Jim Lobe at Antiwar.com brings
fresh news of what has become, proportionately, the most
savage, brutal and ruinous front in the global campaign of
military aggression known as the "War on Terror":
Somalia.
We have been tracking the
situation in Somalia here since American military and
security forces and their Ethiopian proxies invaded the country
in December 2006, in a "regime change" operation to
overthrow the first quasi-stable government Somalia had seen in
15 years. As we noted earlier
this year:
American forces have bombed
fleeing refugees, slaughtered
innocent herdsmen and destroyed villages in attempts to
assassinate a handful of individual alleged, on shaky and
specious evidence, to be "part of" or "associated
with" or "linked to" al Qaeda. American agents have
seized refugees from the Somali war, including
U.S. citizens, and had
them "renditioned" to the notorious prisons of the
Ethiopian dictatorship. And as we have noted here many
times, the Bush Administration has
sent in death squads to "kill anyone left alive"
after American strikes.
| The
bipartisan imperial elite want to have their way -- they
want to crush anyone they have designated as an enemy,
they want to have their own clients and puppets in power,
they want to "project dominance" over strategic
regions, they want to frighten other nations into
compliance with Washington's wishes, etc., etc. -- and
they don't care what it costs. |
Not a word has been said in
the presidential campaign about this ongoing atrocity, this open
culpability in yet another vast war crime. Naturally one doesn't
expect any comment or concern from John McCain, whose
robotic neo-connism can only applaud this violent projection
of American dominance in yet another Muslim land. (As neoconnist
Michael Ledeen once
famously proclaimed: "Every ten years or so, the United
States needs to pick up some small crappy little country and
throw it against the wall, just to show the world we mean
business." This is about as perfect an encapsulation of the
mindset of the bipartisan foreign policy establishment as can be
imagined. For another example, see the "liberal"
Thomas Friedman here.)
But neither has there been a
single criticism or condemnation -- or even a mention -- of the
murderous operation in Somalia by the Democratic candidate: a
man whose own father was a black African Muslim like those being
slaughtered with American backing today. Of course, Barack Obama
has taken some pains to distance himself from the African side
of his heritage -- perhaps understandable in a country where his
own running mate brags
about being from a "slave state" and not long ago
expressed wonderment at the fact that an African-American
politician (in fact, Obama himself!) could
be so well-spoken and even "clean." And it goes
without saying that an aspiring leader of the Terror War would
want to renounce even more firmly any association with his
Islamic background. Still, you would think that sheer partisan
self-interest alone would entice the Democrats to bring up the
subject of Somalia, pointing to it as yet enough botched and
bloody catastrophe of Bush's foreign policy.
Then again, perhaps they know
there is no political mileage in the issue. After all, who
cares? No Americans have died in the operation (although some
Americans were "rendered" to Ethiopia's notoriously
draconian prisons). And after the initial barrage of refugee
bombing and village destroying, America's direct involvement has
been limited to the occasional lobbing of missiles into civilian
homes -- and whatever secret missions are being carried out by
U.S. covert operators and the death squads that clean up after
them. And as the entire sordid enterprise has long been ignored
by the mainstream media -- except for a rare story now and then,
almost always shorn of any context or mention of America's
instrumental role in the war -- it would require a great deal of
background and explanation to make a denunciation of U.S. policy
in Somalia comprehensible to a deliberately misinformed and
blithely unconcerned American electorate. Who has time for that
kind of boring stuff, when there are bumper stickers and sound
bites to propagate?
There's also one other little
point: the hearty he-man Terror Warriors at the top of the
Democratic ticket obviously support
America's actions in Somalia. If they did not, they would
have condemned them long ago.
Lobe reports on a
major new study that confirms what we have been saying here
for months: the American-backed "regime change" in
Somalia has created one of the world's worst humanitarian
disasters -- and has radicalized much of the ruined country,
incubating the very extremism and terrorism that the
invasion was ostensibly -- ostensibly --designed to quash.
(The "War on Terror"
has created so many vast new fertile fields for extremism and
terrorism on all its fronts that a cynic might be forgiven for
suspecting that the creation of more terrorism is, in fact, one
of its principal aims. After all, who have been the chief
beneficiaries of modern terrorism? Those who have reaped
immeasurable riches and vastly augmented authoritarian power
from "counter-terrorism." If the "War on
Terrorism" had not arisen -- just in time to replace the
Cold War -- something else would have had to been invented to
keep the loot and power flowing to (and from) the war machine.
Of course, if we are sliding into a new Cold War with resurgent
Russia and ever-burgeoning China, then we may see the War on
Terrorism start to diminish in importance. But for now, terror
is still trumps in the loot-and-power game.)
