Somalia Introduction
Figure 1. Administrative Divisions of Somalia, 1992
President George Bush visits United States forces in Somalia, January 1, 1993.
Courtesy Unidet States Department of Defense
United Nations secretray general Boutros Boutros-Ghali inspects UN forces from Pakistan in mid-January 1993
Courtesy Unidet States Department of Defense
Somali men unloading wheat outside Malaile, January 1993
Courtesy Unidet States Department of Defense
Sorghum destined for Baidoa being unloaded from British C-130 Hercules aircraft, January 1993
Courtesy Unidet States Department of Defense
Russian personnel unload some prefabricated roofs for shelters
Courtesy Unidet States Department of Defense
United States Marines escort UN food convoy,, January 1993
Courtesy Unidet States Department of Defense
Somali villagers line up to receive food provided by UN
Courtesy Unidet States Department of Defense
Somalis wait near their water bottles, January 1993
Courtesy Unidet States Department of Defense
Children gather along a wall in Mogadishu
Courtesy Unidet States Department of Defense
United States Navy doctor examines a Somali enfant, January 1993.
Courtesy Unidet States Department of Defense
THE PEOPLE WHO LIVE in present-day Somalia have an ancient
history. The medieval Arabs called them Berberi, and
archaeological evidence indicates that they had occupied the area
known as the Horn of Africa by 100 A.D. and possibly earlier. By
the eighteenth century, the Somalis--their name derives from
Samaal, their eponymous ancestor--had developed pastoral nomadism
and were followers of Islam. Their first contact with Islam is
believed to have occurred when a group of persecuted Muslims from
Arabia sought refuge in the region at the time of the Prophet
Muhammad in the eighth century. Historically, the area was home
to two peoples: pastoral and agropastoral groups living in the
interior, with informal and varied political structures; and
trading communities on the coast, such as Seylac and Berbera in
the north and Merca and Mogadishu in the south, that developed
administrative and legal systems based on the Muslim sharia.
The Somalis or Samaal consist of six major clan-families.
Four of the families are predominantly pastoral--the Dir,
Daarood, Isaaq, and Hawiye (representing about 70 percent of
Somalia's population)--and two are agricultural--the Digil and
Rahanwayn (constituting about 20 percent of the population). The
remainder of the population consists of urban dwellers and
marginal non-Samaal groups, most of whom engage in trade or
crafts and who historically have lacked political participation
and the Samaal warrior tradition.
The Digil and the Rahanwayn are located mainly in the south in
the area between the Jubba and Shabeelle rivers, the best
agricultural area. The rest of the country consists primarily of
arid plateaus and plains, with some rugged mountains in the north
near the Gulf of Aden coast. Because of sparse rainfall, nomadic
pastoralism has been the principal occupation of clan-families in
much of the country.
Historically, Somalis have shown a fierce independence, an
unwillingness to submit to authority, a strong clan
consciousness, and conflict among clans and subclans despite
their sharing a common language, religion, and pastoral customs.
Clans are integral to Somali life. Clan consciousness has been
described as centering around the struggle for recognition in all
its forms--social, political, economic, and cultural rights and
status. Despite this clan consciousness, the Somali community
historically preserved its basic unity because of the relative
homogeneity of the society.
Over the centuries, the Somali Peninsula and the East African
coast were subject to various rulers, including the Omanis, the
Zanzibaris, the sharifs of Mukha in present-day Yemen, and the
Ottoman Turks. By 1885, there were five mini-Somalilands: the
north central part controlled by the British; the east and
southeast (mainly present-day Djibouti) controlled by the French;
the south, controlled by the Italians; the Ogaden in the west
controlled by Ethiopia; and the southwestern part that became a
part of Kenya (known as the Northern Frontier District). This
colonial control continued in various forms until Somalia gained
its independence in 1960.
