By Abdiaziz Arab
Wednesday October 5, 2022
The
recent remarks by President Hassan Sheikh Mohamud about the fight against the
terrorist group and anti-peace Al-Shabaab came at the right time, although some
may argue it is too little too late. While addressing the nation, the president
said, "Somalia has only one enemy, and it's Al-Shabaab". In this
noble struggle against the terrorist group, the president defined the fight
against Al-Shabaab and said: "there is no middle ground in the fight with Al-Shabab;
you are either a fighter against them or an acquaintance with them". The
president encouraged the nation to pick arms to liberate the country from
terrorists. However, the president warned that people shouldn't interact with
them socially, economically, and politically. So far, only tribal militias and
some units from the Somali National Army (SNA) are fighting against Al-Shabaab,
despite there being more than 22,000 soldiers from African Union Mission in
Somalia, ATMIS has a United Nations Security Council mandate to fight Al-Shabaab.
The million-dollar question on the lips of every Somali is: if AMISOM does not
want to fight, which is in their job description in Somalia, why are they
staying in the country? Also, we must ask ourselves: how has a six-month
mission turned into a fifteen-year project and is still ongoing?
Similarly,
after seeing the recent triumphs of our brave soldiers and tribal militias
against Al-Shabaab, do we need AMISOM soldiers to stay in our country? In this
short article, I will analyze AMISOM's presence in Somalia and argue that they
have utterly failed to execute their mandate, and it's time for them to leave. But
unfortunately, in his speech, the president shied away from pointing out the Al-Shabaab’s
supply chain of human resources, which is a significant issue to tackle if we
are to defeat the terrorist group both militarily and ideologically.
History
repeats itself
The
current uprise against Al-Shabaab by tribal militias in central Somalia is a
sign that Somalis had run out of patients with Al-Shabaab and are now
determined to put them in the pages of history as they did to every invader who
came to fight them. In fact, historians argue that Somalis have never been
defeated. In the medieval era, the Portuguese fleet backed by Ethiopians on the
land tried to colonize Somalia, but they were met with a fierce fight by
Somalis, and consequently, both were defeated. Both Italians and the British
tried to get hold of a foot in Somalia in the late 19th and early 20th
centuries; however, after decades of fighting, both left. The Americans and
their allies in the early 1990s were met with the same fate, as they were
forced to withdraw by Somali militias. If the Somalis wanted to fight
Al-Shabaab, they would have defeated them a long time ago, but it seems because
of Al-Shabaab's claims of being Muslims, Somalis were hesitant to pick arms and
clear them from the land. Also, the absence of leadership and clear doctrine to
fight Al-Shabaab contributed to the inaction against the group. Some analysts
also argue that the fact the similarity of the group's Islamic ideology to the
exported mainstream ones caused confusion amongst the Somalis that were willing
to fight Al-Shabaab.
This
kind of paradox which the mainstream sheikhs created, helped Al-Shabaab to
flourish in Somalia. Besides, it confused the Somali people who love their
religion and do not want to do anything that goes against its teachings. So, someone
might say, why do we have to fight Al-Shabaab? Isn't it AMISOM's job to fight
them, as they are the ones that receive vast sums of money to fight the group?
Is
AMISOM's Presence Helping Somalia or Hindering?
When
President Hassan Sheikh remarked that "there is no middle ground" in the
war against Al-Shabaab, he addressed to Somali people as well as the Somali stakeholders,
including AMISOM. In this section of the article, I will examine whether the
presence of AMISOM in Somalia hinders the peace process in the country or helps.
On the 19th of January 2007, the first battalion of the African
Union Mission in Somalia AMISOM from Uganda arrived on our soil with the UN
Security Council mandate of six-month authorization to counter the militant
group al-Shabaab. Fifteen years fast-forward, on the one hand, the size and
equipment of AMISOM increased. But, on the other hand, instability,
assassinations, car bombs, and suicide attacks skyrocketed. Originally a tiny
peacekeeping force of Ugandan soldiers, AMISOM has since expanded in size
and the capacity of the mandate and is now encompassed an estimated 22,000
soldiers from Burundi, Djibouti, Ethiopia, Kenya, and Uganda, not to mention
thousands of security experts, African police forces and other foreign military
advisers.
According
to Paul. D. Williams (2018), the author of Fighting for Peace in
Somalia: A History and Analysis of the African Union Mission (AMISOM),
2007-2017, in the beginning, AMISOM "…force was never, from the
outset, a peacekeeping operation, but rather a war-fighting and
counter-insurgency operation. In 2010-11 AMISOM was engaged in urban warfare
against Al-Shabaab in Mogadishu, sustaining and inflicting casualties at a
level that no UN force would have been prepared to do," he said.
Undoubtedly, as Williams (an academic and scholar of Somalia) argued, AMISOM,
from the start, had achieved some victories against al-Shabaab, especially in
the battle of Mogadishu 2010-11, forcing al-Shabaab to withdraw from the
capital.
On
the other hand, according to Williams, AMISOM had encountered some challenges,
such as; a lack of coordination between the military units of AMISOM dispersed
throughout the capital and surroundings. Williams stated that the idea of
AMISOM was "…to develop the Somali National Army (SNA) as their national
counterpart, to the extent that it would be able to take over responsibility
for national security including defeating Al-Shabaab". However,
according to Williams, the SNA has indicated slight possibilities for
accomplishing this, hindered "by the more local loyalties of its
commanders [tribalism], corruption, and political divisions within the Somali
government". Moreover, in a recent interview with the Foreign Policy, one
Ugandan AMISOM colonel said: "[the peacekeeping operation in] Somalia is
like cleaning a pig, you clean it, and it gets dirty [again]." These
failures and the lack of progress from the Somalis' part also makes the AMISOM
contingent to have failed to form an integrated army with standard military
training, doctrines, and command. Although AMISOM lacked the mandate to protect
civilians, they are obliged under the international humanitarian law
obligations to protect civilians. However, due to the lack of guidance, commanders
and troops on the ground were left to make decisions on when and how to use
force. According to Harley Henigson (2018), a scholar of Somalia, the preliminary
plans to develop protection of civilians (POC) hampered efforts to defeat al-Shabaab.
