Wednesday,
July 16, 2008 -
While George Bush
was breezing through photo-ops at the G-8 summit
in Japan, his Ethiopian proxy-army in Somalia was
grinding out more carnage on the streets of
Mogadishu. More than 40 civilians have been killed
in the last 48 hours.
On Sunday, Osman Ali Ahmed, the head of the UN
Development Program in Somalia, was shot gangland
style as he left a mosque after prayers. He died
before reaching the hospital with wounds to the
head and chest. Ali Ahmed is just the latest of
the peace-keepers who have been killed in the
ongoing battle between Bush’s Ethiopian
occupiers and the Somali guerrillas.
US foreign policy in Somalia has resulted in
disaster. Millions of Somalis have been forced to
flee their homes and relocate to tent cities in
the south to escape the fighting. The latest surge
in violence has been the worst in a decade and the
security situation continues to deteriorate
despite the arrival of 2,600 troops from the
African Union and a tentative truce that was
signed in June between some of the warring
factions.
The western media has stubbornly refused to report
on the rising death-toll in Somalia, choosing
instead to focus all of their attention on
America’s “villain du jour,” Robert Mugabe.
Mugabe appears to be next on the neocon’s list
for regime change. (Paul Wolfowitz even composed a
postmortem for Zimbabwe’s president in a recent
Wall Street Journal editorial, “How to Put the
Heat on Mugabe”)
In 2006, the United States supported an alliance
of Somali warlords known as the Transitional
Federal Government (TFG) who established a base of
operations in the western city of Baidoa. With the
help of the US-backed Ethiopian army, western
mercenaries, US Navy warships, and AC-130 gunships,
the TFG was able capture Mogadishu and force the
Islamic Courts Union (ICU) and their allies to
retreat to the south. But, much like Iraq and
Afghanistan, the resistance has coalesced into a
tenacious guerrilla army which has returned to the
capital and resumed the fight making it impossible
for their Ethiopian adversaries to govern.
As the struggle continues, the humanitarian
situation has gone from bad to worse. At least 2.6
million Somalis are now facing famine due to acute
food shortages spurred by a prolonged drought,
violence and high inflation. UN monitors have
warned that the figure could hit exceed 3.5
million by the end of 2008. The UN Security
Council has helped facilitate the violence by
failing to condemn US support for Ethiopia’s
invasion and by promising to send peacekeepers to
mop up after fighting ends. They’ve shown no
interest in stopping the bloodshed or threatening
sanctions against the aggressors. The UNSC has
become little more than an accomplice in Bush’s
rampages.
In an interview with Amy Goodman on Democracy Now,
Salim Lone, a columnist for the Daily Nation in
Kenya and a former spokesperson for the UN mission
in Iraq explains the UN’s role in providing the
“go ahead” for the US invasion:
The lawlessness of this particular war is
astounding; the most lawless war of our
generation. You know, all aggressive wars are
illegal. But in this particular one, there have
been violations of the UN Charter and gross
violations of international human rights. But, in
addition, there have been very concrete violations
by the United States of two Security Council
resolutions. The first one was the arms embargo
imposed on Somalia, which the United States has
been routinely flaunting for many years now. But
then the US decided that that resolution was no
longer useful, and they pushed through an
appalling resolution in December, which basically
gave the green light to Ethiopia to invade. They
pushed through a resolution which said that the
situation in Somalia was a threat to international
peace and security, at a time when every
independent report indicated, and Chatham
House’s report on Wednesday also indicated, that
the Islamic Courts Union had brought a high level
of peace and stability that Somalia had not
enjoyed in sixteen years. So here was the UN
Security Council going along with the American
demand to pass a blatantly falsified UN
resolution. And that resolution actually was a
violation [of the] UN Charter. You know, the UN
Charter is like the American Constitution and the
Security Council is not allowed to pass laws or
rules that violate the Charter. And yet, who is
going to correct them?
The Bush
administration has predictably invoked the
“terrorist” hobgoblin to justify its
involvement in Somalia, but no one is buying it.