The British and Italians followed different courses in their
colonial administration. The British regarded northern Somalia
mainly as a source of livestock for Aden, the principal supply
post en route to India through the Suez Canal, whereas the
Italians developed plantation agriculture based bananas, citrus
fruits, and sugarcane in southern Somalia. Between 1900 and 1920,
while Italy and Britain were consolidating their colonial rule, a
Muslim resistance movement arose under Mahammad Abdille Hasan,
whom the British called the Mad Mullah. Until he died in 1920,
Abdille Hasan, a member of the Salihiyah brotherhood, and his
followers constituted a dervish group that waged war originally
against Ethiopia, and later against the British, seeking to
regain the Ogaden for Somalis.
Early in World War II, Italy invaded British Somaliland and
ejected the British. British forces retook the colony in 1941 and
conquered Italian Somaliland and the Ogaden as well, placing all
three areas under British military administration. The Potsdam
Conference in 1945 decided not to return Italian Somaliland to
Italy; ultimately, the matter was referred to the United Nations
(UN) General Assembly, which decided in 1949 to make the southern
area an Italian trust territory. Meanwhile, under pressure from
its World War II allies, Britain returned the Ogaden to Ethiopia
in 1948, to the dismay of Somalis because the majority of the
inhabitants were Somalis.
Nationalism had been growing in Somalia, largely as a result
of the efforts of salaried Somali colonial officials who
constituted an urban petty bourgeoisie. In 1943 the first Somali
political party, the Somali Youth Club, was created. In 1947 the
group changed its name to the Somali Youth League (SYL) and
adopted the goals of unifying all Somali territories and opposing
clannishness. Partly in response to nationalist pressures, both
the Italians and the British took steps to improve education and
health facilities, spur economic development, and give Somalis
some experience in the political process.
Somalia's independence in 1960 faced several obstacles.
Economically, the country was obliged to rely on Italian and
British subsidies; it also had to obtain other foreign loans to
build an infrastructure and to create model farms and livestock
improvement programs, all designed to increase exports. Other
major obstacles included clan-family and subclan rivalries, the
irredentist pressures to incorporate Somalis living in the
various mini-Somalilands, and differences between residents of
British and Italian Somaliland. These differences were of two
main kinds: economic (pastoral nomadism with its tending of
flocks as opposed to plantation agriculture) and political
(northern Somalis were less experienced in administration and
political participation than their counterparts in the south).
Furthermore, the new Somali constitution did not include
strategies designed to move citizens away from clan loyalties and
toward national objectives. For example, the Iise clan of the Dir
clan-family had devised a system by which the smallest clan was
given a special role: that of providing the overall clan leader
and also of being responsible for settling disputes. Such an
approach could have served as a model for the Western framers of
the Somali constitution.
As a result of clan-family dissensions, one of the major
objectives of the Somali government after independence became
that of national integration. This objective was accompanied by
the efforts of the first president, Abdirashiid Ali Shermaarke,
to promote a Greater Somalia. In seeking to distance itself from
its colonial past, the new government cultivated relations with
the Soviet Union and Eastern Europe. Soviet influence prevailed,
particularly in the armed forces, and later the German Democratic
Republic (East Germany) established the National Security Service
(NSS). The police force, however, was trained primarily by the
Federal Republic of Germany (West Germany) and the United States.
The 1969 elections for the National Assembly demonstrated the
Somali characteristic of independence: sixty-four political
parties participated, some of them as small as one man. The SYL,
however, dominated the field. The elections revealed that various
groups, especially the military, had become increasingly critical
of government corruption and nepotism.
The October 1969 killing of President Shermaarke by one of
his bodyguards led the army, which had previously avoided
political participation, to take over under army commander Major
General Mahammad Siad Barre. The new governing body, the Supreme
Revolutionary Council (SRC), named Siad Barre president.
Retroactively, to facilitate continued Soviet aid, the SRC
indicated it was pursuing scientific socialism, although Somalia
lacked the infrastructure appropriate to Marxist socialism. Among
the new government's objectives were breaking up the old regions
(administrative units) into smaller entities and resettling many
of the nomads in farming and fishing cooperatives. The government
also sought to promote nationalist and socialist goals by
appointing "peacekeepers" to replace the traditional elders and
by creating various committees in place of traditional clan
groups. With reference to the legal system, Siad Barre
eliminated codes that gave clans land, water, and grazing rights.
