Destabilizing The Horn
By Salim Lone
0108/07 "Information
Clearing House" --- - The stability that emerged in
southern Somalia after sixteen years of utter
lawlessness is gone, the defeat of the ruling Islamic
Courts Union now ushering in looting, martial law and
the prospect of another major anti-Western insurgency.
Clan warlords, who terrorized Somalia until they were
driven out by the Islamists, and who were put back in
power by the U.S.-backed and -trained Ethiopian army,
have begun carving up the country once again.
With these developments, the Bush administration,
undeterred by the horrors and setbacks in Iraq,
Afghanistan and Lebanon, has opened another battlefront
in this volatile quarter of the Muslim world. As with
Iraq, it casts this illegal war as a way to curtail
terrorism, but its real goal appears to be to obtain a
direct foothold in a highly strategic area of the world
through a client regime. The results could destabilize
the whole region.
The Horn of Africa, at whose core Somalia lies, is newly
oil-rich. It is also just miles across the Red Sea from
Saudi Arabia and Yemen, overlooking the daily passage of
large numbers of oil tankers and warships through that
waterway. The United States has a huge military base in
neighboring Djibouti that is being enlarged
substantially and will become the headquarters of a new
U.S. military command being created specifically for
Africa. As evidence of the area's importance, Gen. John
Abizaid, the military commander of the region, visited
Ethiopia recently to discuss Somalia, while Chinese
President Hu Jintao visited Horn countries a few months
ago in search of oil and trade agreements.
The current series of events began with the rise of the
Islamic Courts more than a year ago. The Islamists
avoided large-scale violence in defeating the warlords,
who had held sway in Somalia ever since they drove out
U.N. peacekeepers by killing eighteen American soldiers
in 1993, by rallying people to their side through
establishing law and order. Washington was wary, fearing
their possible support for terrorists. While they have
denied any such intentions, some Islamists do have
terrorist ties, but these have been vastly overstated in
the West.
Washington, however, chose to view the situation only
through the prism of its "war on terror." The Bush
administration supported the warlords—in violation of a
U.N. arms embargo it helped impose on Somalia many years
ago—indirectly funneling them arms and suitcases filled
with dollars.
Many of these warlords were part of the
Western-supported transitional "government" that had
been organized in Kenya in 2004. But the "government"
was so devoid of internal support that even after two
years it was unable to move beyond the small western
town of Baidoa, where it had settled. In the end, it was
forced to turn to Somalia's archenemy Ethiopia for
assistance in holding on even to Baidoa. Again in
violation of the U.N. arms embargo, Ethiopia sent 15,000
troops to Somalia. Their arrival eroded whatever
domestic credibility the government might have had.
The United States, whose troops have been sighted by
Kenyan journalists in the region bordering Somalia, next
turned to the U.N. Security Council. In another craven
act resembling its post-facto legalization of the U.S.
occupation of Iraq, the Council bowed to U.S. pressure
and authorized a regional peacekeeping force to enter
Somalia to protect the government and "restore peace and
stability." This despite the fact that the U.N. has no
right under its charter to intervene on behalf of one of
the parties struggling for political supremacy, and that
peace and stability had already been restored by the
Islamists.
The war came soon after the U.N. resolution, its outcome
a foregone conclusion thanks to the highly trained and
war-seasoned Ethiopian army. The African Union called
for the Ethiopians to end the invasion, but the U.N.
Security Council made no such call. Ban Ki-moon, the
incoming secretary-general, is being urged to treat the
enormously complex situation in Darfur as his political
challenge, but Somalia, while less complex, is more
immediate. He has an opportunity to establish his
credentials as an unbiased upholder of the U.N. Charter
by seeking Ethiopia's withdrawal.
The Ethiopian military presence in Somalia is
inflammatory and will destabilize this region and
threaten Kenya, a U.S. ally and the only island of
stability in this corner of Africa. Ethiopia is at even
greater risk, as a dictatorship with little popular
support and beset by two large internal revolts by
Ogadenis and Oromos. It is also mired in a military
stalemate with Eritrea, which has denied it secure
access to seaports. It now seeks such access in Somalia.
The best antidote to terrorism in Somalia is stability.
Instead of engaging with the Islamists to secure peace,
the United States has plunged a poor country into
greater misery in its misguided determination to
dominate the world.
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