U.S. STRATEGIC INTEREST IN SOMALIA: Download here the book of Somali PM Mohamed Abdullahi Mohamed
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From Cold War Era to War on Terror
by Mohamed A. Mohamed
01 June 2009
A thesis submitted to the Faculty
of the Graduate School of the State University
at Buffalo in partial fulfillment of the requirements
for the degree
Master of Arts
Department of American Studies
"I object to violence because when it appears to do good, the good is
only temporary; the evil it does is permanent."
Mahatma Gandhi
Table of Contents
Abstract iii
Chapter 1 Introduction 1
Dynamics of Clanship in Somali Society 1
European Colonial Rule 3
Chapter 2 U.S. Strategic Interest in Somalia during the Cold War Era 7
U.S. and Soviet Union in Somalia 7
The Rise of Warlord Phenomena in Somalia 14
U.S. Support for Somali Warlords 16
Chapter 3 Global War on Terror - Post 911 24
The Rise of Islamic Movement in Horn of Africa 24
The Role of Ethiopia in Somalia 34
Conflicts within Somali Government 47
Chapter 4 Failed U.S. Policy in Somalia 67
Bibliography 78
ii
Abstract
This thesis examines United States¡¯ policy toward Somalia from the era of the Cold War
to that of the more recent and ongoing War on Terror. It asserts that U.S.¡¯s change of policy from Cold War alliance with Somalia to the use of Somalia as a battleground in the War on Terror has resulted in a disorganized and disjointed policy framework. In 1991, an alliance of warlords defeated President Siad Barre¡¯s regime that supplied Somalia¡¯s last central government and that was allied to the US. Subsequently, the victorious warlords turned on one another, resulting in clan feuds that destabilized the Somali state. In March 1994, this chaos engulfed US troops engaged in a humanitarian mission, resulting in the death and humiliation of several American soldiers in the so-called Black Hawk Disaster that led to the withdrawal of US troops and interests from Somalia. However, following the events of September 11, 2001, in which Islamic extremists attacked the Twin Towers in New York City and the ensuing launching of War on Terror, the United States became suspicious that Somalia was now a breeding ground for terrorist attacks against American interests in East Africa. This threat increased when Islamic Court Union (ICU) consolidated its power in southern Somalia after defeating US-allied warlords in June 2006. The ICU did bring a respite of law and peace for some six months, following fifteen years of warfare and chaos. But this was short-lived. Armed with economic and political support from Washington, neighboring Ethiopia invaded southern Somalia and occupied Somalia¡¯s capital, Mogadishu, under the pretext of the War on Terror. As many as 1 million people are reported to have been displaced and more than 10,000 were estimated to have been killed in Mogadishu.
iii
CHAPTER 1
INTRODUCTION
Dynamics of Clanship in Somali Society It is imperative to understand Somali history, society, and culture in order to evaluate U.S- Somali relations during the Cold War and War on Terror. Somalia is located in the Horn of Africa, adjacent to the Gulf of Aden and the Arabian Peninsula. Historically, it was similar to numerous cultures in and around the region. For example, in ancient times, the Egyptians glorified Somalia as a "God¡¯s Land" (the Land of Punt);1 Greek merchants who traveled on Red Sea called it the "Land of Blacks." Arab neighbors used to refer to this land as Berberi. German scholars observed that the Samaal people, who give Somalia its name, inhabited and occupied the whole Horn of Africa as early as 100 A.D.2 This theory diverges from the popular myth that the Somali people (also known as Samaale or Samaal) originated from Arab roots.3 Indeed, historians and archeologists have revealed that Somalis share language, traditions, and culture with Eastern Cushitic genealogical groups.4 The Eastern Cushitic ethnic sub-family includes: the Oromo, most populated ethnic group in Ethiopia; the Afar people who inhabited between Ethiopia and Djibouti; the Beja tribes of Eastern Sudan; and the Boni tribes of Northeastern Kenya. In other words, modern Somalis are richly embedded in African culture.5
1 Jacquetta Hawkes, Pharaohs of Egypt (New York: American Heritage, 1965), 27.
2 Helen Chapin Metz, ed. Somalia: A Country Study (Washington, D.C.: Federal Research Division Library of Congress, 1992), 5
3 Ali Ahmed, The Invention of Somalia (New Jersey: The Red Sea Press, 1995), 5.
4 Lee Cassanelli, The Shaping of Somali Society: Reconstructing the History of a Pastoral People (Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania , 1982), 23
5 B. Lynch & L. Robins, New Archaeological Evidence from North-West Kenya. (Cambridge University Press, 1979), 320.
The four major tribes of Somali lineage are nomadic and pastoral: Dir, Darood, Isaaq, and Hawiye. These nomad tribes constitute around 70 percent of the Somali population.
The two smaller agricultural tribes ¨C Digil and Rahanweyn ¨C make up only 20 percent, while 10 percent of the population is comprised of coastal dwellers whose economy is based on fishing and farming. It is imperative to understand the role and history of clan politics and how it developed over the centuries to shape the modern government in Somalia. Traditionally, nomadic society mastered the art of forming alliances to protect the interests of kingship and ensure water and grazing land. Rainfall, in particular, is very critical to the life of pastoral communities. It is the main factor that forces them to compete with other tribes and to move from one inhospitable place to another. Although they expect two rainy seasons, some localities never see one drop of rain and experience severe droughts, costing nomads most of their livestock. In the 20th century, there were six harsh droughts across several regions of Somalia that lasted more than two years and produced famine.6
6 I. M. Lewis, Brief descriptions of the major Somali drought in the 20th Century, including that of 1973 -
75, can found in Abaar: The Somali Drought. (London, 1975) pp. 1-2, 11-14.
7 While anthropologists might use tribe and clan in different terms, in Somali language, both (clan-family and tribe) mean the same. Tribal elders play an important role in the process of securing water. They make the final decisions in waging war and making peace with other neighboring tribes and relocating
clan-families to new territories.7 Tribal elders sit on the council of leadership that administers most clan affairs, down to relatively small matters, like marriage arrangements within the clan-family. The relationship between different tribes always depends on how tribal elders manage conflicts and enforce previous agreements.