He also abolished the Islamic payment of blood money
(diya) for injuries. Presumably, all these steps were
designed to break down the traditional clan structure and
strengthen the personal control of Siad Barre, as well as to
weaken the role of religious leaders.
Although Siad Barre proclaimed scientific socialism
compatible with Islam, his regime attempted to reduce the
influence, particularly in politics, of Muslim leaders.
Historically, clans had relied on itinerant religious teachers
and on religiously devout males, known as wadaddo, who
generally were the only literate individuals and who often
occupied judicial roles. These religious functions were
supplemented by Sufi religious orders or brotherhoods, whose
leaders were more learned than the wadaddo. The best known
of the latter was Mahammad Abdille Hasan, the early twentieth-
century leader of the revolt against the British. In the first
half of the twentieth century, religious teachers provided most
of Somali education through Quranic schools that gave minimal
literacy instruction. A major difficulty was the absence of an
agreed-upon orthography for the Somali language until the
government decreed one in 1973. The government undertook a huge
literacy campaign thereafter and established numerous primary
schools, some secondary schools, and a university. As of 1990,
Somalia had 4,600 university students.
Whereas in its early years the SRC devoted considerable
attention to such fields as education and economics, later a
major part of its activity related to the political sphere.
Despite the SRC's denunciation of clannishness, the clans
connected with Siad Barre and his family became sufficiently
prominent to be dubbed the MOD (Mareehaan-Ogaden-Dulbahante--the
name of Siad Barre's clan, his mother's clan, and his son-in-
law's clan, respectively). Initially, the SRC outlawed political
parties, but in 1976 Siad Barre dissolved the SRC (it was later
revived) and created one national party, the Somali Revolutionary
Socialist Party (SRSP). The party in practice occupied a largely
ceremonial position; actual power remained with Siad Barre.
To entrench his personal rule and in an attempt to regain the
Ogaden, Siad Barre launched the Ogaden War against Ethiopia in
1977. The war officially ended in 1978 but low-level conflict
continued with border raids and skirmishes for years afterward.
Somalia experienced defeat and the death of 8,000 men, the influx
of about 650,000 ethnic Somali and Ethiopian Oromo refugees, and
a severe drain on its economy. The economic drain was caused by
the purchase of military matériel to replace equipment lost in
the war--three-quarters of Somalia's armored units and one-half
of its air force. Having lost its alliance with the Soviet Union,
which shifted its support to Ethiopia during the war, Somalia
sought military aid from the United States. The latter, following
the fall of the shah of Iran in 1979, was eager to bolster
defenses in the Persian Gulf-Indian Ocean area. As a result, in
return for the United States provision of arms and military
training in 1980 the United States and Somalia concluded a
military access agreement by which the United States could use
Somali ports and airfields in the event of a crisis. The
expansion of its armed forces, which grew from 5,000 troops at
independence to 65,000 in 1990, also sapped Somalia's economy;
for example, 30 percent of the national budget went for the
military in the mid-1980s.
To develop the economy, in the early years of his regime Siad
Barre launched several development plans, created agricultural
and fishing cooperatives, and began establishing food processing
plants. Somalia's foreign debt, however, increased at a
tremendous rate as a result of the 1977-78 Ogaden War. Unable to
call on the Soviet Union for aid, the Siad Barre regime turned
for economic aid to the West, to oil-producing Arab states such
as Kuwait, Qatar, Saudi Arabia, and the United Arab Emirates, and
to the
World Bank (see Glossary). The economic crisis forced
Somalia to devalue its currency and to encourage privatization.
Economic output from agriculture and manufacturing, however,
showed little progress and in some cases declined, partly as a
result of intermittent droughts. The country lacked any energy
sources, apart from wood and charcoal, despite surveys that
indicated the likelihood of oil offshore in the Gulf of Aden.
