Issue 378
|
Front
Page |
|
News Headlines
|
|
|
|
Local
and Regional Affairs |
|
|
|
Editorial |
|
|
|
Features
& Commentary |
|
|
|
International News
|
|
|
|
Opinion |
|
|
|
|
Washington, April 24, 2009 – In the aftermath of the
April 12 sniper killings of three Somali teenagers by the U.S. Navy,
several U.S. agencies met on April 17 to conduct a review of military
and foreign policy toward this Horn of Africa nation. The State
Department, Pentagon and Justice Department have outlined a series of
options to ostensibly fight “piracy” in the Gulf of Aden and the Indian
Ocean.
Somalia is in a desperate condition after decades of intervention by the
U.S. and European imperialists. One of the reasons Somali fishermen have
turned to seizing ships is that tons of toxic and radioactive wastes
from Europe have been dumped off their shores in recent years, killing
off the fish they relied on for a living and sickening the villagers
along the coast.
It was announced on April 17 that the U.S. would fund the security
forces of the new Somalia government established in February. Acting
Assistant Secretary of State for African Affairs Phillip Carter stated
that the Barack Obama administration was going to focus on long-term
“security” issues in Somalia and at the same time end piracy off the
shores of the country.
During the highly publicized seizure of the captain of a U.S.-flagged,
Danish-owned cargo vessel, the Maersk Alabama, the U.S. sent three
warships into the Indian Ocean. Plans are underway to escalate foreign
naval presence in the region in order to provide escorts for ships
traveling the Gulf of Aden and Indian Ocean.
Other options being considered include placing military personnel on
individual ships and imposing a blockade on Somali towns that the U.S.
claims are bases for piracy operations. In addition, Secretary of State
Hillary Clinton has called for seizing the assets of those designated as
pirates operating off the coast of Somalia.
“These pirates are criminals. They are armed gangs on the sea. And those
plotting attacks must be stopped,” Clinton said in Washington. She also
called for “going after” bases where pirates are operating and
developing methods “to explore ways to track and freeze” money paid as
ransom to pirates. (AP, April 16)
It was also reported that “the United States is a major contributor to
an international anti-piracy patrol called Task Force 151. The task
force is part of a contingent of some two dozen warships from a number
of countries, including the European Union, China and Russia, that
patrol the area.” (AP, April 18)
The article mentioned above on the U.S. military presence in the region
also says, “Helicopters and airplanes were at the ready during the
Maersk Alabama standoff, and the Navy has been gathering information
about the pirates through P-3 patrol aircraft and unmanned drones.”
Other tactics are being considered by the Pentagon. “Increased use of
drones and other surveillance tools is one option. Another air option is
using airborne assaults on pirate vessels and on-land lairs. Submarines
might also be used to collect information about pirate movements.”
Some Pentagon officials want also to engage in land operations against
people targeted as pirates. A combination of both attacks on land and
the tracking of people in the waters would require coordination between
the U.S. Army, Marines and Navy.
French commandos have carried out a number of raids against pirates who
have taken control of vessels in the region. In early April, a
28-year-old French civilian died during a gun battle when the military
took control of a ship being held by Somalis.
On April 16, the EU indicated that it was boosting its so-called
“anti-piracy fleet” off the Somalia coast. Up to 11 ships, including an
addition of three Swedish frigates, were to be deployed beginning in
May.
Nonetheless, EU officials are saying that “the U.S. wouldn’t find many
allies if it tried to coordinate commando operations to save hijacked
ships. ‘We don’t want bloodbaths.’” (Inside Somalia, April 18)
Such U.S.-proposed military actions could result in the deaths of many
innocent people. Jason Alderwick, a maritime-defense analyst for the
International Institute for Strategic Studies in London, says,
“Terrorists, tourists, fishermen, pirates, they all look the same until
the last moment.” (Inside Somalia, April 18)
In regard to the legal status of Somalis captured and charged with
piracy, the U.S. has said it will prosecute a Somali teenager captured
during the standoff involving the Maersk Alabama. The French government,
which says it has captured 11 Somalis involved in piracy, is currently
interrogating them in Paris jails.
In response to the increased attention on the situation in the waters
off the coast of Somalia, the U.S., Britain and the EU have all signed
agreements to allow for piracy suspects to be turned over to Kenya for
trial. Kenya is part of the Commonwealth of Britain and its former
colonies.
Linking the Suez Canal and the Red Sea, the Gulf of Aden is a shipping
lane providing the shortest route between Asia and Europe. It is
estimated that some 20,000 ships move through that sea lane annually.
The Indian Ocean is also utilized for the shipment of commercial goods
and military equipment from various parts of the world.