Lobe points us to a report
issued this week by Enough, a human rights group created by a
cooperative effort between the International Crisis Group and
the Center for American Progress. Written by Ken Menkhaus, a
leading American expert on the region, the report --
"Somalia: A Country in Peril, a Policy Crisis" --
presents the stark reality of this Terror War atrocity:
Over the past 18 months,
Somalia has descended into terrible levels of displacement and
humanitarian need, armed conflict and assassinations,
political meltdown, radicalization, and virulent
anti-Americanism. Whereas in the past the country’s endemic
political violence—whether Islamist, clan-based, factional,
or criminal in nature—was local and regional in scope, it is
now taking on global significance....Indeed, the situation in
Somalia today exceeds the worst-case scenarios conjured up by
regional analysts when they first contemplated the possible
impact of an Ethiopian military occupation.
The report makes clear that
the Bush Administration's malign intervention in Somalia began
well before the Ethiopian invasion in 2006. Indeed, it was an
application of the age-old American policy of "divide and
conquer" -- deliberately fomenting violent conflict in the
society of a targeted country -- that helped radicalize and
empower extremist factions in Somalia:
The coalition of clans,
militia leaders, civic groups, and Islamists which formed the
Mogadishu Group [which opposed the Ethiopian-backed
'Transitional Federal Government' set up in 2004] were
themselves divided, however, and war erupted between two wings
of the group in early 2006. This war was precipitated by a
U.S.-backed effort to create an alliance of clan militia
leaders to capture a small number of foreign al Qaeda
operatives believed to be enjoying safe haven in Mogadishu as
guests of the hard-line Somalia Islamists, especially the
jihadi militia known as the shabaab. The cynically named
Alliance for the Restoration of Peace and Counter-Terrorism,
or ARPCT, as the U.S.-backed group was called, clashed with
local Islamists and within months was decisively defeated. The
clan militias’ defeat paved the way for the rise of the
Islamic Courts Union, or ICU, which for seven months in 2006
came to control and govern all of Mogadishu and most of
south-central Somalia.
The first American
intervention failed to bring its hired warlords to power, but
instead paved the way for a coalition of moderate and hardline
Islamist factions to govern. And for a few months, this worked
well:
The ICU quickly delivered
impressive levels of street security and law and order to
Mogadishu and south-central Somalia. It reopened the seaport
and international airport and began providing basic government
services. In the process, the ICU won widespread support from
war-weary Somalis, even those who did not embrace the idea of
Islamic rule.
Factional disputes between
moderates and hardliners -- with the latter taking increasingly
strident public positions -- gave Ethiopia the excuse for its
long-planned, American-backed invasion. As
an April 2008 report for Enough by John Prendergast notes:
...In this volatile region,
the U.S.-led “Global War on Terror” has become intertwined
with Ethiopia’s own response to regional and internal
threats. When Islamists established a foothold in southern
Somalia in mid-2006, Ethiopia began planning an invasion aimed
at propping up a fragile and unpopular transitional government
in Mogadishu. With encouragement from the Bush administration,
Ethiopian forces attacked in December 2006, and 16 months
later they are hunkered down with no end in sight. To make
matters worse, neighboring Eritrea’s support for insurgents
in Somalia and oppositionists in Ethiopia means that Somalia
is further complicated by a proxy war between Ethiopia and
Eritrea, one that could contribute to a disastrous resumption
of war between those two states.
The United States is
concentrating most of its energies on capturing or killing
three foreign Al Qaeda fugitives and a dozen or so of their
Somali associates. U.S. support includes a vast and sustained
intelligence effort, support for self-interested Somali
“counter-terrorism” agencies, and obstruction of
international efforts to broker a ceasefire and power-sharing
agreement with Islamists...
U.S. counter-terrorism
policy has failed to differentiate organic resistance
movements in Somalia and elsewhere from real terrorists. By
branding all resistance “terrorism” and providing aid to
factions of the Somali transitional government that are simply
warlords with titles, the United States has contributed to
further polarization and made a political settlement less
likely.
This is standard practice on every
Terror War front, of course. Prendergast goes on to say:
U.S. policy since 9/11 has
been a central ingredient in the Horn of Africa’s descent
into crisis and the growth of extremism. Concerned that
Somalia might become a safe haven for Al Qaeda and a breeding
ground for Islamist extremism, the United States has
designated Somalia as a priority in the Global War on Terror.
But not only have U.S. counter-terrorism efforts failed to
mitigate the threat in any sustainable way, they threaten to
blow it out of all control. By placing the desire to capture
or kill three “high value” Al Qaeda targets above the
welfare of millions of Somalis, the United States and its
Ethiopian allies have engendered profound resentment, promoted
radicalization, and created the conditions for thousands of
young radicals to turn toward extremist groups.