Moreover, its transportation and communications networks were
minimal. In addition to livestock and agricultural products,
which have constituted the bulk of Somalia's exports, the country
did have a number of undeveloped sectors, however. Among the
chief of these were forestry (myrrh and frankincense were among
Somalia's exports), fishing, and mineral deposits, including
uranium.
Following the Ogaden War, Siad Barre recognized that to gain
Western support he needed to create a political system that would
appear to restore many civil rights that had been eliminated by
the military regime. Accordingly, the constitution of 1979
provided for freedom of speech, religion, publication, and
assembly, but these rights were subject to major qualifications.
The constitution made the president both head of state and head
of government, with broad powers to conduct foreign affairs,
serve as commander in chief of the armed forces, appoint various
ministers and leading officials, and dissolve the legislature.
Members of a single-chamber legislature, the People's Assembly,
served a five-year term, with the government drawing up official
lists of candidates and the assembly occupying a largely symbolic
position. On the local government level, Siad Barre had dissolved
all elected bodies following the military coup and required that
all candidates for election be approved by the central
government. The constitution confirmed the National Security
Courts introduced by Siad Barre; these courts had jurisdiction
over numerous cases and supplemented the regular courts. Siad
Barre appointed only military officers to the High Court, thus
bringing the judiciary under the executive.
Another result of the Ogaden War was the rise of several
organized internal opposition movements. To counter them, Siad
Barre undertook increasingly repressive measures, including
measures that involved numerous human rights violations. After
judging a number of Majeerteen members of the military guilty of
a coup attempt in 1978, Siad Barre initiated a campaign against
the clan-family, using the Red Berets, an elite unit that served
as his bodyguard. Several Majeerteen colonels escaped and fled
abroad, where in 1978 they formed the Somali Salvation Front,
renamed in 1979 the Somali Salvation Democratic Front (SSDF).
This was the first opposition movement dedicated to overthrowing
the regime by force.
Siad Barre then turned on the Isaaq in the north, who were
discontented because they felt inadequately represented in his
government. Isaaq dissidents in London had formed the Somali
National Movement (SNM) in 1981 to topple Siad Barre's regime. In
1982 they transferred their headquarters to Dire Dawa, Ethiopia,
from where they conducted guerrilla raids against Somali
government-held territory. Siad Barre's campaign against the
Isaaq was particularly bloody; it included the 1988 destruction
by bombing of Hargeysa, Somalia's major northern city, causing
the flight to neighboring countries of tens of thousands of
refugees. Next, Siad Barre attacked the Hawiye in the central
area around Mogadishu. The Hawiye had meanwhile formed their own
opposition movement, the United Somali Congress (USC), which
received support from the SNM.
Siad Barre thus progressively alienated an increasing number
of clans, including some, such as the Ogaden, that originally had
given him strong support. The Ogaden blamed him for Somalia's
defeat in the Ogaden War and opposed his 1988 peace treaty and
resumption of diplomatic relations with Ethiopia. As a result of
Siad Barre's actions, many Ogaden officers deserted from the army
and joined the Somali Patriotic Movement (SPM), an opposition
group that had been formed in 1985 and that also received SNM
support.
The various opposition groups waged relatively intense
warfare against the national army during Siad Barre's final three
years in office and gained control of extensive government areas:
the SNM in the northwest, the USC in the center, and the SPM in
the south. Africa Watch reported that 50,000 unarmed civilians
were killed in the course of Siad Barre's various reprisals
against the Majeerteen, Isaaq, and Hawiye. Thousands more died of
starvation resulting from the poisoning of waterwells and the
slaughtering of cattle. In addition, hundreds of thousands sought
refuge outside the country.
Following a July 1989 demonstration in Mogadishu in which
about 450 persons were killed by government forces, leaders from
various sectors of society, representing all clan-families,
formed the Council for National Reconstruction and Salvation to
press for political change. In May 1990, they published a
manifesto calling for Siad Barre's resignation, the establishment
of an interim government representing opposition movements, and a
timetable for multiparty elections. Siad Barre ordered the arrest
of the 114 signatories, but the security forces could only locate
45 persons. Foreign protests over their detention forced their
release. Meanwhile, the opposition groups recognized the need to
hold talks among themselves to coordinate strategy; time,
however, did not allow mutual trust to develop.
