago Tribune article, the invasion in Somalia was
"a covert war in which the CIA has recruited gangs of unsavory warlords
to hunt down and kidnap Islamic militants...and secretly imprison them
offshore, aboard U.S. warships. The British civil-rights group Reprieve
contended that as many as 17 U.S. warships may have doubled as floating
prisons since the September 11 terrorist attacks."
Only one month after the 9/11 attacks, Paul Wolfowitz, one of the top
neo-con hawks in the Bush administration, met with various factions in
Ethiopia and Somalia, alleging that al-Qaeda terrorists might use these
territories as "escape routes."
On December 4, 2006, Gen. John Abizaid, then the head of U.S. Central
Command covering much of the Middle East and the surrounding region, met
with the Ethiopian Prime Minister Meles Zenawi. Three weeks later,
Ethiopian forces crossed into Somalia, and the U.S. launched air strikes
to back them up. The air attacks were supposedly against terrorist
targets, but they killed dozens of civilians. The U.S. also embedded
small numbers of Special Forces in the Ethiopian army, and provided
naval and air support.
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
THE END result of the U.S. intervention has been untold destruction.
Human Rights Watch published a report in December 2008 detailing the
impact:
Two years of unconstrained warfare and violent rights abuses have helped
to generate an ever-worsening humanitarian crisis, without adequate
response. Since January 2007, at least 870,000 civilians have fled the
chaos in Mogadishu alone--two-thirds of the city's
population...Somalia's humanitarian needs are enormous.
Humanitarian organizations estimate that more than 3.25 million
Somalis--over 40 percent of the population of south-central
Somalia--will be in urgent need of assistance by the end of
2008...Freelance militias have robbed, murdered and raped displaced
persons on the roads south towards Kenya. Hundreds of Somalis have
drowned this year in desperate attempts to cross the Gulf of Aden by
boat to Yemen.
Amnesty International documented numerous accounts of killings of
Somalis by Ethiopian troops. In one case, "a young child's throat was
slit by Ethiopian soldiers in front of the child's mother."
And according to the Red Cross, about half of Somalia's population is
dependent on food aid. Millions live in tent cities without adequate
water, food or power, while hyperinflation has driven up the price of
staple goods by six times since the start of 2008. As Whitney puts it,
"It is the greatest humanitarian crisis in Africa today; a man-made hell
entirely conjured up in Washington."
Somalis celebrated the withdrawal of Ethiopian troops, and President
Sheikh Ahmed enjoys popular support as a legacy of past UIC rule. The
U.S. government's short-term goal of installing a partner in
counter-terror appears thwarted.
Yet Sheikh Ahmed's openness to the U.S. and his collaboration with the
TFG now divides his forces from other wings of the former UIC, including
groups like al-Shabab, which is on the U.S. government's list of
terrorist organizations. For the U.S., the split is welcome.
Meanwhile, attacks by Somali armed groups have continued. Suicide
bombers, likely connected to al-Shabab, attacked African Union troops on
February 3.
The longer-term picture likewise indicates increased volatility in the
region. Since the collapse of the UIC government in 2006, a resurgence
of pirate attacks off the Somali coast--with some holding
multimillion-dollar tankers hostage--recently prompted the Chinese and
Indian governments to send naval patrols, an unprecedented move for
China.
Faced with this heightened militarization, Bush called for sending
warships to the Gulf of Aden as well, and Barack Obama has pledged
support for continuing that policy.
The Obama administration is also a strong proponent of Africom, a new
U.S. military command for Africa officially launched on October 1, 2008,
with the frightening potential to subject Somalia and other countries
and regions to U.S. terror on a new scale. In fact, Africom could mean
the Somali experience writ large for the entire continent, with local
proxies and enhanced military reinforcement.
As Nunu Kidane put it in an article titled "Africom, Militarization and
Resource Control":
If you're thinking traditional bases with thousands of military
personnel, think again. General Kip Ward has said it is not about
"bases" and "garrisons," but rather a network of sophisticated military
operations strategically placed throughout the continent, which can be
moved around and utilized for any purpose.
General Gates called Africom "a different kind of command with a
different orientation, one that we hope and expect will institutionalize
a lasting security relationship with Africa." It is "a civilian-military
partnership," where diplomatic and humanitarian relief by the U.S.
Agency for International Development (USAID) will get directives from
the Department of Defense.
Africa Action and other human rights groups have rightly called on the
Obama administration to address the humanitarian catastrophe in Somalia.
But one often-proposed solution--United Nations peacekeepers--would only
escalate the problems for ordinary Somalis. On the ground, UN troops
would carry out U.S. priorities, just as they did during the
"humanitarian intervention" of 1993.
Instead, activists should stand against any U.S. military intervention
in Somalia, from Africom to the naval patrols. Challenging the "war on
terror" is a crucial first step toward real peace for Somalis.
Source: SocialistWorker.org, Feb 09, 2009
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