This
led AMISOM to neither fight al-Shabaab nor protect civilians but prioritize
government institutions and staff protection. The inclusion of old foes of
Somalia, such as Kenya and Ethiopia, and the allegation of Sexual Exploitation
and Abuse (SEA) has turned many Somalis to distrust the African Union's mission
in Somalia, Henigson argued. According to Henigson, life is hard to live under
the harsh policies of al-Shabaab; some Somalis prefer to live in al-Shabaab-governed
areas to AMISOM and FGS-ruled because they believe that Al-Shabaab-controlled
areas are safer than government ruled provinces. It is explicitly clear that the solution to
our problems does not lie with foreigners like AMISOM or any other entity.
Although comparisons sometimes mislead, ISIS came out long after al-Shabaab
established itself and has proven to be stronger than al-Shabaab in the military,
financial, and personnel. Yet, they were defeated in a short time. Someone may
argue that the US and Russia defeated ISIS. That is half the truth of what
happened in Iraq and Syria to defeat ISIS. Yes, Americans and the Russians
provided air support, but the Iraqi troops on the ground were the ones that
fought ISIS tooth and nail, street by street, and eventually cleared ISIS
fighters from their country one by one. In stark contrast, the terrorist group al-Shabaab
is flourishing in Somalia, particularly in some places in the South of Somalia
and the Northeast mountains in Puntland State; it seems their resources,
especially their human resource is unlimited. Don't we have to ask ourselves
why we cannot break Al-Shabaab's supply chains?
Destroying
Al-Shabaab's chain of supply
Second,
we must cut and disrupt the terrorists' chain of recruitment supplies by
controlling madrasas, masjids, and all learning and worshipping places.
According to reports, Al-Shabaab has a long list of youngsters who wants to be
suicide bombers. In recent experiences from Iraq and other places, terrorists
cannot be defeated only with military assault. We must ask ourselves; do we
have a strategy to defeat Al-Shabaab other than a military one? Have we
prepared an ideological war against the group? Because Al-Shabaab has an
ideology, to beat them, military assaults alone may win us a battle but will
not win us the war, which is crucial. Since 1991, the collapse of the National
Central Government of Somalia, the country became an experimental ground where
Islamist ideologies are tested. Extreme doctrines and peculiar interpretations
of Islam that Somalis were not familiar with have been imported into Somalia by
several Islamist groups.
With
foreign money and support, these groups established schools, colleges, and
universities of their own, with each group teaching the curriculum of the group
that financed them. Some of these schools teach the curriculum of Saudi Arabia,
and some teach Egyptian and UAE curricula. As a result, these schools produced
and still produce Egyptians, Saudis or Emiratis who know more about the history
and geography of these countries than their own country (Somalia). Because of
the lack of a stable government that controlled, filtered, and united national
curriculums, thus, some of these schools took advantage of the country's
situation and taught children very much of the same ideology of Al-Shabaab,
albeit a theoretical one.
Therefore,
once these children grow up and graduate, Al-Shabaab recruiters are on hand
outside the schools to recruit them. All Al-Shabaab needs to do is to apply the
finishing touches and use the new graduates as suicide bombers and killers of
innocent people because the jihadist ideology is already instilled in them. To
my knowledge, until today, nobody inspects these schools and colleges which
operate across the nation. Also, neither the Federal Government of Somalia nor
the regional administrations have any power or accountability over these
schools. These schools, in my opinion, represent the supply chain of human
resources of Al-Shabaab. Therefore, we must inspect and closely monitor what
the schools teach our children to defeat Al-Shabaab. The war on terror in
Somalia should start from the grassroots, and it is a waste of lives and
resources if we do not accompany our bullets with educational reforms. We
should fight the terrorists with bullets on the one hand and control the
education system on the other.
Similarly,
no one controls the ideas spread in our mosques; the Ministry of Islamic
Affairs is responsible for insinuating what is being taught in our mosques. We
do not need any extremist views, Somalia is a Muslim country, and according to
historians, Islam reached Somalia before it reached Medina. Therefore, we
should never stand behind anyone, whomever it may be when it comes to Islam. But,
by and large, if we do not gain control over our mosques and schools, we should
kiss goodbye to our peace and life aspirations. The battle against Al-Shabaab
should start in schools and mosques if we are to defeat this heartless
enemy.
In
the final analysis, President Hassan is right that there is no middle ground
for fighting and defeating Al-Shabaab, as it is every Somalis' job—and everyone
must contribute to whatever they can in the struggle—no more harbouring the
terrorists or collaborating with their poisonous ideas. Somalis must know that
we will never be able to defeat Al-Shabaab until, first, we are all united and
work together. Second, we must reclaim our schools and mosques and cleanse them
from all sorts of extremist agendas and ideologies. Third, AMISOM must withdraw
on short notice, as it is obvious that they are not willing to fight
Al-Shabaab, and they cannot achieve now what they could not do in fourteen
years. The president's remarks are apparent to Somalis and all stakeholders in
Somalia; you are either with the Somali people or terrorists; there is no
middle ground.
Abdiaziz Arab
Emai: [email protected]