Opposition forces defeated Siad Barre's regime on January 27,
1991. Long before the government collapsed, however, the armed
forces, the police force, the People's Militia, government
ministries, and institutions such as the People's Assembly,
schools, and health facilities, for all practical purposes, had
ceased to operate. Siad Barre fled Mogadishu, and, after a stay
in Kenya, ultimately sought refuge in Nigeria. The USC announced
the formation of a provisional government in February 1991, with
Ali Mahdi Mahammad of the Hawiye clan-family as president and
Umar Arteh Ghalib, of the Isaaq clan-family, as prime minister.
However, former army commander General Mahammad Faarah Aidid
opposed Mahammad's presidency and eventually split off to form
his own USC faction. The provisional USC government created a
Ministry of Constitutional Affairs charged with planning a
constitutional convention and revising the constitution.
Meanwhile, provisions of the constitution of 1979 that had not
been specifically voided by the provisional government remained
in force. The provisional government also announced its intention
of restoring judicial independence.
The USC's establishment of a provisional government angered
other opposition groups who felt they had not been consulted. In
the subsequent clashes, the SSDF and the SPM aligned themselves
against the USC. In the course of the fighting, control of
various towns such as Chisimayu and Baidoa changed hands several
times. A number of cease-fires were announced between early April
1991 and the latter part of 1992, but none remained in effect
long.
Meanwhile, in the north the SNM refused to participate in the
unity talks proposed by the USC. In May 1991, the SNM proclaimed
the Republic of Somaliland as an interim government, pending 1993
elections, and decreeing the sharia as its legal base. As of
early 1993, the Republic of Somaliland had not been recognized by
any foreign government. Moreover, the government has proved
ineffective in establishing its authority throughout the region
of former British Somaliland that it claims to control.
In the Mogadishu area, each of the opposition groups drew
support from a particular clan and each resorted to arms to
further its claims. The result was disintegration of government,
civil society, and essential services by September 1991 if not
earlier. Serious fighting in Mogadishu began in September 1991,
intensified in November, and by the end of March 1992 was
estimated by Africa Watch to have caused 14,000 deaths and 27,000
wounded. Mahammad, a member of the Abgaal clan of the Hawiye
clan-family and leader of one USC faction that had a force of
about 5,000 fighters, gained control of northern Mogadishu. He
was challenged primarily by Faarah Aidid, of the Habar Gidir clan
of the Hawiye, who led a USC faction of about 10,000 guerrillas
that advocated cooperation with the SNM. During 1991 and 1992,
outside parties, such as Djibouti, the League of Arab States, the
Organization of African Unity, the Islamic Conference, and the
United Nations made numerous unsuccessful attempts to end the
fighting in Mogadishu.
The situation in the country as a whole deteriorated rapidly,
as a result not only of the civil war but also of the drought in
central and southern Somalia that left hundreds of thousands
starving. By August 1992 Somali refugees were reliably estimated
at 500,000 in Ethiopia, 300,000 in Kenya, 65,000 in Yemen, 15,000
in Djibouti, and about 100,000 in Europe. The civil war destroyed
Somalia's infrastructure and brought all economic activities,
apart from minimal subsistence agriculture, herding, and internal
trade, to a virtual halt. Following an official visit to Somalia
in early August 1992 by Muhammad Sahnoun, the UN Special
Representative, and Bernard Kouchner, the French minister of
health and humanitarian affairs, an estimate was released that
approximately one-fourth of the population, about 1.5 million
people, was in danger of death by starvation--other estimates ran
as high as one-third of the population. A United States Centers
for Disease Control study further showed that in the city of
Baidoa at least 40 percent of the August 1992 population had died
between August 9 and November 14; relief organizations estimated
that as of September 25 percent of all Somali children under five
years of age had died.