Lobe has more from other
experts who attended the most recent report's release:
"The (current) crisis
is fundamentally different and fundamentally worse than the
situation of the last decade and a half," said Chris
Albin-Lackey, a Horn of Africa specialist at Human Rights
Watch (HRW), who appeared with Menkhaus at the report's
release at a conference sponsored by at the Woodrow Wilson
International Center for Scholars here Wednesday.
Albin-Lackey, who has
conducted some 80 interviews of Somali refugees in East Africa
in the past month, said ongoing violence, including almost
daily artillery bombardments by Ethiopian army and TFG forces
on the one hand and opposition militias, including the
Islamist Shabaab on the other, as well as assassinations
carried out by both sides, have added to the insecurity.
"People have nowhere to
turn for security," he said, adding that search
operations by TFG forces, while nominally for the purpose of
arresting suspected insurgents, had become "an excuse for
murder, rape and looting on an incredibly large scale."
As a result, he said, Mogadishu has become "largely
depopulated" with about two-thirds of the population –
or about 800,000 people – having left their homes there over
the past 18 months.
The new report by Menkhaus
details the humanitarian catastrophe:
The humanitarian nightmare
in Somalia is the result of a lethal cocktail of factors. The
large-scale displacement caused by the fighting in Mogadishu
is the most important driver. The displaced have fled mainly
into the interior of the country, where they lack access to
food, clean water, basic health care, livelihoods, and support
networks. Internally displaced persons, or IDPs, are among the
most vulnerable populations in any humanitarian emergency.
With 700,000 people out of a population of perhaps 6 million
in south-central Somalia forced to flee their homes, the
enormity of the emergency is obvious...
Second, food prices have
skyrocketed, eroding the ability of both IDPs and other
households to feed themselves. The rise in food prices is due
to a global spike in the cost of grains and fuel; chronic
insecurity and crime, which has badly disrupted the flow of
commercial food into the country; and an epidemic of
counterfeiting of the Somali shilling by politicians and
businesspeople, creating hyperinflation and robbing poorer
Somalis of purchasing power. Mother Nature is not cooperating
either: a severe drought is gripping much of central Somalia,
increasing displacement, killing off livestock, and reducing
harvests in farming areas.
Third, humanitarian agencies
in Somalia are facing daunting obstacles to delivery of food
aid. There is now virtually no “humanitarian space” in
which aid can safely be delivered. Until recently, the TFG and
its uncontrolled security forces were mainly responsible for
most obstacles to delivery of food aid. TFG hardliners view
the provision of assistance to IDPs as support to an enemy
population—terrorists and terrorist sympathizers in their
view—and have sought to impede the flow of aid convoys
through a combination of bureaucratic and security
impediments. They also harass and detain staff of local and
international non-governmental organizations, or NGOs, and
U.N. agencies, accusing them of supporting the insurgency.
Uncontrolled and predatory TFG security forces, along with
opportunistic criminal gangs, have erected over 400 militia
roadblocks (each of which demands as much as $500 per truck to
pass) and have kidnapped local aid workers for ransom.
Since May 2008, however,
jihadist cells in Mogadishu linked to the shabaab have become
an additional threat to humanitarian actors. They are engaged
in a campaign of threats and alleged assassinations against
any and all Somalis working for western aid agencies or
collaborating with the U.N. and Western NGOs. Not all shabaab
members embrace this policy (the shabaab leader Sheikh Mukhtar
Robow has condemned the assassinations and is known to be
working to provide protection for aid operations in his
clan’s home region), but jihadist cells in Mogadishu are now
increasingly fragmented and answer to no one, and some of
these cells are believed to have targeted national aid workers
and civil society leaders.
As Lobe notes: "The UN
recently estimated that, barring substantial improvement in the
security situation, some 3.5 million Somalis will be dependent
on humanitarian aid by the end of this year." That is more
than half the population of the entire country reduced to
the most absolute penury. An equivalent number would be 14
million people in Iraq -- or 150 million in the United States.
Meanwhile, as we have seen in
Iraq, the violent extremism, government terror and sheer chaos
unleashed by the U.S.-backed invasion is destroying Somali
society itself. From Lobe:
The assassination campaign
by TFG hardliners and fragments of the shabaab movement is the
latest attack on Somalia’s once vibrant civil society and
has the potential to morph into a violent purge of all
professionals and civic figures. Somali civic figures are in
shock at this latest threat, and are either fleeing the
capital or keeping a very low profile. This is an enormous
setback for hopes to consolidate peace in the country...
A peace agreement signed
last month by moderate factions of the opposition and the TFG
is already in great peril from hardliners in both camps -- and
from U.S. policies which continue to exacerbate the conflict.