However, an agreement might not last long. Therefore, it is the role of elders to find some sort of resolution to crises before things get out of hand and an endless cycle of revenge ensues. It must be said that these tumultuous situations and conflicts are positive in that they cement together clan-families against the threat presented by other tribes.
This is necessary, as with political circumstances shifting continuously, it is hard to predict when another skirmish or war might take place. Yet, insecurity and suspicion within the clan remains high where negotiation and conflict resolution are not possible.
In his book, Lee V. Cassanelli summarizes Somali clan politics by translating Somali proverb:
I and my clan against the world
I and my brother against the clan
I against my brother8
European Colonial Rule ¡¡
8 Cassanelli, 21
Over the centuries, the Somali people have demonstrated, as part of their tradition, a
vigorous independence and unwillingness to surrender to a single political authority.
Clan leaders never quite had the authority to enforce rules on all people; rather, their role
was to remind people of the importance of strong clan consciousness, stressing ancestral
pride, as the clan has been the integral part to their survival and existence since ancient
times.
It is important to discuss the reaction of Somali nomadic society to the European-
introduced modern Somali state. A clash of cultures invariably resulted from different
conceptions of law as it relates to the person. The European concept sees the state as
responsible for individual rights; inherently, it does not recognize the nomadic system of
justice, based on collective responsibility. Over the centuries, the Somali coastal area has
entertained various outside rulers, including the Omanis, the Zanzibaris, the Sharifs of
Mukha in present day Yemen, and the Ottoman Turks. One thing these rulers had in
common was that they did not disturb the nomadic lifestyle or interfere in their clan-
family politics, because they knew Somalis were used to being ungoverned and therefore
suspicious of foreigners. However, everything changed when the Somali Peninsula and
East Africa were dragged out of relative isolation into world politics. This was only the
start of the imperial epoch. In 1885, rival European powers ¨C Great Britain, France, and
Italy ¨C divided amongst themselves land populated by the Somali ethnic group in the
Horn of Africa.9 This territory was essentially ruled by clans until Great Britain took the
northern territory near the Red Sea, close to its other colonies in Aden; while the least-
experienced European colonies, Italy, was granted Southern Somaliland. The French took
hold of what is today known as Djibouti, a tiny nation on Red Sea. Ethiopia also grabbed
a chunk of Somali land called the Ogaden (see Figure 1 & 2).
¡¡
9 Scott Peterson, Me Against my Brother: At War in Somalia, Sudan, and Rwanda (London: Routledge,
2000), 11
FIGURE 1: Political Map of Africa10 FIGURE 2: Map of Somalia and
10 World Atlas. Retrieved April 20 2009, from http://www.world-atlas.us/africa-map.gif
11 US Politics. Retrieved April 21 2009, from http://www.uspolitics.about.com
12 Cassanelli, 148
13 Abdi Sheik-Abdi, Somali Nationalism: Its Origin and Future. (England: Cambridge University Press,
1977), 658
http://www.world-atlas.us/africa-map.gif
http://www.1001arabian.net/somalia/somalia-map.gif
Neighboring Countries11
The British and Italians had different strategies and interests in Somalia. Britain was
interested in Northern Somalia, mainly as source of livestock for its colony in Aden,12 its
principal supply route to Indian Ocean through the Suez Canal. British occupied Aden in
1839. Italians, on the other hand, wanted crops in the form of plantation agriculture:
bananas, sugarcane, and citrus fruits. As soon as the British colonial government started
asserting its authority over Somalia at the turn of the century, resistance took shape under
the leadership of Somali nationalist Sayyid Mohammed Abdille Hasan: known to the
British as "the Mad Mullah".13 His Islamic resistance movement sought to end European
rule and Ethiopian incursion in Somali territories. He used both religion and nationalism
to advance his cause and successfully united Northern Somali tribes against the
foreigners until his death in 1920. The use of force by British never produced a better
outcome, but Sayyid Mohammed won many followers, especially among his own clan.
He dared to suggest the possibility of a free and united Somalia. While British and Italian
colonies were vying for control of the Somali Peninsula during the World War II,
Somalis continued to mistrust and undermine the authority of their colonial rulers. As a
result, the first modern Somali political group was formed in 1943. The Somali Youth
League (SYL) articulated the need for national unity and, by extension, discouraged
division and feuding between clan-families. This new ideology worked; the SYL helped
Somalis realize that the only way to succeed and overcome colonial occupation was to
unite against it.14 Against a common rival, a national consciousness was beginning to
form. The political pressure also helped to improve lives: colonial rulers took steps for
economic development, better education, and healthcare for growing urban communities.
The SYL¡¯s main focus, of course, was to end colonial rule and liberate the nation from
foreign influence and domination. This did not happen overnight; however, the
organization succeeded well in easing ill-feelings between tribes and compromising the
14 M. I. Egal, Somalia: Nomadic Individualism and the Rule of Law (Oxford University Press, Jul., 1968),
220
15 B. Braine, Storm Clouds over the Horn of Africa. International Affairs (Royal Institute of International
Affairs, Oct., 1958), 437
clan system. The creation of a Somali state in 1960 could not have happened without this
foundation.15
CHAPTER 2
U.S. STRATEGIC INTEREST IN SOMALIA DURING THE COLD WAR ERA
The U.S. and Soviet Union in Somalia
U.S involvement in Africa was limited before World War II, with the exception of a few
commercial treaties signed with selected countries in West Africa. Generally speaking,
Washington was not interested in African affairs and voiced no real objection to
European domination of the continent. However, there was some attention to Africa
when, on January 18, 1918, President Woodrow Wilson offered his famous Fourteen
Points declaration to a Joint Session of Congress in which he spoke about the principle of
self-determination and governance.16 At that time, President Wilson wanted to counter
the German threat which had changed the American attitude toward European Colonies.
His stance had obvious implications for the millions of Africans subjected to foreign rule.
16 Paul Johnson, Modern Times: The World from the Twenties to the Nineties (New York:
HarperCollins,1991), 429
17 Ibid., 21
The Atlantic Charter, signed in 1941 by President Franklin Roosevelt and Prime Minister
Winston Churchill, was another initiative to promote world peace by compromising
imperialism. Both leaders recognized the importance of colonial people¡¯s rights to self-
determination and self-governance.17 After World War II, the Soviet Union entered
world political affairs in opposing Western domination and imperialism. As a result, the
Western bloc became still more proactive in promoting democracy in the former colonial
countries.
