U.S. Slows Anti-Terrorist Campaign in Somalia as It Considers New Policy
On Jan. 19, a U.S. aircraft opened fire on a
vehicle driving near Jamaame, Somalia, killing a commander of the Islamist
militant group al-Shabaab, the local al Qaeda affiliate.
That mission and another the same day brought to
203 the number of airstrikes former President Donald Trump carried out in
Somalia during his term in office, according to military records.
On Jan. 20, Joe Biden was sworn in as president.
Since then, there hasn’t been a single U.S. airstrike on al-Shabaab.
The U.S. war against al-Shabaab, conducted largely
behind a veil of secrecy since 2007, remains in limbo as Mr. Biden weighs his
national-security priorities and wrestles with the last-minute decisions of his
predecessor.
“We’re committed to Somalia,” said a senior U.S.
official. “What exactly that will look like is still under discussion.”
In the final weeks of his presidency, Mr. Trump
ordered a hurried withdrawal of roughly 650 U.S. special-operations and other
troops from Somalia, where they had been training an elite local commando unit
to fight al-Shabaab. The military moved most American troops to neighboring
Djibouti and Kenya, sites within commuting distance of Somali government
training camps.
Mr. Trump’s decision has constrained Mr. Biden’s
options in the strategic Horn of Africa, the geographic intersection of
valuable Red Sea shipping routes, U.S.-China competition for business and
influence, and the sprawling, post-Sept. 11 American War against Islamist
militants.
Mr. Biden’s administration is conducting a global
review of American troop deployments overseas. Among the decisions the
president faces: Whether to put troops back into Somalia, a country that seems
distant to many Americans and where the 1993 Black Hawk Down episode left 18
U.S. soldiers dead on the streets of Mogadishu.
Mr. Biden also confronts the question of whether
to resume airstrikes against al-Shabaab, the militant group that emerged from
the chaos that followed that previous U.S. misadventure in Somalia.
A Somali army spokesman declined to comment on the
country’s security situation. A government spokesman didn’t respond to a
request for comment.
In 2017, Mr. Trump declared parts of Somalia
“areas of active hostility” and authorized offensive operations against
al-Shabaab. U.S. Africa Command, based in Stuttgart, Germany, could approve
airstrikes, with a good deal of authority given to the counterterrorism task
force and special-operations commanders inside Somalia.
The airstrikes fell into two categories: Planned
strikes on key al-Shabaab leaders, and urgent close-air support for American or
allied troops in firefights against militants.
“In Somalia a little air power goes a long way,”
said a former senior U.S. commander. “Al-Shabaab will always quit the
battlefield if they feel there’s an air power capability.”
With U.S. troops no longer stationed alongside
their Somali allies, there have been no close-air support missions since Mr.
Biden’s inauguration.
Planned airstrikes against top leaders, directed
by the counterterrorism task force, now require signoff from Washington,
according to defense officials. Five months into his term, Mr. Biden has yet to
order a single one.
An Africa Command spokeswoman declined to explain
the reasons behind the lull in airstrikes. A Pentagon spokesman declined to say
whether field commanders had sought approval for strikes or whether the
president has to sign off personally on such requests.
“It is common for the U.S. government to pull
kinetic strike authorities back to the highest level of decision makers
following a change in administration,” said Maj. Gen. William Zana, commander
of the U.S.-led task force in the Horn of Africa. “Militarily, we benefit from
having those authorities passed back down to a level which is sufficiently
agile and operationally effective.”
U.S. commanders see rising militant violence in
Somalia in the context of surging security threats from Islamist militants across
a swath of Africa, especially in the Sahel, a band of semiarid land that runs
East-West through Mali, Burkina Faso and Niger.
Groups aligned with al Qaeda and Islamic State
carried out 1,170 attacks in the Sahel last year, up from 92 in 2016, according
to data from the Armed Conflict Location & Event Data Project assembled by
the Pentagon-funded Africa Center for Strategic Studies. Militants killed more
than 4,200 people in the Sahel last year and conducted 278 attacks in the first
three months of this year, the center reported.
In 2017, four U.S. servicemen and five Nigerien
troops were killed in an ambush in Niger carried out by militants from the
Islamic State of the Greater Sahara.
The U.S. maintains a reconnaissance drone base and
other forces in Niger. American troops in June completed ground, air and sea
exercises with counterparts from Morocco, Senegal and Tunisia, including a
simulated attack across the desert with armor, infantry and a B-52 bomber.
U.S. troops are only authorized to use lethal
force in self-defense in the Sahel; France takes the lead in providing
offensive combat assistance to beleaguered governments there.
For years, the U.S. made Somalia its primary focus
in Africa.
