- [SW Country] (AllAfrica.com - Herman J. Cohen ) Somalia and the United States: A Long and Troubled History
- :Posted on [22 Jan 2002]
Somalia
and the United States: A Long and Troubled History
Story Filed: Monday, January 21, 2002 5:20 PM EST
Washington, DC, Jan 21, 2002 (allAfrica.com/All Africa Global Media
via COMTEX) -- The arrival of the film "Blackhawk Down" in
cinemas in the United States and around the world reminded Americans
that Somalia has never been far from
the center of Washington's national security concerns. This vivid
memory of the tragedy that befell American soldiers and Mogadishu
fighters on October 3, 1993, comes at a time when Somalia
is drawing worldwide attention as a potential hiding place for
Al-Qaeda terrorists seeking to escape from U.S. forces in Afghanistan.
Starting as far back as the Second World War (1939-1945), the
United States paid particular attention to Somalia
in its Africa policy. Since Italy was an enemy nation, allied with
Nazi Germany and the Axis powers in the Second World War,
Italian-controlled Somalia, Eritrea
and Ethiopia were early military targets of the United Nations powers.
Thanks to British forces based in Kenya, these territories were among
the first to be liberated from Axis control in 1942. This was
important to the United States because Mogadishu, Asmara and Djibouti
were relay stations for U.S. forces operating in the Middle East.
Even before the end of the Second World War, the problem of Somali
irredentism caused some friction between the United States and
Britain. In August 1944, the British proposed to consolidate all
Somali peoples into one nation, including the Ogaden, Italian
Somaliland and French Somaliland, which became Djibouti. (Of course,
they conveniently omitted the Somalis living in northeast Kenya, a key
British colony..)
The United States objected to the inclusion of the Ogaden in
Somaliland because Ethiopia had entered the war as an independent
state and as an ally of the United Nations powers. For the same
reason, the U.S. acquiesced in the amalgamation of the Italian colony
of Eritrea with Ethiopia, without consulting the people of Eritrea.
After the merger of the Italian and British Somalilands into one
independent nation in 1960, the United States regarded Mogadishu as an
important African country given its strategic location next to the Red
Sea and Persian Gulf. Following the military takeover led by Mohammed
Siad Barre in October 1969, and his adoption of "scientific
socialism" as Somali state policy, Somalia
became a pawn in the Cold War between Washington and Moscow. The
country's strategic location made the U.S.-Soviet competition all the
more intense.
The essence of Siad Barre's foreign policy was Somali nationalism
and irredentism, with a focus on uniting all Somali people under one
flag. This policy constituted a major threat to Ethiopia's Ogaden
region, where the vast majority of the inhabitants are Somalis. The
policy also provided an opening for the Soviets, who had no
inhibitions about pouring arms into Somalia
in order to menace Ethiopia, America's main ally in the Horn Africa.
As part of this process, the Soviets developed an air and naval
facility in the port city of Berbera on Somalia's
northwest coast.
With a key communications' base in Asmara, the United States
countered the Somali arms buildup with a major military assistance
program to the Ethiopian regime of Emperor Haile Selassie. Armed
clashes between Somalia and Ethiopia
took place on a regular basis, mainly in the Ogaden region. It was in
this area that the first test of American and Soviet air power took
place, with Ethiopian F-5 American-built aircraft demonstrating
superiority over the Somali Mig-16s supplied by the Soviets.
In 1975, U.S. policy toward Somalia
took an ironic 180-degree turn, when a military coup in Ethiopia
overthrew Emperor Haile Selassie in favor of a Marxist pro-Soviet
group known as the DERGUE, under the leadership of Mengistu Haile
Merriam. This gave the Soviets an opening to become close to the
Ethiopians in order to further undermine U.S. influence and gain
control over the Red Sea lanes leading to the Indian Ocean and Persian
Gulf. The Soviet aim was to use their friendship with both Ethiopia
and Somalia to reconcile the two
feuding powers as "Marxist brothers." However, they failed
to understand that in the mind of Siad Barre, the friend of their
enemy (Ethiopia) could not be simultaneously a friend of Somalia.