World War II¡¯s end marked the beginning of de-colonization in Somalia in earnest. The
process was not always perfect. Upon Somali independence in 1960, British Somaliland
and Italian Somaliland united under one flag, yet colonial boundaries granted Ethiopia,
Kenya, and France control over territories in which ethnic Somalis make up the majority
of the general population. While these three countries remained allies of the United
States, the U.S did not want to sever relations with Somalia because of the Soviet threat
and strategic importance of Africa¡¯s Horn region. As a result, the U.S promised financial
and military aid to Somalia; however, the Soviet-led Eastern bloc also offered a similar
deal in pursuit of its geographic advantages. Thus, Somalia became a prize during the
Cold War; even President Kennedy recognized this development and met with Somali
Prime Minister Abdirashid Ali Sharmarke in 1962. However, the Soviet Union ultimately
offered what Somalia wanted most: more military hardware (the Russian military aid
agreement of 1963) to protect the Somali population in Kenya and Ethiopia.18 On
October 21, 1969, the armed forces, led by General Siad Barre, overthrew the civilian
regime (former democratically elected leader Abdirashid Ali Sharmarke was assassinated
by one of his own security guards during his visit in the drought-stricken area of the Las-
Anod Disrtict, in the northern part of Somalia). Quickly, the usurping government
adopted scientific socialism, nationalized all major private corporations, prohibited
political parties, and shut down the parliament. U.S influence in Somalia apparently
ended as Somalia and the Soviet signed a prestigious treaty of friendship.
18 I. M. Lewis, Modern History of Somalia (London: Westview Press 1988), 209
On November 1, 1969, General Siad Barre established the Supreme Revolutionary
Council (SRC). The organization announced its intention to fight and abolish tribalism
and nepotism, major obstacles to progress and growth in the nine years of civilian,
democratic government. The nation was in perpetual financial crisis and overly
dependent on foreign assistance to meet its operating budget. A majority of Somali
people welcomed the new military regime¡¯s promise to clean up the sort of corruption
that had been tolerated in the previous administration. Popular acceptance helped
facilitate Barre¡¯s initiatives like "Scientific Socialism" and the battle against tribalism,
thought to be the true cancer of Somali society. Indeed, an official government slogan
stated, "Tribalism divides where Socialism unites."19
19 I. M. Lewis, Modern History of Somalia (London: Westview Press 1988), 209
20 Metz, 119
The new government won the hearts and minds of the people by promoting a new self-
reliance and self-supporting mentality. This helped to encourage a national, rather than
clan, consciousness, for it lessened dependence on traditional clan lineage for survival.
The main dream for every Somali was to be unified, including those living under
Ethiopian and Kenyan rule. Over the first eight years of the Barre regime, the Soviet-
Somali relationship grew into a significant military alliance. The two countries signed an
agreement that brought Soviet military capabilities to Somalia. Numerous, sophisticated
Russian weapon systems appeared, including MiG-21 jet fighters, T-54 tanks, and SAM-
2 missile defense system.20 In return, the Soviets were allowed a base at the port of
Berbara port, near the Red Sea and Indian Ocean. From this strategic location, they could
counter United States military movement in the Middle East and North Africa and control
trade. A more sinister aspect of the agreement saw the Soviet Union¡¯s KGB training
Somalia¡¯s own secret police organization, the National Security Services (NSS), which
could detain people indefinitely for any manufactured allegation.21 The ambition of a
greater, stronger Somalia come to fruition when Siad Barre invaded Ethiopia to liberate
the ethnic-Somali Ogaden region in 1977.
Ironically, the 1977-8 Somalia-Ethiopian War, enabled by Soviet support, was the
severing point in the friendship between the Cold War nations. The Soviets elected to
support Ethiopia against the nationalistic plans of its audacious neighbors. The Somali
National Army lost the war when a full Eastern bloc (comprised of Cuba, East Germany,
Libya, South Yemen, the Soviet Union army) attached themselves to the Ethiopian cause.
Of course, Somalia was not doomed to float out at sea. In a polarized world, a Soviet
enemy was automatically the United States¡¯ friend. Here, Washington found an
opportunity to normalize relations with Mogadishu. It offered military equipment to
Somalia in order to counterbalance Soviet and Cuban support for Ethiopia. Somalia, built
by Soviet aid, joined the Western camp in 1978, thus verifying the old clich¨¦ that there
are "no permanent friends nor permanent enemies."
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21Metz, 188
During the Cold War, the United States had a definite history in its African Enterprise of
supporting ruthless dictators, who committed atrocities and violate the fundamental
human rights of their own citizens. It was only required that these thugs somehow suit
American interests. This policy has long compromised key principles of the
Constitution: due process of law, respect for individual freedom and human rights, free
and fair democratic elections, and a free market economy. Yet such opportunism remains
a fixture of American foreign policy. Somalia fits the trend. Despite Siad Barre¡¯s poor
human rights records and corrupt government, the United States provided him with the
economic aid to sustain his government and military aid to protect Somalia from
Ethiopia¡¯s hostile Marxist regime. Here, one of many American-Soviet proxy wars was
waged where mutually assured destruction prevented a direct clash. Like Zaire¡¯s
notorious Mobutu Sese Seko, Barre benefited handsomely from America¡¯s support and
blind eye (see Figure 3). His regime survived the 80s, receiving grants and flexible loans
from the World Bank and International Monetary Fund (IMF), and food aid through
USAID22, which was distributed amongst camps and displaced communities, as a result
of a refugee flood from war-torn Ogeden region of Eastern Ethiopia. In return, the
United States received its strategic naval base at Berbera.
22 Graham Hancock, Lord of Poverty: The Freewheeling Lifestyles, Power, Prestige, and Corruption of the
Multibillion Dollar Aid Business. (London: Macmillan London Ltd., 1989), 24
Strategically speaking, this was a win-win situation between the two allies. However,
Barre¡¯s gloomy shadow lingered over American integrity. Here was an illegal dictator
who neither tolerated political opposition nor so much as attempted to compromise in
crafting solutions acceptable in all parties. Rather, he preferred to act as a thug, using
force to eliminate any clan-family sympathizing with the opposition. His military forces
committed unnecessary atrocities in central Somalia in particular, where they burnt
villages, slaughtered thousands of innocent people, and raped women. Barre was highly
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antithetical to what the United States was supposedly pursuing. It is no wonder that, in
mid 80s, a rising opposition movement demanded fair representation in the government.
