Why Civil War is About to Erupt in Somalia

The “Black Hawk Down” episode and the piracy depicted in the film “Captain Phillips” continue to shape the American image of Somalia. For years, such perceptions have been unfair. Between 2010 and 2014, there were more than 350 pirate attacks or attempted attacks; over the next five years, there were eight; most piracy today occurs in the Gulf of Guinea, where 90 percent of kidnappings at sea now occur. Garowe, the capital of the Puntland state that I had the opportunity to visit last month, is secure. Business flourishes. Construction is constant. Locals and visitors both walk around the city or take advantage of its coffee shops and restaurants without security. Under the presidency of Sheikh Ahmed Madobe, Kismayo, the commercial capital of the Jubaland state, is also reportedly booming, even if its countryside is less secure than Puntland’s.
The national capital Mogadishu,
however, remains a mess. Somalis, of course, bear ultimate responsibility for
Mogadishu’s insecurity and decline, but much blame also rests on the international
community and the tendency both in Washington and at the United Nations to
confuse money spent with effectiveness. Since 1991, the international community
has invested more than $50 billion in Somalia. Most of that money was wasted.
This should never have been a surprise John Drysdale, who spent much of his
career in Somalia, was fluent in Somali, advised several Somali prime
ministers, warned in his history of the region, “Opportunism, being the ancient
key to Somali survival in savannah conditions, could be readily turned by
recent generations of urban dweller to the exploitation of alien moneybags.”
The theory was reality. Transparency International has consistently ranked
Somalia to be the world’s most corrupt country. While U.S. Ambassador Donald
Yamamoto and James Swan, a former U.S. diplomat who now heads up the local UN
mission, have lobbied both for aid and debt relief in order to build patronage
for and empower the central government, the problem is that such a strategy has
never worked in Somalia. Mohamed Abdullahi Farmaajo, whom Yamamoto and Swan
have extra-constitutionally sought to empower, has used the resources provided
to him to punish political competitors rather than fight terrorists or build
the country.
Farmaajo’s four-year term expired
two weeks ago after he had for months undermined the integrity of elections
that might have replaced him. While the Somali president asserted the right to
an extension as some of his predecessors received in order to arrange new
elections, Farmaajo acted unilaterally rather than build broad consensus for
the move. The opposition balked and called for peaceful protests in central
Mogadishu but Farmaajo’s forces fired on crowds that included his chief
competitors.
On February 21, Puntland President
Said Abdullahi Deni, who has distinguished himself as among Somalia’s most
effective and mature political leaders, addressed Somalia’s current situation.
He warned bluntly that Farmaajo’s behavior and the international community’s
tolerance for it could return Somalia to the chaos of the 1990s. The United
States, United Nations, European Union, and African Union have all supported a
federal model in Somalia that would balance regional and central government.
Deni argued that Farmaajo has unilaterally abrogated this. Frankly, he is
right: Yamamoto and Swan have both sought to empower the individual at the
expense of the system. The Puntland leader warned that Farmaajo has threatened
to use the Turkish-trained Gorgor special forces and Harimocad special police,
both of which he had previously deployed against political enemies, but Deni
said that he would not give in and he has forces that will protect his regional
government. Indeed, Deni pointed out that since Farmaajo took office, Somalia’s
special forces only do battle with political critics but not the al-Shabaab
terrorist group that they were created to counter.
The credibility of the
international community is at stake. Deni said that when he and other regional
leaders warn Yamamoto, Swan, and other ambassadors about their concerns or seek
assistance to stop Farmaajo’s violations of previous agreements, the
international community simply refers to the sanctity of the Sept. 17 agreement
in which Farmaajo and Somalia’s five Federal Member States agreed to an
indirect model for the forthcoming elections. Deni noted, however, that
Farmaajo had refused to uphold his end of the agreement. Mediation always fails
when one side violates agreements with impunity. Regardless, Deni said that the
issue is no longer the Sept. 17 agreement, but rather the lack of the agreement
during the summit in Dhusamareb on Feb. 1-6, 2021, summit and Farmaajo’s use of
force against the opposition.