Somalia - The Most Dangerous Place
in the World
by Jeffrey Gettleman
www.foreignpolicy.com/, March/April
2009
Somalia is a state governed only by anarchy.
A graveyard of foreign-policy failures, it has known just six
months of peace in the past two decades. Now, as the country's
endless chaos threatens to engulf an entire region, the world
again simply watches it burn.
When you land at Mogadishu's international
airport, the first form you fill out asks for name, address, and
caliber of weapon. Believe it or not, this disaster of a city,
the capital of Somalia, still gets a few commercial flights. Some
haven't fared so well. The wreckage of a Russian cargo plane shot
down in 2007 still lies crumpled at the end of the runway.
Beyond the airport is one of the world's
most stunning monuments to conflict: block after block, mile after
mile, of scorched, gutted-out buildings. Mogadishu's Italianate
architecture, once a gem along the Indian Ocean, has been reduced
to a pile of machine-gun-chewed bricks. Somalia has been ripped
apart by violence since the central government imploded in 1991.
Eighteen years and 14 failed attempts at a government later, the
killing goes on and on and on-suicide bombs, white phosphorus
bombs, beheadings, medieval-style stonings, teenage troops high
on the local drug called khat blasting away at each other and
anything in between. Even U.S. cruise missiles occasionally slam
down from the sky. It's the same violent free-for-all on the seas.
Somalia's pirates are threatening to choke off one of the most
strategic waterways in the world, the Gulf of Aden, which 20,000
ships pass through every year. These heavily armed buccaneers
hijacked more than 40 vessels in 2008, netting as much as $100
million in ransom. It's the greatest piracy epidemic of modern
times.
In more than a dozen trips to Somalia
over the past two and a half years, I've come to rewrite my own
definition of chaos. I've felt the incandescent fury of the Iraqi
insurgency raging in Fallujah. I've spent freezing-cold, eerily
quiet nights in an Afghan cave. But nowhere was I more afraid
than in today's Somalia, where you can get kidnapped or shot in
the head faster than you can wipe the sweat off your brow. From
the thick, ambush-perfect swamps around Kismayo in the south to
the lethal labyrinth of Mogadishu to the pirate den of Boosaaso
on the Gulf of Aden, Somalia is quite simply the most dangerous
place in the world.
The whole country has become a breeding
ground for warlords, pirates, kidnappers, bomb makers, fanatical
Islamist insurgents, freelance gunmen, and idle, angry youth with
no education and way too many bullets. There is no Green Zone
here, by the way-no fortified place of last resort to run to if,
God forbid, you get hurt or in trouble. In Somalia, you're on
your own. The local hospitals barely have enough gauze to treat
all the wounds.
The mayhem is now spilling across Somalia's
borders, stirring up tensions and violence in Kenya, Ethiopia,
and Eritrea, not to mention Somalia's pirate-infested seas. The
export of trouble may just be beginning. Islamist insurgents with
al Qaeda connections are sweeping across the country, turning
Somalia into an Afghanistan-like magnet for militant Islam and
drawing in hard-core fighters from around the world. These men
will eventually go home (if they survive) and spread the killer
ethos. Somalia's transitional government, a U.N.-santioned creation
that was deathly ill from the moment it was born four years ago,
is about to flatline, perhaps spawning yet another doomed international
rescue mission. Abdullahi Yusuf Ahmed, the old war horse of a
president backed by the United States, finally resigned in December
after a long, bitter dispute with the prime minister, Nur Hassan
Hussein. Ostensibly, their conflict was about a peace deal with
the Islamists and a few cabinet posts. In truth, it may be purely
academic. By early this year, the government's zone of control
was down to a couple of city blocks. The country is nearly as
big as Texas.
Just when things seem as though they can't
get any worse in Somalia, they do. Beyond the political crisis,
all the elements for a full-blown famine-war, displacement, drought,
skyrocketing food prices, and an exodus of aid workers-are lining
up again, just as they did in the early 1990s when hundreds of
thousands of Somalis starved to death. Last May, I stood in the
doorway of a hut in the bone-dry central part of the country watching
a sick little boy curl up next to his dying mother. Her clothes
were damp. Her breaths were shallow. She hadn't eaten for days.
"She will most likely die,'' an elder told me and walked
away.