When Barre ignored this element, the opposition armed itself as the insurgent Somali
National Movement (SNM), its aim simply to overthrow the Barre regime.23
¡¡
23 Ahmed I. Samatar, The Somali Challenge: From Catastrophe to Renewal? (London: Lynne Rienner,
1994), 118
FIGURE 3
Siad Barre sitting with Ronald Reagan. Courtesy Somali Embassy in Washington, D.C.
The SNM¡¯s guerrilla army briefly seized two major cities in Northern Somalia ¨C Hargeisa
and Buro ¨C in 1988. Barre and his superior American weapons reacted by emphatically
crushing the SNM movement. He essentially leveled the rebel cities.24 Many civilians
died in the crossfire; thousands more fled their homes for the countryside, where water
and shelter were short.
24 Anna Simons, Somalia and the Dissolution of the Nation-State (American Anthropologist, New Series,
Vol. 96, No. 4, Dec., 1994), 823
25 Scott Peterson, Me Against my Brother: At War in Somalia, Sudan, and Rwanda (London: Routledge,
2000), 15
26 Samatar, 121
When the Soviet Union disintegrated in 1991, so too did the polarization of the world.
The United States no longer had any real need for Somalia. It was now convenient to
withdraw the support that had long enabled Barre¡¯s rule and the illegalities that
characterized it. When the United States suspended all financial aid to the Barre¡¯s
regime, his security apparatus swiftly collapsed. Sensing the regime¡¯s vulnerability, rebel
forces ¨C taking the form of the United Somali Congress (USC) ¨C led by Mohamed Farah
Aideed stormed Mogadishu. Barre fled the capital in January, 1991.25 With the shared
enemy eliminated, so too did any reason for the resistance movement to be unified. The
same warlords who brought down the dictator continued to fight among themselves for
power and control; thus regional, clan politics returned to Somalia at the worst possible
time.26
The United States neglected its former Cold War ally until the September 11, 2001
terrorist attacks. Now, embroiled in another global conflict, the United States found new
strategic interest in Somalia and the Horn of Africa. This time, aid was offered to Somali
warlords and former Somali rival, Ethiopia, to fight America¡¯s proxy war. President
George Bush announced that Ethiopia could serve as an important strategic ally against
international terror networking. Therefore, in 2005, he oversaw a $450 million donation
in food aid, engineered by the U.S. Agency for International Development.
The Rise of Warlord Phenomenon in Somalia
The warlord phenomenon started soon after the collapse of the central government in
Somalia in 1991. This was the era of the United Somali Congress (USC) rebel
movement, characterized by much unfortunate chaos and violence. When USC
leadership (predominately from the Hawiye tribe) could not reconcile its political
differences, it descended into infighting which took the form of outright war, given that
the USC was, in fact, a tribal militia at heart. This struggle had two sides: one side was
loyal to self-appointed president Ali Mahdi Mohammed and the other side to General
Mohamed Farah Aideed. For a year the power struggle afflicted the Somali people with
loss of lives and property. The two men¡¯s quarrel became everyone¡¯s problem. Too
often, this is the case in modern-day Somalia. Neither leader could claim a decisive
victory or take control of government institutions. Consequently, peace and security in
the nation¡¯s capital were threatened.
These leaders were entrapped in Somali tradition. They exploited that tradition while
bearing the guise of modern diplomacy and tact. They effectively turned the struggle for
control of the USC into a fight for clan supremacy. The combatants recruited fighters
from their own clan-families and committed themselves to clan, rather than Somali nation
interests.
Aideed and Mahdi were vying for presidency of the entire nation. Although their
collaboration had already toppled the Siad Barre regime, they did not understand that
compromise worked. Now they had worked together to defeat a dictatorship: each settled
to become a local political leader of his respective clan-family in the hope he would
thereby control government institutions for the benefit of his own sector of the Somali
people. Interestingly, the two "candidates" were members of the same Hawiye tribe of
Mogadishu and central Somalia. Aideed belonged to Habar-Gidir sub-clan family, while
Mr. Mahdi was a member of the Abgal sub-clan. Thus, General Aideed and Mr. Mahdi
subdivided Hawiye tribe into two sub clans over which they presided as warlords. This development marked a "slippery slope" which was incompatible with the modern nation-state. Hence, "Warlordism" became an accepted part of Somali political culture. With so much threat from other clans, every major clan-family had to grow its military leaders and militias in order to protect itself. After all, the government itself was infested with warlords. So there was little protection ¨C let alone examples of good state governance ¨C coming from the Somali State Capital.
In summary, while clan elders and chiefs were still responsible for clan family affairs in villages, warlords were the players upon the national stage. They kept away from clan business which might create conflicts with traditional elders and chiefs. The warlords
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concerned themselves with warfare; they knew no other way of getting things done. In effect, they were ¨C and still are ¨C Somalia¡¯s nightmare, an unending plague.
U.S. Support for Somali Warlords
The United States reevaluated its foreign policy following the Soviet collapse and the subsequent end of the Cold War. Somalia marked one of the changes. Since there was no longer significant strategic importance to the Horn region of Africa, the U.S. ended all economic and military aid to Siad Barre¡¯s regime, leaving him with no leg to stand on.
Encouraged, insurgents rose to armed struggle against the demoralized and poorly equipped national army. Suddenly, Barre¡¯s government resembled a pushover. It quickly ceased to existed, but the transition was less than ideal. Somalia went from one to many rulers; already in battle mode, warlords took to fighting each other where there was no Barre to unite against. Thus, anarchy replaced law and order. Somali went back to traditional clan warfare. This sort of chaos was part of the old, nomadic culture but hardly compatible with the requirements of a modern nation state. The clan-family system and its culture of violence took its toll. Major clan-families aligned themselves behind warlords. All seeking protection of their own interests and territories, they wound up infringing heavily upon each other, fueling a prolonged civil war in the country.
