Al-Shabaab compensates for internal losses with random border operations to prove its existence
Al-Shabaab in Somalia has recently
suffered a significant decline with material and human losses. During the past
six months, the terrorist group lost half of the lands it previously
controlled, perhaps the most prominent of which is Galmudug region, one of the
most important regions in Somalia, according to the Somali army.
The terrorist movement lost large
parts in central and southern Somalia. These areas represented important
strategic strongholds from which the movement's elements withdrew after major
confrontations with the Somali army and African forces.
Withdrawing from the cities and
regions in which the movement enters into confrontations with the other side is
one of the most important strategies that the group resorts to in order to
preserve part of its elements as a human force.
Plan to survive
In order for the terrorist movement
to survive as long as possible, it resorted to several plans, including
ambushes and mobile attacks, where ordinary citizens cannot move between cities
and areas controlled by government forces without being subjected to ambushes
or attacks by Al-Shabaab.
The movement also imposed a complete
siege on these cities, which means that the areas that the government considers
liberated are for Al-Shabaab traps set for the African and government forces.
The second thing that the movement
follows is that it is currently stealing homes and agricultural crops, as well
as imposing royalties on the residents of the areas they control.
Due to the financial conditions in
Somalia, Al-Shabaab managed to recruit a large number of men and youth to
gather information in return for small amounts of money, and through them it
was able to escape from many checkpoints and carry out some minor operations.
Activity abroad
Because of the restrictions on
Al-Shabaab at home and because of its continuous losses, the movement has
tended to launch attacks on the external borders since 2018, especially Kenya,
where it has intensified its terrorist operations.
Mohamed Hussein, professor of
political science at Cairo University, said that due to Al-Shabaab's internal
losses, it has tended to launch attacks abroad, but mainly to pressure the
governments of African countries that participate in Somalia in its war on
terrorism against it, especially Kenya, which is one of the strongest African
countries that participate with Somalia in its war against the movement, so the
movement constantly launches terrorist attacks against the country.
Hussein stressed in an exclusive
statement to the Reference that the second matter is that the movement wants to
preserve its organizational structure, so it continues to expose its internal
losses with victories abroad, and it does not want to be considered minor
compared to the competing terrorist organizations in Africa, such as ISIS, Boko
Haram and al-Qaeda.