Somalis face increased harassment
Over the last several months, the FBI has conducted numerous
investigations in the Somali community in the U.S. Reports have surfaced
in the corporate press that young Somali men have left the U.S. and
returned to their home country.
The Justice Department has attempted to create suspicion around these
movements, despite the fact that many Somalis feel the new coalition
government formed in Mogadishu may bring about political stability
inside the country, which has been without an internationally recognized
government since 1991.
In Minnesota, federal agents have been going to high schools, colleges
and the state university and interviewing Somali nationals on the
whereabouts of various young men. In response to these developments, the
Council on American-Islamic Relations (CAIR) is requesting that colleges
provide legal assistance to students approached by the FBI.
At the University of Minnesota in Minneapolis, Ruqia Mohamed was
approached by two FBI agents seeking information about various young
men, as well as the leaders of a local mosque. Mohamed described the
visits as “random and at the same time spooky.” (Minnesota Daily, April
15)
The student said that the federal agents were “two young girls dressed
casual, unlike those I see on TV.” She said they came to her home with
photographs of men who are supposedly missing and mosque leaders.
“They asked me about how [one of the two missing men from the
University] used to dress and the mosques he attended,” Mohamed said.
“Mosques were built for prayers,” Mohamed told the FBI agents, adding
that “every Muslim goes to mosques.” (Minnesota Daily, April 15)
Mohamed also reported that FBI agents showed up at her home on
Inauguration Day, Jan. 20, and asked if she had information on anybody
who was planning attacks on Washington. “We are Americans and we voted
for Obama,” she told the federal agents. “Why would we bomb his
inauguration?”
The president of the Somali Student Association (SSA), Fathi Gelle, has
also been approached about the missing men as well as various activities
engaged in by the organization. Deputy Chief Chuck Miner of the
university’s police force confirmed that they had urged the students to
cooperate with the FBI.
Although Gelle was reminded by the police that she was under no
obligation to speak with the FBI, she felt compelled to explain the
character of the SSA. “But since I’m leader of the association, I felt I
should educate them about SSA,” she said. The association sponsors
educational, cultural and religious activities.
Gelle said that she was questioned about the missing men and whether
they were members of the SSA. “I told them they were members,” she said.
“Of course, they are Somalis.”
She stated that it was “wrong that the FBI is approaching the students
in the campus.” She also told the Minnesota Daily that “students should
not talk to them if they think they might say something that will haunt
them later.”
Implications for U.S. actions towards Somalia
The escalation of the numbers of U.S. Naval warships in the Gulf of Aden
and the Indian Ocean is designed to maintain a permanent presence in the
region. There have been two failed efforts on the part of the U.S. to
establish political control over developments in Somalia in recent
years.
In 1992, during the concluding days of the George Bush, Sr.
administration, thousands of U.S. troops were deployed to Somalia to
supposedly provide humanitarian assistance to the country. However, over
the next several months, hundreds of Somalis had been arrested and
killed by U.S. military forces.
Somalis began to vigorously resist the presence of the U.S. Marines and
other military forces under the banner of the United Nations. A series
of battles between Somalis and the occupying troops resulted in the
deaths of both U.S. and other U.N. forces during 1993. The United States
and the United Nations withdrew completely from the country in 1994.
In 2006, when the Union of Islamic Courts began to stabilize the
situation inside of Somalia, the George W. Bush administration began to
fund “warlords” opposed to the Islamic Courts in an attempt to undermine
the efforts aimed at creating a new and more representative political
system. When this failed, the U.S. encouraged the western-backed regime
in Ethiopia to launch an invasion.
The invasion and occupation was met with strong resistance from the
Union of Islamic Courts. The youth wing of the UIC, Al-Shabab, took the
lead in forcing the Ethiopian government troops to withdraw from the
country in January 2009.
A new coalition regime incorporating elements from the Federal
Transitional Government, supported by Ethiopia and the U.S. and more
moderate forces inside the UIC, was formed earlier in the year. However,
the situation is still volatile because Al-Shabab and other
organizations are demanding that the African Union troops (AMISOM) from
Uganda and Burundi be completely withdrawn from the country.
The continuing struggle inside Somalia, coupled with the seizure of
commercial vessels, has prompted the U.S. and other imperialist states
to step up their presence in the region. Nonetheless, the presence of
these naval fleets will only further inflame tensions in the Horn of
Africa and off its coast.
Anti-imperialists inside the U.S. must oppose this recent upsurge in
pro-interventionist propaganda. It is the U.S. presence that has created
increased instability in Somalia over the last two years. Any effort to
create peace and stability in the region must come from the Somali
people themselves in conjunction with other African states throughout
the region.
Source: World Workers, April 24, 2009
|