Countless innocent people lost their lives because of the fighting. More severe, however, was the starvation it left in its wake. 1992 saw a historic famine. A full quarter of Somalia¡¯s nine-million people experienced malnourishment. Here, conscience got the better of the United States and international community. The United Nations took up a
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humanitarian intervention geared at getting help to starving people in the countryside.
This was easier said than done. It quickly became apparent that the United States could
not aid Somalia without embroiling itself in the civil war. Warlords were blocking
United Nations¡¯ aid shipments from reaching people in need. President George H. W.
Bush¡¯s administration introduced a new initiative called "Operation Restore Hope"
before it left office in late 1992. This effort saw the United States partner with United
Nations Secretary-General Boutros Boutros Ghali in the deployment of 30,000-strong
peacekeeping force to oversee safe and effective delivery of humanitarian food to the
starving people. President Bush went to the town of Baida, which the media had dubbed
"City of Death," to witness what the effort was accomplishing ¨C and exactly what it was
up against.
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Bill Clinton replaced George H.W. Bush in office in 1993. He continued, and in fact
expanded, his predecessor¡¯s involvement in Somalia. Now the humanitarian mission
started to turn into a political and nation-building effort.27. However, in pursuit of the
best government, U.N. and U.S. officials actually helped to exacerbate strife by pitting
one warlord against another. One prime example was when Belgian peacekeepers
enabled warlord Mohamed Said Morgan to capture the southern Somali town of Kismayo
from General Mohamed Farah Aideed¡¯s ally, Mohamed Omar Jess.28 This action
infuriated Aideed and his followers (see Figure 4). Many violent protests ensued against
U.N. humanitarian efforts, involving road bombs and skirmishes with Pakistani
27 Craig Unger, The Fall of the House of Bush: House of Bush, House of Saud. (New York: Simon &
Schuster, 2007), 176
28 Peterson, 65
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peacekeepers.
FIGURE 4
General Mohamed Farah Aideed29. Courtesy Hobyo.net
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29 Aideed¡¯s photo was retrieved from http//www.hobyo.net
Here, U.S. policy completed its transformation from a humanitarian to military mission
and ordered the arrest of General Aideed. This mistake shows the extent to which the
United States failed to understand the culture and the clan politics of this nomadic nation.
Admittedly, Aideed was a ruthless thug and a poor model for humanity; yet when U.S.
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and U.N coalition started to hunt him down, he became an automatic hero for Somalis
because of his wiliness to stand up to the world¡¯s remaining superpower. As mentioned
before, there has always been conflict among tribes; however, as soon as a foreign threat
manifests itself, old clan rivalries give way to unity against the common threat. The
clans, after all, are separate pieces of one shared, regional culture; here is where they
become Somali.
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Aideed mobilized Somalia¡¯s clans, including rivals, against the foreigners. In response,
the United States and United Nations escalated the conflict. This led to eighteen
American servicemen losing their lives and the infamous shooting down of two Black
Hawk helicopters.30 The nation-building effort never succeeded because of
misunderstanding of Somali culture and misguided foreign policy based on unnecessary
use of force rather than political resolution. The war became an embarrassment to the
Clinton administration especially, particularly when images surfaced of an American
serviceman being dragged through the street of Mogadishu. This was about enough.
President Clinton admitted the failed U.S. policy toward Somalia and announced that he
was bringing forces home.31 In 1994, U.S. and international forces left Somalia, having
been defeated by militias a few-hundred strong.
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30 Mark Bowden, Black Hawk Down: A Story of Modern War. (New York: Penguin, 2000), 90
31 Richard Clarke, Your Government Failed You: Breaking the Cycle of National Security Disasters. (New
York: HarperCollins Publishers, 2008), 35
Al-Qaeda leader Osama Bin-Laden missed no time in claiming responsibility for the U.S.
defeat in Somalia. The Saudi terrorist leader said that he had provided Somali militants
with the sophisticated air-missiles that had shot down the two Black Hawk helicopters.
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He insisted that U.S. Army had no backbone to fight and die in such wars.32. He
threatened to continue his own struggle until United States interests all over the world
were in ruins. Thus, the new threat of Islamic radicalism effectively replaced fifty years
of Cold War. This, however, was a different kind of enemy.
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32 Dinesh D¡¯Souza, The Enemy at Home: The Culture Left and Its Responsibility for 9/11. (New York:
Random House, 2007), 213
33 Mathew Blood, "The U.S. Role in Somali¡¯s Misery"; available from
http://www.greenleft.org.au/2008/778/39996; Internet; accessed 25 November 2008
34 Ken Menkhaus, State Collapse in Somalia: Second Thoughts (Review of African Political Economy, Vol.
30, No. 97, The Horn of Conflict, Sep., 2003), 406
Somalia always has been a strategic location, but the U.S. effectively neglected it
between Clinton¡¯s 1994 pullout and the advent of the War on Terrorism in 2001.
Washington feared the impact of terrorism growing all around the world,33 particularly in
failed states such as Somalia and Afghanistan. Al-Qaeda threatened more than once that
they would bring their jihad against the U.S. and its regional ally, Ethiopia. In response,
Washington committed another foreign policy blunder. As allies, it solicited none other
than the Somali warlords who had effectively feudalized and starved the country. Thus,
against its policy and ideals, the United States effectively legitimized their reign of terror.
In the process of continued feuding for control of territories, warlords established two
semi-autonomous governments: Somaliland in the northwest and Puntland in the
northeast of Somalia. Southern Somalia, including Mogadishu and Kismayo, were still
lawless ¨C ravaged by clan warfare and mired in destruction and starvation.34 American¡¯s
primary goal was to partner any allies in support of the War on Terrorism in the Horn
region.
¡¡
¡¡
¡¡
George W. Bush came to Oval Office promoting "compassionate conservatism."35 His
balanced, humble foreign policy outlook quickly changed following the September 11,
2001 terrorist attacks. Starting in December 2001, President Bush decided to expand
U.S. involvement in the Horn of Africa once again. He declared Ethiopia to be the
principal regional ally against terrorism. Just as Somalia benefited from U.S. economic
aid during the Cold War because of its strategic location, its neighbor (Ethiopia) now
emerged as favored nation, benefitting from aid from the U.S. Agency for International
Development. Thus, Ethiopian government and Somali warlords were sought to hunt and
neutralize suspected terrorists hiding in the region.