Al-Shabaab’s “leaders have called for attacks on
Americans, not only in the region, but in the world and in the U.S. homeland,”
Gen. Stephen Townsend, head of U.S. Africa Command, said after the military
exercises in Morocco. “I believe we should take these threats seriously.”
Last year, al-Shabaab fighters attacked U.S.
forces posted to a Kenyan military base in Manda Bay, near the Somali border.
An American soldier, Spc. Henry J. Mayfield, Jr., and two U.S. civilian
contractors were killed.
American troops at Manda Bay were training Kenyan
soldiers for anti-al Shabaab operations in Somalia under the auspices of the
African Union.
Early this month, al-Shabaab claimed
responsibility for a suicide bombing that targeted police and intelligence
officials who frequent tea shops at an intersection in Mogadishu, according to
retired Somali Col. Ahmed Abdullahi, former commander of the country’s
special-forces brigade, and a militant pronouncement monitored by SITE
Intelligence Group.
The group last month seized control of the town of
Wisil, a strategic crossroads in central Somalia.
“The lack of strikes now has really emboldened al-
Shabaab a lot,” said Col. Abdullahi, who is now a security consultant for
diplomats working in Somalia.
He said he hoped Mr. Biden would put a smaller
American force back into Somalia to train local commandos. He argued that the
U.S. should resume airstrikes, but more selectively target high-level
al-Shabaab commanders so as not to create resentment among ordinary Somalis.
Human Rights Watch and Amnesty International have
alleged that U.S. airstrikes have repeatedly killed or injured civilians, and
that the U.S. military has done an inadequate job of investigating those cases.
U.S. soldiers in 2020 boarded a plane in Camp
Lemonnier, Djibouti, headed toward a Kenyan military base in Manda Bay
following an al-Shabaab terrorist attack there.
U.S. Africa Command says it is diligent in
investigating allegations of civilian deaths, including a report that the Jan.
19 airstrike killed a noncombatant. Military investigators concluded that the
only casualty was the al-Shabaab commander the airstrike was intended to kill.
In a written statement that accompanied that
investigation, Gen. Townsend said, “We will continue to refine our processes to
ensure our partners and the public recognize our commitment to minimizing
civilian casualties whenever possible.”
The military is still investigating allegations
that a Jan. 1 airstrike injured three civilians.
Efforts by the U.S., the African Union and their
allies to help stabilize Somalia have been frustrated by clan rivalries and
political skirmishing between the powerful states and the central government.
In some areas of rural Somalia, al-Shabaab is the
de facto government. U.S. officials calculate that al-Shabaab collects about
$130 million in “taxes” from these areas each year, an amount equivalent to
about 20% of the budget of the Somali federal government.
“Somalia is just a mess, and it will continue to
be a mess,” said Air Brig. Gen. Stéphane Dupont, commander of French forces in
the region.
Most of the U.S. troops previously stationed in
Somalia are now among the 4,000 or so U.S. personnel at Camp Lemonnier in
neighboring Djibouti, which shares linguistic and cultural ties with Somalia.
While awaiting orders from Mr. Biden, U.S. special-operations troops commute
from Djibouti into Somalia to train and supervise the local commandos.
The base is the largest U.S. position in Africa
and houses an East Africa Response Force on call for embassy evacuations and
other emergencies. Specialists at a military crime lab at the camp try to
identify al-Shabaab bomb makers by examining explosives residue, fingerprints,
DNA and other evidence from attacks.
U.S. trainers conduct infantry drills with
Djibouti’s 400-man Rapid Intervention Battalion, and American personnel fly
drones, both armed and unarmed, over Somalia from a base near Djibouti’s
capital.
Djibouti has largely avoided al-Shabaab violence,
despite its alliance with the U.S. An exception was in 2014 when an al-Shabaab
operative in a black robe blew herself up in the middle of the dining room at
La Chaumière restaurant, a spot popular with foreigners. Another attacker threw
a hand grenade toward a pair of German diners, according to the restaurant’s
owner.
Two people died, plus the attackers themselves.
Djibouti was a French colony until 1977, and
France still keeps an army battalion and Mirage jets in the country to assist
in its defense.
The U.S. camp in Djibouti sits about 5 miles from
China’s first overseas base, a port facility that Western officials says is
being expanded to handle an aircraft carrier. China’s presence, and the large
infrastructure projects Beijing is sponsoring in Djibouti, add a backdrop of
great-power competition to the counterterrorism campaign that absorbs the Horn
of Africa.
“If someone comes and brings investment, we’ll
roll out the red carpet,” said Youssef Moussa Dawaleh, president of the
Djibouti Chamber of Commerce.
Gen. Zana said it was too early to know whether
the U.S. withdrawal to Djibouti has worsened Somalia’s security. But, he added,
“I don’t know that anyone would assert that the situation has improved as a
result of this decision.”