It's crunch time for Somalia, but the
world is like me, standing in the doorway, looking in at two decades
of unbridled anarchy, unsure what to do. Past interventions have
been so cursed that no one wants to get burned again. The United
States has been among the worst of the meddlers: U.S. forces fought
predacious warlords at the wrong time, backed some of the same
predacious warlords at the wrong time, and consistently failed
to appreciate the twin pulls of clan and religion. As a result,
Somalia has become a graveyard of foreign-policy blunders that
have radicalized the population, deepened insecurity, and pushed
millions to the brink of starvation.
Somalia is a political paradox-unified
on the surface, poisonously divided beneath. It is one of the
world's most homogeneous nation-states, with nearly all of its
estimated 9 to 10 million people sharing the same language (Somali),
the same religion (Sunni Islam), the same culture, and the same
ethnicity. But in Somalia, it's all about clan. Somalis divide
themselves into a dizzying number of clans, subclans, sub-subclans,
and so on, with shifting allegiances and knotty backstories that
have bedeviled outsiders for years.
At the end of the 19th century, the Italians
and the British divvied up most of Somalia, but their efforts
to impose Western laws never really worked. Disputes tended to
be resolved by clan elders. Deterrence was key: "Kill me
and you will suffer the wrath of my entire clan." The places
where the local ways were disturbed the least, such as British-ruled
Somaliland, seem to have done better in the long run than those
where the Italian colonial administration supplanted the role
of clan elders, as in Mogadishu.
Somalia won independence in 1960, but
it quickly became a Cold War pawn, prized for its strategic location
in the Horn of Africa, where Africa and Asia nearly touch. First
it was the Soviets who pumped in weapons, then the United States.
A poor, mostly illiterate, mainly nomadic country became a towering
ammunition dump primed to explode. The central government was
hardly able to hold the place together. Even in the 1980s, Maj.
Gen. Mohamed Siad Barre, the capricious dictator who ruled from
1969 to 1991, was derisively referred to as "the mayor of
Mogadishu" because so much of the country had already spun
out of his control.
When clan warlords finally ousted him
in 1991, it wasn't much of a surprise what happened next. The
warlords unleashed all that military-grade weaponry on each other,
and every port, airstrip, fishing pier, telephone pole-anything
that could turn a profit-was fought over. People were killed for
a few pennies. Women were raped with impunity. The chaos gave
rise to a new class of parasitic war profiteers-gunrunners, drug
smugglers, importers of expired (and often sickening) baby formula-people
with a vested interest in the chaos continuing. Somalia became
the modern world's closest approximation of Hobbes's state of
nature, where life was indeed nasty, brutish, and short. To call
it even a failed state was generous. The Democratic Republic of
the Congo is a failed state. So is Zimbabwe. But those places
at least have national armies and national bureaucracies, however
corrupt. Since 1991, Somalia has not been a state so much as a
lawless, ungoverned space on the map between its neighbors and
the sea.
In 1992, U.S. President George H.W. Bush
tried to help, sending in thousands of Marines to protect shipments
of food. It was the beginning of the post-Cold War "new world
order," when many believed that the United States, without
a rival superpower, could steer world events in a new and morally
righteous way. Somalia proved to be a very bad start. President
Bush and his advisors misread the clan landscape and didn't understand
how fiercely loyal Somalis could be to their clan leaders. Somali
society often divides and subdivides when faced with internal
disputes, but it quickly bands together when confronted by an
external enemy. The United States learned this the hard way when
its forces tried to apprehend the warlord of the day, Mohammed
Farah Aidid. The result was the infamous "Black Hawk Down"
episode in October 1993. Thousands of Somali militiamen poured
into the streets, carrying rocket-propelled grenades and wearing
flip-flops. They shot down two American Black Hawk helicopters,
killing 18 U.S. soldiers and dragging the corpses triumphantly
through the streets. This would be Strike One for the United States
in Somalia.
Humiliated, the Americans pulled out and
Somalia was left to its own dystopian devices. For the next decade,
the Western world mostly stayed away. But Arab organizations,
many from Saudi Arabia and followers of the strict Wahhabi branch
of Sunni Islam, quietly stepped in. They built mosques, Koranic
schools, and social service organizations, encouraging an Islamic
revival. By the early 2000s, Mogadishu's clan elders set up a
loose network of neighborhood-based courts to deliver a modicum
of order in a city desperate for it. They rounded up thieves and
killers, put them in iron cages, and held trials. Islamic law,
or sharia, was the one set of principles that different clans
could agree on; the Somali elders called their network the Islamic
Courts Union.
