Unquiet Americans: The folly of
U.S. meddling in the Horn of Africa. By Alex P. KelloggThe dissolution of Somalia into further violence thanks to Ethiopia’s invasion of it in the last few weeks is a horrific development for
East Africa. It’s devastating to the perception of the
United States abroad as well. Ethiopia said that, beyond a concern for the integrity of its borders, tacit U.S. support led it to invade
Somalia. That support became even more explicit when the United States tried to capture Fazul Mohammed and two other alleged high level al-Qaeda terrorists Monday with military strikes in southern
Somalia. A State Department spokesperson told The New York Times that the Bush administration, in the Times’s paraphrase, “was concerned about reports that the Islamists were using child soldiers and abusing Ethiopian prisoners of war.” Thus the
U.S. backing. It ought
not require spelling out that the use of child soldiers and abuse of prisoners of war in Africa have never been much of a concern to the
United States. In fact, Ethiopia’s relationship with the
United States is a strategic marriage of convenience.
The opportunity to eliminate an alleged al-Qaeda stronghold in a failed state was enough to garner
U.S. support. Likewise, any excuse — especially U.S. backing — was enough for the Ethiopians to escalate their low-level fighting with
Somalia. But the Islamic courts that took power there last year enjoyed the support of most Somalis, for ousting the powerful warlords from cities such as the former capital of Mogadishu and the strategic southernport of
Kismayu. For the Islamists to be driven out at the hands of the United States and
Ethiopia merely escalates the stakes and the prospects for violence. (The direct
U.S. air strike only does so more.) The question is thus: why the U.S. support for
Ethiopia’s action now, and for what purpose?
Somalia’s last functioning government, a socialist dictatorship led by Mohamed Siad Barre, was overthrown in 1991 by warlords who later turned on each other. After years of violence, the Islamists that the United States and
Ethiopia are now opposing emerged in 2000. They eventually coalesced seven months ago into a government-like entity that
ruled most of southern
Somalia by Koranic law. The United States says it’s after Mohammed and other terrorists tied to the bombing of two U.S. embassies in
East Africa in 1998 — terrorists who are integral to the Islamists’ leadership and who also have large price tags on their heads. But assisting the Ethiopians with driving out the Islamists is a mistake. The Islamists will likely revive their fighting as an insurgency, while the interim Somali government that formed from abroad years ago with the backing of the United Nations is going to garner little support, now that it has ridden in on Ethiopia’s coattails with
U.S. backing.
That new Somali government was officially installed in power by
Ethiopia just before the start of the new year. It is, at best, a work in progress. The government is made up mostly of prominent political refugees from the nation, and its organization is suspect. Officials from different political factions have fought often in the past and so many voices have demanded inclusion that arguably no legitimate leadership exists. Ethiopians, for their part, are widely disliked in Somalia, on grounds of religious difference (Christian versus Muslim), historic battles between the two ancient nation states dating back thousands of years, and Ethiopia’s more recent cross-border proxy battles there with its northern foe, Eritrea. The new Somali government’s association with
Ethiopia is therefore a worst-case template for stability. Iraq and Afghanistan have made it abundantly clear that the
United States can easily fail at stabilizing nations. Yet Somalia provides one of the best examples of
U.S. ineptitude at these efforts. The desert landscape is often described by outsiders as a virtual no man’s land, though Somalis have a distinctive culture and collective sense of self that dates back
to Pharaonic
Egypt. Roughly eight million Somalis speak the same language and share the same ethnicity. The brief colonization of much of Somalia by the British and then the Italians sparked one of the fiercest resistance efforts in all of
Africa. The northern edges of the country, less divided along the blood lines and clan ties that wracked the south with violence, have established two government-like arrangements with virtually no outside support (the unacknowledged nation of
Somaliland and the burgeoning state of Puntland).
Lack of understanding has long plagued outsiders’ involvement in this country, including that of the
United States. The film Black Hawk Down did little to contextualize the violent attacks on U.S. soldiers in 1993 that soon led to
U.S. withdrawal from the country. (Several of their bodies were drug through the gravel and rock of
Mogadishu.) The movie failed to mention the killing of four foreign journalists by Somali mobs, which occurred in part due to the somewhat misguided
U.S. attacks that preceded it. The four journalists worked for Reuters’
East Africa office, where I worked several years later. In October 1998, I was one of two Reuters journalists to return to the country for the first time since those deaths. Any journalist in East Africa then could tell you: the hundreds of Somalis mistakenly killed during a
U.S. manhunt conducted early in Operation Rescue helped to foment and escalate the violence there that year.
In 2002, I reported on the similarly misguided U.S. policy of engagement with Eritrea,
Ethiopia’s northern neighbor. That situation turned out pretty badly for that nation, which has a more repressive government than ever before thanks in part to the
U.S. turning a largely blind eye to its totalitarianism. Now, with the escalation of violence in Somalia, it’s clear that if the
United States had any legitimacy among everyday Muslims left, the situation there should squelch it.
After approximately a week of onslaught, the headlines already read by the start of the new year that the Islamists in
Somalia faced defeat and capture. But surely Iraq has shown definitively — if
Afghanistan hadn’t — that early military “success” against militant Islamic fighters (who seem to “melt away” into the broader population) typically leads to an entrenched insurgency. Ethiopia’s President Meles Zenawi of Ethiopia has already told MPs in his country that he hopes to get out of
Somalia in a few weeks, while the once foreign-based interim Somali government — which, until now, had no control over the country — says the Ethiopians might need to stay for months at least. No one in
East Africa wants another cross border conflict or outright war, especially not the ordinary people who suffer the brunt of the violence. At the moment, there are at least five conflicts killing thousands in
East Africa. The mass murder in Darfur has crossed over to into Chad; Uganda’s government battles northern rebels that seek respite in
southern Sudan; the Democratic Republic of Congo’s instability spills over into Rwanda and Burundi, which have their own stark ethnic divisions; and now, there’s the Ethiopian invasion of
Somalia. If the United States wants to boost its support in East Africa and the rest of the planet, it might pay more attention to, say, the genocide in
Darfur. But there’s nothing the world needs less right now than
U.S. fomented violence — particularly in the name of battling Islamic fundamentalists.
Alex P. Kellogg writes for The Detroit Free Press.
http://www.prospect.org/web/printfriendly-view.ww?id=12377
4 Comments
April 17, 2007 at 8:24 am
Nice blog!
April 27, 2007 at 1:58 pm
I woke this morning to a BBC account of the devastation in Somalia. The reporter concluded that the short six-months (before December ‘06) Somalis enjoyed under the decentralized, eclectic, and UNAGGRESSIVE Union of Islamic Courts (UIC) will be looked back upon as a “kind of Golden Age.” That was before the unnecessary and unprovoked invasion by Ethiopia, with backing from the usual suspects.
If we are to be saddled with the misnomer of “Islamofascism” which I would contest, then we should also contemplate an equally dubious notion of Christofascism. But whatever nomenclature we designate to describe these two versions of intolerance, both need to be combatted and defeated.
July 16, 2007 at 6:55 pm
than you for your comments and support
July 16, 2007 at 6:59 pm
I have been away for a while because of the death and destruction Zinawi’s Tigre occupation forces has been wrecking in Somalia. I will be making more posts Ethiopia’s occupation of Somalia in the coming months and weeks. Peace