For Siad Barre, Somali irredentism was much more important than
Marxist scientific socialism.
As U.S.-Ethiopian relations cooled in the aftermath of the 1975
Mengistu coup, U.S.-Somali relations warmed. The United State
increased military and economic assistance to Somalia,
and the U.S. Embassy in Mogadishu became one of the biggest American
diplomatic missions in Africa. However, the U.S. faced a dilemma in
its relations with Somalia because
Washington did not want to be responsible for supporting Somali
aggression against the Ethiopian Ogaden. Thus, Washington had to walk
a fine line between the supply of defensive weapons to the Somali
army, while parrying Siad Barre's constant demand for offensive
weapons with which to attack Ethiopia.
Using offensive weapons purchased from Italy and other suppliers,
Siad Barre attacked Ethiopia in the aftermath of the 1975 Mengistu
takeover, hoping to take advantage of the disarray in the Ethiopian
military. In order to counter Somalia's
initial military successes in the Ogaden in 1977, Ethiopia called for
assistance from the Soviet Union, who financed the arrival of 5,000
Cuban troops. The Cubans helped defeat the invading Somali army.
The deployment of Fidel Castro's Cuban troops to both Ethiopia and
Angola in the period 1975-1976 was the major cause of the death of the
policy of detente between the U.S. and the USSR. The Cold War had
flared up again in Africa, and once again, Somalia
was deeply involved.
In 1979, U.S. relations with Somalia
took another turn after the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan. U.S.
military analysts feared that the invasion was just the beginning of a
major Soviet military push into Iran and the Persian Gulf oil
producing areas. President Jimmy Carter reacted to this analysis by
ordering the State Department to negotiate military base rights and
facilities in the Gulf region. Saudi Arabia and other Arab states
surrounding the Persian Gulf said they wanted American protection from
the Soviet threat, but preferred that U.S. military components remain
"over the horizon", and out of sight. The logical
alternative to bases directly in the Gulf countries was to have
facilities in East Africa. Thus, between 1979 and 1980, the U.S.
negotiated to take over the former Soviet naval and air facility in
the Somali port of Berbera and proceeded to upgrade the runway and
docks in a project costing $35 million.
With Berbera becoming a key component of U.S. military planning in
the defence of the Persian Gulf region, U.S.-Somali relations became
even more important to Washington. This created yet another dilemma
for U.S. policy, because the Siad Barre dictatorship became
increasingly harsh, repressive and corrupt during the decade of the
1980s. Human rights groups in the U.S. and elsewhere criticized the
American policy of providing military support to the Siad Barre
regime. There were efforts in Congress to cut off military assistance
to Somalia. These succeeded in 1989,
so Washington had to maintain relations with Siad Barre solely through
the supply of humanitarian and economic assistance.
During the second half of the 1980s, Somalia
sank more and more deeply into civil war and lawlessness, as various
clan groups armed themselves in opposition to Siad Barre's murderous
regime. In 1990, Siad Barre's military had lost control of most of the
country and was reduced mainly to defending Mogadishu.
Throughout this period, the United States continued to maintain
good relations with Siad Barre because of the overriding imperative of
maintaining military access to Berbera. In mid-1990, Iraq invaded
Kuwait, setting off a major security crisis in the Persian Gulf. It
was for such a contingency that the U.S. had maintained strong ties
with Siad Barre, despite his invasions of Ethiopia and his despicable
human rights record. But in an irony of ironies, the American military
suddenly found itself welcomed to the Persian Gulf and was able to
base its fighting units inside Saudi Arabia and other Gulf countries
in preparation for the fight to drive Iraq out of Kuwait. Thus, the
United States did not need Berbera in the Gulf War, and the reason for
the friendship with Siad Barre fell away.