Mogadishu's business community spotted
an opportunity. In Mogadishu, there are warlords and moneylords.
While the warlords were ripping the country apart, the moneylords,
Somalia's big-business owners, were holding the place together,
delivering many of the same services-for a tidy profit, of course-that
a government usually provides, such as healthcare, schools, power
plants, and even privatized mail. The moneylords went as far as
helping to regulate Somalia's monetary policy, and the Somali
shilling was more stable in the 1990s-without a functioning central
bank-than in the 1980s when there was a government. But with their
profits came very high risks, such as chronic insecurity and extortion.
The Islamists were a solution. They provided security without
taxes, administration without a government. The moneylords began
buying them guns.
By 2005, the CIA saw what was happening,
and again misread the cues. This ended up being Strike Two.
In a post-September 11 world, Somalia
had become a major terrorism worry. The fear was that Somalia
could blossom into a jihad factory like Afghanistan, where al
Qaeda in the 1990s plotted its global war on the West. It didn't
seem to matter that at this point there was scant evidence to
justify this fear. Some Western military analysts told policymakers
that Somalia was too chaotic for even al Qaeda, because it was
impossible for anyone-including terrorists-to know whom to trust.
Nonetheless, the administration of George W. Bush devised a strategy
to stamp out the Islamists on the cheap. CIA agents deputized
the warlords, the same thugs who had been preying upon Somalia's
population for years, to fight the Islamists. According to one
Somali warlord I spoke with in March 2008, an American agent named
James and another one named David showed up in Mogadishu with
briefcases stuffed with cash. Use this to buy guns, the agents
said. Drop us an e-mail if you have any questions. The warlord
showed me the address: no_email_today@yahoo.com.
The plan backfired. Somalis like to talk;
the country, ironically, has some of the best and cheapest cellular
phone service in Africa. Word quickly spread that the same warlords
no one liked anymore were now doing the Americans' bidding, which
just made the Islamists even more popular. By June 2006, the Islamists
had run the last warlords out of Mogadishu. Then something unbelievable
happened: The Islamists seemed to tame the place.
I saw it with my own eyes. I flew into
Mogadishu in September 2006 and saw work crews picking up trash
and kids swimming at the beach. For the first time in years, no
gunshots rang out at night. Under the banner of Islam, the Islamists
had united rival clans and disarmed much of the populace, with
clan support of course. They even cracked down on piracy by using
their clan connections to dissuade coastal towns from supporting
the pirates. When that didn't work, the Islamists stormed hijacked
ships. According to the International Maritime Bureau in London,
there were 10 pirate attacks off Somalia's coast in 2006, which
is tied for the lowest number of attacks this decade.
The Islamists' brief reign of peace was
to be the only six months of calm Somalia has tasted since 1991.
But it was one thing to rally together to overthrow the warlords
and another to decide what to do next. A rift quickly opened between
the moderate Islamists and the extremists, who were bent on waging
jihad. One of the most radical factions has been the Shabab, a
multiclan military wing with a strict Wahhabi interpretation of
Islam. The Shabab drove around Mogadishu in big, black pickup
trucks and beat women whose ankles were showing. Even the other
Islamist gunmen were scared of them. By December 2006, some of
the population began to chafe against the Shabab for taking away
their beloved khat, the mildly stimulating leaf that Somalis chew
like bubble gum. Shabab leaders were widely rumored to be working
with foreign jihadists, including wanted al Qaeda terrorists,
and the U.S. State Department later designated the Shabab a terrorist
organization. American officials have said that the Shabab are
sheltering men who masterminded the bombings of the U.S. embassies
in Kenya and Tanzania in 1998.
Somalia may indeed have sheltered a few
unsavory characters, but the country was far from the terrorist
hotbed many worry it has now become. In 2006, there was a narrow
window of opportunity to peel off the moderate Islamists from
the likes of the Shabab, and some U.S. officials, such as Democratic
Rep. Donald M. Payne, the chairman of the House subcommittee on
Africa, were trying to do exactly that. Payne and others met with
the moderate Islamists and encouraged them to negotiate a power-sharing
deal with the transitional government.