Lobe reports:
But the implementation of
the agreement faces "steep challenges," warned
Menkhaus, not least because "the moderates [who
negotiated the accord] don't control any of the armed
groups." While the Shabaab have already denounced the
[moderate] leaders as "apostates," he noted,
hard-liners in the TFG know that they can stay in power
"if and only if the Ethiopians stay."
Only by reinforcing the
moderates can the international community, including the US,
enhance the chances for the agreement's successful
implementation and, with it, the chances for reconciliation,
according to Menkhaus. But that will require major changes in
US and western policies, which have "actually worked to
strengthen and embolden hardliners" over the past two
years.
In that respect, the US
emphasis on counterterrorism has been particularly
destructive, not only in supporting the Ethiopian offensive in
December, 2006, but, more recently, in placing the Shabaab on
its list of designated terrorist groups last March. That step
not only isolated opposition moderates from their own
coalition but also gave the Shabaab "even more reason to
sabotage" ongoing peace talks.
At the same time, Washington
has provided "robust financial and logistical support to
armed paramilitaries resisting the command and control of the
TGF, even though they technically wear a TFG hat" to both
fight the Shabaab and track down suspected terrorists.
"To the extent that
these security forces also deeply oppose...reconciliation
efforts with the opposition, the US counterterrorism
partnerships have also undermined peace-building efforts by
emboldening spoilers in the government camp," according
to the report...
The Tomahawk missile attack
that killed Shabaab leader Aden Hashi Ayro [and at least two
dozen civilians] in May – the latest in a series of similar
strikes against armed Islamists in Somalia, allegedly tied to
al-Qaeda – resulted in a sharp radicalization in the group,
which announced at the time that it would strike against US
and western targets, including aid workers, as well as
Ethiopian and TFG forces, compounding an already dramatic
humanitarian crisis.
Again, these are policies that
seem designed to produce more terrorism, more conflict, more
instability, more death and suffering. Certainly, no sentient
observer could believe that the American actions in Somalia are
in any way designed to alleviate
these conditions.
But perhaps we are being too
cynical in suspecting subtle Machiavellian ploys behind U.S.
policy in Somalia. It could be as brutally simple as this: the
bipartisan imperial elite want to have their way -- they want to
crush anyone they have designated as an enemy, they want to have
their own clients and puppets in power, they want to
"project dominance" over strategic regions, they want
to frighten other nations into compliance with Washington's
wishes, etc., etc. -- and they don't care what it costs. In
other words, perhaps they have not deliberately set out to
destroy a nation and grind its helpless people into the
dust....but if that's what it takes to get their way, then by
God, that's what they'll do. It's not their fault if these
darkie Muslims won't play ball.
This is of course a gangster
mentality: "If you do what we want, nobody gets hurt. Hey,
we might even send you a turkey at Christmas, or get your nephew
a job or something. But if you cross us, then you'll get what's
coming to you -- and it'll be your own damn fault."
This hideous mentality is not
restricted to the Bush Administration. It is the long-standing
philosophy of America's bipartisan ruling elite. As
Major General Smedley Butler noted back in 1933:
War is just a racket. A
racket is best described, I believe, as something that is not
what it seems to the majority of people. Only a small inside
group knows what it is about. It is conducted for the benefit
of the very few at the expense of the masses....
I spent thirty-three years
and four months in active military service as a member of this
country's most agile military force, the Marine Corps. I
served in all commissioned ranks from Second Lieutenant to
Major-General. And during that period, I spent most of my time
being a high-class muscle-man for Big Business, for Wall
Street and for the Bankers. In short, I was a racketeer, a
gangster for capitalism....
I helped make Mexico,
especially Tampico, safe for American oil interests in 1914. I
helped make Haiti and Cuba a decent place for the National
City Bank boys to collect revenues in. I helped in the raping
of half a dozen Central American republics for the benefits of
Wall Street. The record of racketeering is long. I helped
purify Nicaragua for the international banking house of Brown
Brothers in 1909-1912. I brought light to the Dominican
Republic for American sugar interests in 1916. In China I
helped to see to it that Standard Oil went its way unmolested.
During those years, I had,
as the boys in the back room would say, a swell racket.
Looking back on it, I feel that I could have given Al Capone a
few hints. The best he could do was to operate his racket in
three districts. I operated on three continents.
The racket is immeasurably
more vast and more powerful these days. Somalia is its latest --
and one of its most cruelly ravaged -- victims. Yet among the
great and good of America, not a word is raised in protest or
opposition to the nation's complicity in this work of evil.
Chris
Floyd has been a writer and editor for more than 25 years,
working in the United States, Great Britain and Russia for
various newspapers, magazines, the U.S. government and Oxford
University. Floyd co-founded the blog Empire
Burlesque, and is also chief editor of Atlantic
Free Press. He can be reached at cfloyd72@gmail.com.
This column is republished
here with the permission of the author.