The ICU is not an Al Qaida affiliate or a
terrorist organization despite the absurd claims
of the State Department. It is true that the ICU
was trying to enforce Sharia Law, but a much
milder form of Sharia than America’s ally, Saudi
Arabia.
The ICU was the first government in over a decade
to restore security and order to Somalia and —
generally speaking — the people were supportive
of the new regime. Political analyst James Petras
summed it up like this:
The ICU was a relatively honest administration,
which ended warlord corruption and extortion.
Personal safety and property were protected,
ending arbitrary seizures and kidnappings by
warlords and their armed thugs. The ICU is a broad
multi-tendency movement that includes moderates
and radical Islamists, civilian politicians and
armed fighters, liberals and populists,
electoralists and authoritarians. Most important,
the Courts succeeded in unifying the country and
creating some semblance of nationhood, overcoming
clan fragmentation.
The real motives behind the invasion were oil and
geopolitics. According to most estimates 30
percent of America’s oil will come from Africa
in the next ten years. Bush’s new warlord
friends in the Transitional Federal Government (TFG)
have already indicated that they are ready to pass
a new oil law that will encourage foreign oil
companies to return to Somalia. The same oil
giants that are now lining up in Iraq will soon be
making their way to Somalia as well.
The Horn of Africa is also critical for its
deep-water ports and its strategic location for
future military bases. It’s all part of the
Grand Schema for reconfiguring the region to
accommodate America’s hegemonic ambitions.
Humanitarian Catastrophe: “The Ethiopian
invasion has destroyed all the life-sustaining
systems”
Heavy fighting and artillery fire have reduced
large parts of Mogadishu to rubble. More than
700,000 people have been forced to leave the
capital with nothing more than what they can carry
on their backs. Entire districts have been
evacuated and turned into ghost towns. The main
hospital has been bombed and is no longer taking
patients. Ethiopian snipers are perched atop
rooftops across the city. Over 3.5 million people
are now huddled in the south in tent cities
without sufficient food, clean water or medical
supplies. It is the greatest humanitarian crisis
in Africa today; a man-made Hell entirely conjured
up in Washington.
Just weeks ago, Amnesty International reported
that it had heard many accounts that Ethiopian
troops were “slaughtering (Somalis) like
goats.” In one case, “a young child’s throat
was slit by Ethiopian soldiers in front of the
child’s mother.”
In another Democracy Now interview, Abdi Samatar,
professor of Global Studies at the University of
Minnesota, had this to say:
The Ethiopian invasion, which was sanctioned by
the US government, has destroyed virtually all the
life-sustaining economic systems which the
population have built without the government for
the last fifteen years. And the militia that are
supposed to protect the population have been
looting shops. For instance, the Bakara market,
which is the largest market in Mogadishu, has been
looted repeatedly by the militias of the so-called
Transitional Federal Government of Somalia,
supported by Ethiopian troops. And the new prime
minister of Somalia, Mr. Hassan Nur Hussein, has
himself announced in the BBC that it was his
militias that — who have looted this place. So
what you have is a population that’s hit from
both sides — on one side, by the militias of the
so-called Transitional Federal Government, which
is recognized by the United States, and on the
other side, by the Ethiopian invaders who seem to
be bent on ensuring that they break the will of
the people to resist as free people in their own
country…. What you have is really terror in the
worst sense of the word, a million people have
been displaced that the Ethiopians have been
denying humanitarian aid, and the United States
which seems to just watch and let it happen.
It’s like there’s has been a calculated
decision made somewhere in the world, maybe in
Washington, maybe in Addis Ababa, maybe in
Mogadishu itself, to starve these people until
they submit themselves to the whims of the
American military and the Ethiopians, who are
acting on their behalf.
Amnesty International has called for an
investigation of the United States role in
Somalia.
Regrettably, neither the United Nations nor the
establishment media are at all interested in
Bush’s war crimes in Africa. All they care about
is Mugabe.
Mike Whitney lives in Washington state. He can be
reached at: fergiewhitney@