But the Bush administration again reached
for the gunpowder. The United States would not do much of the
fighting itself, since sending large numbers of ground troops
into Somalia with Iraq and Afghanistan raging would have been
deemed insane. Instead, the United States anointed a proxy: the
Ethiopian Army. This move would be Strike Three.
***
Ethiopia is one of the United States'
best friends in Africa, its government having carefully cultivated
an image as a Christian bulwark in a region seething with Islamist
extremism. The Ethiopian leadership savvily told the Bush administration
what it wanted to hear: The Islamists were terrorists and, unchecked,
they would threaten the entire region and maybe even attack American
safari-goers in Kenya next door.
Of course, the Ethiopians had their own
agenda. Ethiopia is a country with a mostly Christian leadership
but a population that is nearly half Muslim. It seems only a matter
of time before there is an Islamic awakening in Ethiopia. On top
of that, the Ethiopian government is fighting several rebel groups,
including a powerful one that is ethnically Somali. The government
feared that an Islamist Somalia could become a rebel beachhead
next door. The Ethiopians were also scared that Somalia's Islamists
would team up with Eritrea, Ethiopia's archenemy, which is exactly
what ended up happening.
Not everyone in Washington swallowed the
Ethiopian line. The country has a horrendous human rights record,
and the Ethiopian military (which receives aid for human rights
training from the United States) is widely accused of brutalizing
its own people. But in December 2006, the Bush administration
shared prized intelligence with the Ethiopians and gave them the
green light to invade Somalia. Thousands of Ethiopian troops rolled
across the border (many had secretly been in the country for months),
and they routed the Islamist troops within a week. There were
even some U.S. Special Forces with the Ethiopian units. The United
States also launched several airstrikes in an attempt to take
out Islamist leaders, and it continued with intermittent cruise
missiles targeting suspected terrorists. Most have failed, killing
civilians and adding to the boiling anti-American sentiment.
***
The Islamists went underground, and the
transitional government arrived in Mogadishu. There was some cheering,
a lot of jeering, and the insurgency revved up within days. The
transitional government was widely reviled as a coterie of ex-warlords,
which it mostly was. It was the 14th attempt since 1991 to stand
up a central government. None of the previous attempts had worked.
True, some detractors have simply been war profiteers hell-bent
on derailing any government. But a lot of blame falls on what
this transitional government has done-or not done. From the start,
leaders seemed much more interested in who got what post than
living up to the corresponding job descriptions. The government
quickly lost the support of key clans in Mogadishu by its harsh
(and unsuccessful) tactics in trying to wipe out the insurgents,
and by its reliance on Ethiopian troops. Ethiopia and Somalia
have fought several wars against each other over the contested
Ogaden region that Ethiopia now claims. That region is mostly
ethnically Somali, so teaming up with Ethiopia was seen as tantamount
to treason.
The Islamists tapped into this sentiment,
positioning themselves as the true Somali nationalists, and gaining
widespread support again. The results were intense street battles
between Islamist insurgents and Ethiopian troops in which thousands
of civilians have been killed. Ethiopian forces have indiscriminately
shelled entire neighborhoods (which precipitated a European Union
investigation into war crimes), and have even used white phosphorous
bombs that literally melt people, according to the United Nations.
Hundreds of thousands of people have emptied out of Mogadishu
and settled in camps that have become breeding grounds for disease
and resentment. Death comes more frequently and randomly than
ever before. I met one man in Mogadishu who was chatting with
his wife on her cellphone when she was cut in half by a stray
mortar shell. Another man I spoke to went out for a walk, got
shot in the leg during a crossfire, and had to spend seven days
eating grass before the fighting ended and he could crawl away.
It's incredibly dangerous for us journalists,
too. Few foreign journalists travel to Somalia anymore. Kidnapping
is the threat du jour. Friends of mine who work for the United
Nations in Kenya told me I had about a 100 percent chance of being
stuffed into the back of a Toyota or shot (or both) if I didn't
hire a private militia. Nowadays, as soon as I land, I take 10
gunmen under my employ.
By late January, the only territory the
transitional government controlled was a shrinking federal enclave
in Mogadishu guarded by a small contingent of African Union peacekeepers.