¡¡
35 David Frum, The Right Man: The Surprise Presidency of George W. Bush (New York: Random House,
2003), 5
36 John Prendergast and Colin Thomas-Jensen, "Blowing the Horn". International Crisis Group ¨C Foreign
Affairs. (March/April 2007). Retrieved from www.crisisgroup.org/home/index.cfm?id=4679
In Somalia, Washington endeavored to build a new association: The Alliance for
Restoration of Peace and Counterterrorism. This was comprised of regional warlords.
The United States paid each $150,000 per month for his cooperation.36 This type of
unilateral action severely undermined the new transitional government by further
legitimizing states within a state and, effectively, feudalism. This is not what Somalia
needed; the President of Somali government, Abdullahi Yusuf Ahmed (who, like some of
his ministers, had past lives as a warlord) continually reiterated the need for U.S.
political, military, and humanitarian aid for his weak government. The American policy
failed, as the Somali people rejected the coalition between violent warlords and Ethiopia.
The former only brought lawlessness and instability; the latter was opportunistic at best,
and more likely a prospective colonist. It is no surprise, then, that when conflict started
¡¡
¡¡
between U.S. backed warlords and Islamic Court Union (ICU), the majority of Somalis
supported the ICU ¨C seen to be the only real hope for a peaceful Somalia.
Washington¡¯s policy, already a failure, only escalated the crises by labeling the ICU as
extremist and soliciting Ethiopia, a major recipient of American arms since the Cold War
ended, to deal with the ICU in a sort of proxy war in the grander scheme of the War on
Terror. Of course, U.S. officials declined to directly address the question of backing for
Somali warlords, who styled themselves as a counterterrorism coalition in pursuit of
continued American support. For instance, State Department spokesman Sean
McCormack vaguely told reporters:
¡¡
"The United States would work with responsible individuals . . . in fighting terror.
It's a real concern of ours ¨C terror taking root in the Horn of Africa. We don't want
to see another safe haven for terrorists created. Our interest is purely in seeing
Somalia achieve a better day."37
37 Emily Wax and Karen DeYoung, "US Secretly Backing Warlords in Somalia", Washington Post
17 May, 2006, sec. A01
¡¡
The United States¡¯ gamble on the warlords failed when the increasingly well-supported
ICU crushed them. The Islamic organization took control Mogadishu and most of
southern Somalia. Now, in a disastrous blow to U.S. anti-terrorism initiative as a whole,
it revealed its Islamist character. This included the introduction of a harshly-interpreted
Sharia which punished all outlaws, prohibited the consumption of alcohol and use of
stimulant khat, required women to wear veils, and banned movies and televised World
¡¡
¡¡
Cup soccer games on television. The ICU brand of Islam might have been an
abomination in better times, however most people saw no better choice. The United
States failed to internalize just how unsecure Somalia had become, when it chose to
support the warlords who had caused this problem. As a reward, it now had an incredibly
hostile governing body to deal with. With the ICU effectively in power, the country¡¯s
new, weak transitional government has been operating largely out of neighboring Kenya
and the southern city of Baidoa. Most of Somalia was in anarchy, ruled by a patchwork of
competing warlords; the capital was too unsafe for even Prime Minister Ali Muhammad
Ghedi to visit. He described U.S. officials¡¯ involvement in the conflict between Somali
warlords and ICU as dangerous and shortsighted, arguing that this was undermining his
government:
"We would prefer that the U.S. work with the transitional government and not
with criminals. This is a dangerous game. Somalia is not a stable place and we
want the U.S. in Somalia. But in a more constructive way. Clearly we have a
common objective to stabilize Somalia, but the U.S. is using the wrong
channels."38
¡¡
38 Emily Wax and Karen DeYoung, "US Secretly Backing Warlords in Somalia", Washington Post
17 May, 2006, sec. A01
¡¡
¡¡
CHAPTER 3
GLOBAL WAR ON TERROR ¨C POST 9/11
The Rise of Islamic Movement in Horn of Africa
¡¡
It has already been seen that, after the fall of Said Barre in 1991, opportunistic warlords
effectively feudalized Somalia back into a dark age. Their bands ravaged the country
amidst uncontrollable civil war, as they battled for strategic towns and regional footholds.
Anyone who could piece together an army or militia could obtain a piece of Somalia.
Accordingly, a group of northeastern Islamists wasted no time in grabbing Garowe Town
in 1992. While the majority of the Somali population is Muslim (99%, predominantly
Sunni), the nation had long sustained itself without a theocratic thrust. Religious leaders
have always been respected and honored for their knowledge of the Islam, yet the Somali
culture traditionally draws a line between their realm and those of state, government, and
clan. Generally, clerics have neither sought to influence clan politics nor claim any
particular leadership position other than that of teacher.39
¡¡
39 Metz, 97
Over the centuries, Somalia pastoral society perpetuated its own Islamic tradition.
Fundamentalism held little appeal for it. Clan society saw only harm in strict Salafist
ideas. Particularly abrasive among these were rigid Sharia law and new, rank-and-file
leadership which could only confront and undermine the time-honored clan system. That
is why pastoral Somalia had rejected Islamist militant fervor in the past. It saw instability
¡¡
¡¡
rather than tranquility in the usurpation of power from the most basic social units. It was
not easy for the phenomenon of hard-line Islamism to survive in the Somali nomadic
society without the support of clan leaders, not to mention the common people as an
entirety. However, fundamentalism ¨C based in sources to which no one could answer (i.e.
the Koran) ¨C was equally hard to squelch entirely. Like a parasite, it would always find a
way to breed and perpetuate its kind. The Islamist part of Somali society and its
leadership came from different tribes and regions. However, a single goal unified all of
the elements: to rule the land under Islamic law. The movement was effectively against
all of Somali history. Often construed as antiquated, fundamentalists actually think
themselves progressive. The Somali version believed that the ancient clan system was
un-Islamic and in need not of realignment, but abolition. This idea was brash and radical.
Its fate in Garowe Town suggests a basic rift with the Somali people and time. The clan
system brought down the fundamentalists when northeastern communities learned that
the group¡¯s principal leader, Sheikh Hasan Dahir Aways (future head of the Islamic Court
Union), was a member of Hawiye tribe which belongs to same clan as General Mohamed
Farah Aideed. Aideed had achieved infamy as the notorious warlord who led the rebel
USC in overthrowing Siad Barre¡¯s government and instigating genocide against the
Darood clan in the south. Many of the victims fled from their homes in Mogadishu for
refugee camps in Kenya and Ethiopia.
