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Somalia, if I recalled

 

E. Ablorh-Odjidja, Ghanadot

December 28, 2006

 

As the world awaits the outcome on Iraq, perhaps, it will be best to look at what is not happening in Somalia today.

 

Somalia’s self-immolation started during the late 1980s.  President Said Barre had seized power in 1969 and had ruled with an iron fist.  In 1977, he started a war with Ethiopia and lost.

 

That event and the decision to do so was to cause him the vital support of the Soviet Union.

 

In 1991, Said Barre was overthrown by a coalition force of Somalia clans led by Mohammed Farah Aidid.  But the coalition was thrown into disarray, as each of the three major clans went on separate ways to rampage for power, leading to the current civil war and famine. 

 

The war between the coalition members worsened the socio-economic conditions in Somalia, which led the UN to send a humanitarian mission in 1992 to provide relief under Resolution 794. 

 

The US was brought in to protect the UN mission. Bush the elder was the president of the U.S. then.

 

Before Bush senior left office after 1992, he had sent 25,000 US troops to Somalia. But as soon as Clinton came to the presidency in 1993, he had a different goal in mind.

 

Then came the firefight in Mogadishu in October 1993, called “Black Hawk Down,” in which US Rangers tried to capture Aidid and failed, And the US as a consequence suffered numerous casualties. 

 

Clinton had a change of heart after the tragedy of “Black Hawk Down” and started drawing down the US total troops’ strength.

 

But a few weeks later, Clinton had another change of heart. 

 

He then ordered more troops to Somalia.  He said at the press conference held for the occasion that the mission was "to protect our troops and to complete our mission," as reported by the Los Angeles Times on October 8, 1993.

 

Clinton’s objective, the Los Angeles Times reported, for “the new deployment was to give the Somalis a reasonable prospect of survival in conditions of near-anarchy and factional warfare.”

 

Regardless, within six months Clinton had what he called “exit strategy” for Somalia; as opposed to what is seen as Bush (junior) has no “exit strategy for Iraq because he had no plan before the invasion,” according to the press.

 

Historians will have to decide whether this call for "six months" withdrawal was a classic case of “cut and run” or not; coming after the “Black Hawk Down” debacle.

 

Whether Clinton, by his exit strategy, gave Somalia “a reasonable” chance for survival with his “six months” short time can be debated.  But the clear fact is that Somalia has continued to this day as a completely failed state after the American troops left Somalia.

 

Somalia has been in a constant state of war with itself since the pullout; a fact which is completely at odds with Clinton’s promise for Somalia.

 

So, some 14 years after the initial US and UN combined intervention, the damage in Somalia continues.  Islamic warlords who recently pushed the interim government of Somalia out of the capital of Mogadishu have also been driven out.

 

Now Ethiopia, a neighbor to the West, is caught in the fray in an attempt to help loosen the Islamic stranglehold on Somalia.

 

Even the AU, which is usually timid when it comes to internal affairs of member countries, has been forced to support openly Ethiopia’s incursion into Somalia; thus, raising the possibility that the whole region, impoverished as it is already, may suffer further misery through a wider war.

 

Back in 1993, Clinton’s stance on America’s involvement in any conflict was to reject all calls for America to "cut and run," as he described it.

 

"Do we leave when the job gets tough or when the job is well done?” Clinton asked rhetorically in emphasis to his commitment to conflicts overseas; same as President Bush is doing on Iraq today.

 

“Do we invite the return of mass suffering or do we leave in a way that gives the Somalis a decent chance to survive?"

 

Substitute Somalia for Iraq in this statement and you would hear the same “stay the course” promise that Bush was to make about Iraq.

 

Yet, for Clinton and for all the bluster, the pullout from Somalia was quick but not the consequence. 

 

The war did not end and the conflict continued because there was no controlling authority in the country, a country that could have survived with massive credible support from the world, if not from the US.

 

However, the lesson that was not learned in Somalia has been repeated in Iraq.

 

Who to blame?  Not the General Assembly of the UN, nor its then Secretary-General Mr. Kofi Annan.  Blame the Security Council with its veto power that often cripples the world’s resolve.

 

In the case of Iraq, indeed, the mission “was accomplished” as Bush said. Saddam was removed from power.

 

But the “Mission accomplished” was derided by Bush’s detractors.  They wanted Bush’s failure in Iraq more so than his success; all in the interest of their hidden agendas.   

 

Their attitude colors the ongoing mission in Iraq and is the major reason that the effort to establish peace in Iraq has become a drawn-out fiasco in that war-torn country.

 

Nine years after “Black Hawk Down,” a US ranger who saw action in Somalia was to write about his experience in the Wall Street Journal:

 

“I will always regret how, with the enemy on the run and at such terrible cost, we were prevented from re-arming, kitting up, and finishing the task.”

 

Another writer, however, was not so charitable. Mark Bowden, the author of “Black Hawk Down” wrote that Clinton “lacked the kind of moral personal force that it took to persuade Congress and the American people that even though this (war) is not popular, we have to do it.”

 

The character of the personality in the presidential office always determines the political outcome of these foreign interventions.  Whether the president will allow others, set in their quest for power, override his considered objective for a particular outcome is the question.

 

It has been some 13 years since “the cut and run” policy was tried in Somalia.  So, what is in store for Iraq now?

 

E. Ablorh-Odjidja, December 28, 2006, Washington, DC.

 

 

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