By early 1991, Siad Barre had been driven out of office and out of Somalia
by his clan enemies, the Cold War had formally ended, and the Dergue
regime in Ethiopia had been defeated and replaced by Tigrayan and
Eritrean guerrilla armies. Unlike Ethiopia, where a new government was
able to restore order and take control expeditiously, Somalia
fell into a state of anarchy after Siad Barre's departure. Mogadishu
was especially hit by clan warfare, lawlessness and banditry. The
newly constructed U.S. Embassy was invaded by bandits, with the entire
American staff and diplomats from other nations escaping on
helicopters sent by the American military operating in the nearby Gulf
war. Thus, in January 1991, it looked as if the United States had
reached the point of forgetting about Somalia,
which in strategic terms had reverted to being just another troubled
backwater.
But Somalia could not be
forgotten. By early 1992, in the absence of a central government, the
country's humanitarian situation was becoming disastrous. This was
especially true in southern Somalia,
where marauding clan armies were fighting over the different quarters
of Mogadishu, as well as the cities of Baidoa and Kismayu. With the
security situation so dangerous, farmers were unable to plant and
harvest. Efforts by the United Nations and private relief
organizations to deliver food to the hungry were thwarted by warlords
who were using relief goods as bargaining chips for money and power.
By mid-1992, the UN was reporting growing starvation in southern Somalia,
with infants, nursing mothers and the elderly as the chief victims.
Thus, Somalia again became a major
policy issue for the United States government.
Efforts by UN Secretary General Boutros Boutro-Ghali to persuade
the UN Security Council in early 1992 to consider the use of
peacekeepers to help alleviate starvation in Somalia
were blocked, mainly by the United States. The U.S. military were
reluctant to start a process whereby American forces might be called
upon to engage in combat in a lawless situation. But the so-called
"CNN effect" that showed starving Somali mothers and babies
on American television daily had a strong impact. Congress was
inundated with mail calling for Washington to do something to stop the
suffering.
In August 1992, as the U.S. presidential election campaign was
beginning, President Bush ordered the U.S. military to begin a
humanitarian relief airlift to Somalia.
The airlift was based in the Kenyan port city of Mombasa, and was
successful in alleviating food shortages around some of the major
Somali airports such as Baidoa. However, in situations of major
famine, airlifts are invariably insufficient because of the cargo
limitations of aircraft. It was clear that the only solution to the
problem of mass starvation (5000 Somalis were dying per week as of
October 1992) was massive delivery by ship and overland truck
transport. This could only take place, however, with military
protection of the shipments against the predatory warlords who
controlled Mogadishu's seaport and airport.
In November 1992, after he had lost the election to Bill Clinton,
President Bush asked the State Department for recommendations with
respect to the humanitarian disaster unfolding in Somalia.
The Department recommended that the United State propose a UN-led
military enforcement operation to open the way for food deliveries,
without the use of American troops, but with the logistical support of
U.S. military airlift. The Pentagon expressed the view that it would
take at least six months for the United Nations to mount such an
operation, and only the United States military had the capability of
moving quickly.
On the basis of these recommendations, President Bush ordered a
U.S.-led military operation to stop the starvation, provided that (1)
the Security Council agreed, (2) there were troops of other countries
to accompany U.S. forces, and (3) the United Nations take over the
relief operation within six months. With all of these agreements in
place, the first American forces arrived in Somalia
in early December 1992. A number of other countries also sent troops
to Somalia, including Botswana and
Nigeria in Africa. In terms of ending the hunger cycle, the operation
was a huge success. Within a matter of weeks, relief supplies were
flowing smoothly, and the number of deaths from starvation and
malnutrition had declined tremendously.
The American-led relief operation was turned over to United Nations
control in May 1993, as originally planned. U.S. forces were reduced
to 2,500 troops serving in a reserve capacity. Boutros-Ghali appointed
retired American Admiral Jonathan Howe to head up the entire
operation. With relief supplies flowing and agriculture revived, the
UN operation became one of working to restore governmental
institutions and basic security.