As soon as the Ethiopians pulled out of the capital, vicious fighting
broke out between the various Islamist factions scrambling to
fill the power gap. It took only days for the Islamists to recapture
the third-largest town, Baidoa, from the government and install
sharia law. The Shabab are not wildly popular, but they are formidable;
for the time being they have a motivated, disciplined militia
with hundreds of hard-core fighters and probably thousands of
gunmen allied with them. The violence has shown no signs of halting,
even with the election of a new, moderate Islamist president-one
who had, ironically, been a leader of the Islamic Courts Union
in 2006.
If the Shabab do seize control of the
country, they might not stop there. They could send their battle-hardened
fighters in battered four-wheel-drive pickup trucks into Ethiopia,
Kenya, and maybe even Djibouti to try to snatch back the Somali-speaking
parts of those countries. This scenario has long been part of
an ethereal pan-Somali dream. Pursuit of that goal would internationalize
the conflict and surely drag in neighboring countries and their
allies.
The Shabab could also wage an asymmetric
war, unleashing terrorists on Somalia's secular neighbors and
their secular backers-most prominently, the United States. This
would upend an already combustible dynamic in the Horn of Africa,
catalyzing other conflicts. For instance, Ethiopia and Eritrea
fought a nasty border war in the late 1990s, which killed as many
as 100,000 people, and both countries are still heavily militarized
along the border. If the Shabab, which boasts Eritrean support,
took over Somalia, we might indeed see round two of Ethiopia versus
Eritrea. The worst-case scenario could mean millions of people
displaced across the entire region, crippled food production,
and violence-induced breaches in the aid pipeline. In short, a
famine in one of the most perennially needy parts of the world-again.
The hardest challenge of all might be
simply preventing the worst-case scenario. Among the best suggestions
I've heard is to play to Somalia's strengths as a fluid, decentralized
society with local mechanisms to resolve conflicts. The foundation
of order would be clan-based governments in villages, towns, and
neighborhoods. These tiny fiefdoms could stack together to form
district and regional governments. The last step would be uniting
the regional governments in a loose national federation that coordinated,
say, currency issues or antipiracy efforts, but did not sideline
local leaders.
Western powers should do whatever they
can to bring moderate Islamists into the transitional government
while the transitional government still exists. Whether people
like it or not, many Somalis see Islamic law as the answer. Maybe
they're not fond of the harsh form imposed by the Shabab, who
have, on at least one occasion, stoned to death a teenage girl
who had been raped (an Islamic court found her guilty of adultery).
Still, there is an appetite for a certain degree of Islamic governance.
That desire should not be confused with support for terrorism.
A more radical idea is to have the United
Nations take over the government and administer Somalia with an
East Timor-style mandate. Because Somalia has already been an
independent country, this option might be too much for Somalis
to stomach. To make it work, the United Nations would need to
delegate authority to clan leaders who have measurable clout on
the ground. Either way, the diplomats should be working with the
moneylords more and the warlords less.
But the problem with Somalia is that after
18 years of chaos, with so many people killed, with so many gun-toting
men rising up and then getting cut down, it is exceedingly difficult
to identify who the country's real leaders are, if they exist
at all. It's not just Mogadishu's wasteland of blown-up buildings
that must be reconstructed; it's the entire national psyche. The
whole country is suffering from an acute case of post-traumatic
stress disorder. Somalis will have to move beyond the narrow interests
of clans, where they have withdrawn for protection, and embrace
the idea of a Somali nation.
If that happens, the work will just be
beginning. Nearly an entire generation of Somalis has absolutely
no idea what a government is or how it functions. I've seen this
glassy-eyed generation all across the country, lounging on bullet-pocked
street corners and spaced out in the back of pickup trucks, Kalashnikovs
in their hands and nowhere to go. To them, law and order are thoroughly
abstract concepts. To them, the only law in the land is the business
end of a machine gun.
Jeffrey Gettleman is East Africa bureau
chief for the New York Times.
In Somalia: Economy Without a State (Bloomington:
Indiana University Press, 2003), Peter D. Little explains how
Somali moneylords have maintained their profits. I.M. Lewis's
classic, A Modern History of the Somali: Nation and State in the
Horn of Africa (Athens: Ohio University Press, 2002), offers a
solid background on 20th-century Somali history. "Africa's
Revolutionary Deficit" (Foreign Policy, July/August 2007),
by Jeremy M. Weinstein, argues that war in Africa costs so little
that it's anyone's game.
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