Well-known African Horn historian Said Samatar described the relationship between
Islam and Somali tribal tradition as follows:
¡¡
¡¡
"Somalia will never be a breeding ground for Islamic terrorism" the main reason
being, the Somali politics shaped as it is "to an extraordinary degree, by a central
principle that overrides all others, namely the phenomenon that social
anthropologists refer to as the segmentary lineage system"40
Exploring the phenomenon further, Samatar agreed with what Professor Cassanelli
argued about the systematic division among Somali society:
¡¡
40 Samatar, 1992: 629
41 Ibid., 629
"My uterine brother and I against my half brother, my brother and I against my
father, my father's household against my uncle's household, our two households,
against the rest of the immediate kin, the immediate kin against non-immediate
members of my clan, my clan against others and, finally, my nation and I against
the world."41
¡¡
Accordingly, Islamist leaders often lost the battle between religious and clan loyalty.
This was the precise fate of the northeastern Islamists in Garowe Town. Sheikh Aweys
looked outside of his clan to establish and recruit an Islamic militia. He failed. Local
tribal leaders and residents defined him as an outsider and enemy of the Darood who
wanted to unmake the peace that they had enjoyed since the collapse of central
government. When Aweys and his followers lost the support of the people, clan warlord
and future Somali president Abdullahi Yusuf Ahmed mobilized his militia to oust the
Islamists from Gorowe and the region. That is the best example of the old clan system
¡¡
¡¡
overpowering the incursion of hard-line Islamic ideas.
¡¡
However, it was just as difficult to destroy radical Islamism as it was to defeat the clan
system. The movement did not die; rather, it changed its strategy and point of attack to
the southern regions where there was far more violence, chaos, and anarchy to exploit.
For several years, the Islamists went underground and quietly reorganized under the
radar. Then, in 1996, they announced a new organization called Al-Itahad al-Islamiya,
based in Gedo in the southwest, near the Ethiopian and Kenyan borders.42 Here, warlords
and tribal leaders had only a very loose handle. Al-Itahad al-Islamiya perceived a power
vacuum and sought to take advantage of it. Sheikh Dahir Aweys, previously defeated by
northeastern warlord Abdulahi Yusuf Ahmed in1992, resurfaced as the organization¡¯s
leader.43 The radicals started to collect weapons and impose Sharia on locals without
clan leaders¡¯ assent. Before long, Al-Itahad al-Islamiya had placed its own regional and
town administrators in direct opposition to existing clan leadership. With the menace
growing ever more foreboding, local leaders tried to negotiate with the Islamists, advising
them to lay their weapons down and resume peaceful teaching duties instead. The
militant group rejected the offer and killed some influential members of the clan-family
to assert that they were serious. During the negotiations, clan leaders encountered
Islamist¡¯s logic and reasoning were beyond their comprehension, because their rivals
sincerely believed that they did not have any ulterior motives except God¡¯s work on earth
and to apply His words to all people and society.
42 Andre Le Sage, Prospects for Al Itihad & Islamist Radicalism in Somalia. (Review of African Political
Economy, Vol. 28, No. 89,: Taylor & Francis, 2001), 473
43 Chris Tomlinson. "Target of Somalia air strike was one of the FBI¡¯s most wanted." The Independent. 9
January, 2007.
¡¡
¡¡
A long debate ensued as the southern Somali clan base sought an appropriate course of
action. Mareehaan - Darood warlord Omar Haji Mohamed, former Defense Minister
helped steer the discussion toward Ethiopia. It was decided to seek military assistance.
Now Sheikh Aweys made another mistake by operating outside of his Hawiye clan¡¯s
territory. Combined Ethiopian and native forces proceeded to defeat the Islamists in the
Gedo region. Al-Itahad al-Islamiya was essentially nullified as a threat to southern
Somalia. Twice-defeated, Aweys and the remnants of his militia retreated to Mogadishu,
where his Hawiye clan dominates. It could no longer wage war against any clan militia
near the Somali-Ethiopian border.
The Islamists were neutralized, but all was not well. Old problems continued to afflict
Somalia. As before, warlords fought one another for territory, and United States
maintained its distance from the Somali people, who had suffered a decade of senseless
war and drought which had forced many into refugee camps inside and outside of the
country. Somalia was no longer a country, in truth. It was split into mini-states
controlled by clan leaders concerned far more with their fiefdoms than national unity
government. Puntland was established as an autonomous region in the northeast, while
the northwest proclaimed its independence as the Somaliland Republic. The south
remained lawless and violent. The region¡¯s deprivation enabled Islamic clerics to make a
comeback as bearers of order and peace. Indeed, the creation of a new Islamic court
system made good on its promise. The clerics brought some justice to Mogadishu. They
addressed many tough issues, including real estate and other civil disputes around which
¡¡
¡¡
clan warfare had revolved. Mogadishu, at least, saw a drop in clan feuds and criminal
activities.44 As a result of this, the Hawiye clan-family, which had suffered greatly at the
hands of warlords, grew to support the Islamic clerics as a possible check to harmful
warlords¡¯ influence within the clan-family. The clerics¡¯ potential for stabilization was
apparent, insofar as their main goal was to advance and protect the interests of the tribe.
Unfortunately, Islamic extremism has shown again and again that this is too much to
hope for. While Islamic clerics committed themselves to community service and fair
judgment by law, they had bigger agenda than their own local clan in mind: to introduce
Sharia and to rule first Mogadishu and then all of Somalia by Islamic law. With the full
support of their clan-family and its leaders, the clerics had an opportunity to organize
former Al-Itihad al-Islamiya members and sympathizers into a court militia, charged with
enforcing rulings and arrest runaway criminals. The arming of the court gave it enormous
autonomy and justification, bordering on martial law. In 2006, Islamic clerics and
businesspeople progressed further in forming a new political organization called the
Islamic Court Union (ICU) to unite all smaller Islamic groups. Electing 90 assembly
members helped legitimize the Islamist interest. As president, they elected none other
than former Al-Itihad al-Islamiya leader Sheikh Hassan Dahir Aweys. Aweys had twice
failed in efforts to Islamize large chunks of Somalia. Now, with a political apparatus and
established court behind him, he once again pushed into the south.