This prospect became a threat to some of the warlords in the
Mogadishu area who feared for their economic interests. One of them,
Mohammed Aideed, decided to take action to force the United Nations
out. This took the form of guerrilla attacks on UN peacekeepers. In
September 1993, his men ambushed and killed 25 Pakistani UN
peacekeeping troops.
As a loyal commander, Admiral Howe felt that he had to take action
to punish the perpetrators of this atrocity. However, instead of
working through UN channels to obtain authorization to use military
force, he worked through U.S. channels to organize a raid by American
ranger troops on Mohammed Aideed's compound. This operation resulted
in the disaster of October 3, 1993 in which 18 U.S. troops and many
hundreds of Somalis died.
As a result of the October 3 disaster, President Bill Clinton
decided to pull all forces out of Somalia
and to close down the UN operation, thereby fulfilling Mohammed
Aideed's objective. In addition, President Clinton cast public blame
on the United Nations for the deaths of American troops, when the
United Nations had nothing to do with the operation. This led to a
steady decline in support for the UN within the American public and
the United States Congress.
Over the years, it has become conventional wisdom in the press, and
even in academic circles, to describe the U.S. operation in Somalia
a failure because of the tragic events of October 3 1993. However,
this is not the case. President Bush's objective of bringing a halt to
the massive starvation caused by the warlords' interference in food
distribution was fully successful. The operation was turned over to UN
control as planned. It was only after the official U.S. handover of
control that the tragedy with U.S. combat troops took place. It was a
tragic occurrence, but the success of the U.S. operation to stop
starvation cannot be disputed. President Bush senior deserves credit
for this success.
In 1993, once again, the United States Government thought it was
saying goodbye to Somalia, hoping
never to have to deal with that troubled, failed state again. But,
alas for Somalia, the events of
September 11, 2001 led to a search for Al-Qaeda terrorists and their
bases of operation throughout the world.
It was known to American intelligence agencies that Osama Bin Laden
had sent Islamic "missionaries" to Somalia
from Sudan in 1991-1992. These missionaries organized a Somali welfare
organization called "Al Itihad". In addition to traditional
work to establish clinics and schools, Al Itihad also organized armed
militias designed to attack enemies of the Islamic revolution as
defined by Bin Laden. These militias, based near the confluence of the
Somali, Kenyan and Ethiopian borders, made guerrilla attacks inside
Ethiopia. The Ethiopian army, under Prime Minister Meles Zenawi,
reacted strongly to these attacks, invading Somali towns to find and
root out the Al Itihad fighters and administrative structures. By the
mid-1990s, the Ethiopians had succeeded in doing significant damage to
the Al Itihad organization.
Because of the history of Al Itihad, and its ties to Osama Bin
Laden, the American government naturally looked at Somalia
in its worldwide survey of Al-Qaeda operations. The fact that Somalia
remained an anarchic state raised suspicions that Al-Qaeda was
actually operating or hiding in Somalia,
or that Al-Qaeda fighters escaping from Afghanistan might be trying to
go to Somalia in order to regroup and
continue the war against the United States from there. Hence, there is
currently a great deal of attention being paid to Somalia
as the possible "next target" in America's response to the
attacks of September 11, 2001.
While still a country without a government, Somalia
continues to struggle to survive and restore central authority. It
therefore remains vulnerable to external manipulation and penetration,
as was Afghanistan during the period of Taliban rule. It is to be
hoped that despite their suffering, the Somali people will reject any
efforts by Al-Qaeda forces to exploit their weaknesses and use Somalia
as a base of operations against the United States and the west. At the
same time, the United States government should finally understand that
failed states, such as Somalia,
cannot be ignored in a globalized world, in which both productive and
destructive forces cannot be contained within national boundaries.
Herman J. Cohen is a former American diplomat, who retired in 1993
with the rank of career ambassador after serving as Assistant
Secretary of State for Africa in the first Bush administration and
Senior Director for Africa on President Reagan's National Security
Council staff. He is currently president of Cohen and Woods
International, a Virginia-based consulting and lobbying firm.
by Herman J. Cohen
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