¡¡
44 D. Ignatius, "Ethiopia¡¯s Iraq. Washington Post," 13 May 2007 , sec. B07
Since Somalia was classified as failed state and had lost its territorial integrity soon after
the collapse of central government fifteen years earlier, the Bush administration
¡¡
¡¡
overreacted to this new development by employing warlords to fight an American proxy
war under the heading of the War on Terrorism. Bush declared Somalia a potential
"haven of terrorism"; there was, in truth, a precedent to back this opinion. Al-Qaeda and
non-state actors favor a lawless and anarchic environment where they can conduct
training, operate their financial and communication networks, and plan targets relatively
freely. In Somalia as well as Afghanistan, Al-Qaeda recruited from the local population
and preached openly its opportunistic "destroy-and-kill" philosophy. The indoctrination
and manipulation of young, disenchanted Muslim men has been an effective a strategy.
Peace-loving people around the world have been materially and morally robbed ¨C too
often of life itself. Osama bin Laden¡¯s al-Qaeda deserves the greatest condemnation for
its barbaric actions and needs to be eliminated as an entity by any means possible.
However, it remains the case that Somalia is not the same situation as Afghanistan. Here
again, as with Iraq, the Bush administration automatically associated trouble and
unfavorable circumstances in a Muslim country with al-Qaeda and terrorism. The U.S.
branded the ICU without learning about the complex relationships between Islamic
clerics within the ICU organization. In reality the organization, like Islam itself, is very
multifaceted. Besides the different factions loyal to specific ethnic groups, ICU militants
and clerics pursued and advocated different varieties of Islam. These include but are not
limited to traditionalist, Brotherhood, Salafist, Islamist, and Jihadist Muslim. Washington
missed a great opportunity to recognize these differences and choose its words, actions,
and judgments accordingly. By branding the entire ICU as "terrorist," the U.S. alienated
¡¡
¡¡
Somali Muslims in general and forged a much greater enemy in the process.45
Thus, unwelcome American incursion only helped to encourage the ICU¡¯s rise to power.
Three factors behind its rise were:
1.) Violent turmoil and lawlessness which killed many Somalis and denied many
more the right and ability to work and feed themselves.
2) Lack of international support in addressing the need for national reconciliation
in forming an inclusive, credible government.
3) The United States and its Ethiopia ally rushing to judgment in characterizing
all devoted Somali Muslims as radical Jihadists in need of destruction.
¡¡
45 Anna Shoup, "U.S. Involvement in Somalia"; available from
www.pbs.org/newshour/indepth_coverage/africa/somalia/usinvolvementinsomalia; Internet; access 24
November 2008
Washington, in failing to understand the importance of the above issues, missed an
opportunity to better its international image and Somalia. Addressing the ICU with care
¨C via diplomacy and international consensus building ¨C might have gone a long way in
easing the United States¡¯ reputation for stereotyping and not quite trying to understand
Muslims (or worse, being their enemy). The Islamic world and Africa might have been
well-involved in a concerted effort to stabilize Somali. Instead, the U.S. went the route
of facilitating more war in a war-torn nation. By financing Ethiopia and Somali warlords
in their fight against the Islamists, Washington was perceived by Somalis not as the
solution, but part of the problem. In fact, the underhanded maneuvering of Kenyan-based
CIA operatives made the extremists more popular, boosting their image as righteous
¡¡
¡¡
warriors among radicals and traditionalists alike. It is probably not coincidental,
therefore, that before Mogadishu fell into the hands of the ICU and imposed a strict
interpretation of Sharia law. Washington was alarmed; it would seem that Somalia had
acquired its own Taliban.46
¡¡
46 Burkheman, O. (2006, June 10). Fall of Mogadishu Leaves U.S. Policy in Ruins. Guardian, pp.A4
47 Ibid, pp.A5
Somali expert and associate professor of political science at Davidson College in North
Carolina, Ken Menkhaus, lamented the consequences of the turn in U.S. Somali policy: "
This is worse than the worst-case scenarios ¨C the exact opposite of what the US
government strategy, if there was one, would have wanted". 47 Washington, in many
ways, made its own bed; now it will have to lie in it. It had paid little attention to a
decade-long humanitarian crisis, anarchy, and lawlessness. To this day, the U.S. State
Department Bureau of African Affairs webpage does not even include Somalia as a
trouble spot in sub-Saharan Africa in need of help and attention. In short, the U.S. has no
inherent political and economic interest in Somalia which requires it to intervene for
peace and stability. However, as the second Islamic radicalism comes to the fore, the
U.S. shifts its policy and pursues a quick-fix marred war and a further exacerbation of the
crisis. All of this begs a very good question: Is the United States really involved in
Somalia for Somalia¡¯s sake, or for its own?
¡¡
The United States¡¯ dilemma grew and contracted some additional urgency when Al-
Itahad al-Islamiya leader Sheikh Aweys took control the ICU organization. Naturally,
Al-Itahad al-Islamiya was added to the list of al-Qaeda-linked terrorist organizations.
¡¡
¡¡
The Ethiopian government had accused Aweys¡¯ group of involvement in a series of
bombing in Ethiopia. During a congressional hearing, Jendayi Frazer, Assistant
Secretary for African Affairs, told lawmakers that the U.S. would monitor the situation
and coordinate a response through a new body called the Contact Group. The Contact
Group consists of the African Union (AU), United Nations (UN), European Union (EU),
United States, Sweden, Norway, Italy, Tanzania, and others. Frazer explained the ICU
takeover of Mogadishu and other southern towns as an extension of al-Qaeda operations:
"The U.S. government remains deeply troubled by the foreign-born terrorists who have
found safe haven in Somalia in recent years."48
The U.S. drafted a U.N. resolution that authorized the African Union (AU) to intervene in
Somalia and asked the international community to finance this effort. On December 6,
2006, the Security Council passed resolution number 1725. Predictably, the Ethiopian
army, with complicit U.S. backing, rushed in to protect the United Nations-sponsored
Transitional Federal Government (TFG), based in Baidoa, a small town
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