The problem of food distribution to the starving was
aggravated by armed bandits, frequently under the influence of
qat, a mild stimulant known to increase aggressiveness, that was
grown in several areas of East Africa. These bandits, who
recognized no authority except occasionally that of local
warlords, looted warehouses in Mogadishu and other major centers
as well as shipments of food to the interior. The rise of local
warlords, who controlled the cities, including harbors and
airports, as opposed to traditional clan leaders, clan councils,
and clan-recruited militias in the hinterland, was a relatively
new phenomenon in Somali society. Their rise has been attributed
to the breakdown of central government authority and the lack of
strong, well-organized opposition parties. The availability of
vast quantities of arms in the country from earlier Soviet and
United States arming of Somalia (between the early 1980s and mid-
1990, the United States provided Somalia with US$403 million in
military aid), from the large caches of arms gained in gray and
black markets, and from the cross-border trade, particularly in
ammunition, as well as the military training that the Siad Barre
regime required all school and college graduates and civil
servants to undergo further facilitated the rise of warlords.
In response to this critical situation, UN secretary general
Boutros-Ghali announced in early August that he would send UN
soldiers to Somalia to protect food supplies. In mid-August
United States president George Bush ordered a food air lift to
Somalia. In implementation of his earlier pledge to protect food
aid convoys, on August 28 Boutros-Ghali authorized sending 3,500
personnel in addition to a 500-man Pakistani force already
authorized for Somalia.
After a number of delays resulting from the opposition of
local warlords, on November 10 Pakistani units were allowed to
take control of Mogadishu airport. Meanwhile, on November 21 the
United States National Security Council decided to intervene in
Somalia. It did so because of the scale of human disaster and the
realization that the United States was the only nation perceived
by Somalis and by the regional states as being in a position to
maintain neutrality and with the ability to launch such a large-
scale aid operation. The first United States military units in
Operation Restore Hope arrived in Mogadishu on December 9. They
were joined by elements of the French Foreign Legion from
Djibouti with others from Belgium, Canada, Egypt, Italy, Saudi
Arabia, and Turkey expected. To avoid contact with the foreign
forces, Somali armed groups and their "technicals" (vehicles on
which an automatic weapon had been mounted) began leaving
Mogadishu, thus exacerbating security problems in the hinterland.
United States forces and those of their allies gradually
branched out from the airport and harbor of Mogadishu to the
surrounding area. In succession they secured the Soviet-built
airport at Baledogle (halfway to Baidoa), Baidoa, and then
Chisimayu, Baardheere, Oddur, Beledweyne, and Jalalaqsi. The plan
entailed setting up food distribution centers in each of the
major areas affected by the famine and bringing in large
quantities of food so as to eliminate looting and hoarding. By
doing so, the operation would ensure that food was no longer a
"power chip," thereby eliminating the role of the warlords. As
the provision of food to southern Somalia reached massive
proportions, however, it became clear that as a result of the
August rains and resultant domestic crop production, it would be
necessary to sell some of the donated grain in local markets at a
suitable price in order to safeguard the livelihood of local
farmers in the hinterland.
The question of the security of food shipments proved a
difficult one with respect to disarming the population. The
commander in chief of the United States Central Command, Marine
General Joseph P. Hoar, announced on December 14 that the United
States would not disarm Somalis because the carrying of arms was
a political issue to be settled by Somalis. However, by January
7, 1993, after completing the first stage of Operation Restore
Hope, United States forces began to pursue "technicals" and raid
arms depots in order to safeguard the operation and protect
United States and allied personnel and Somali civilians.
In the second stage of the operation, United States political
officers also began coordinating town meetings in Mogadishu,
Baidoa, Baardheere, and Chisimayu, encouraging Somalis to set up
their own municipal institutions. Furthermore, United States
military personnel cleared streets and restored municipal water
systems. Observers noted that Somali women, who displayed a gift
for reconciliation, were playing key roles in operating many of
the food distribution centers established by nongovernmental
organizations.
Meanwhile, on the political level, in an effort to further
reconciliation, Aidid and Mahammad met several times, as arranged
by former United States ambassador to Somalia Robert B. Oakley,
who served as special presidential envoy. On December 28, the two
Somalis led a peace march along the Green Line separating the two
areas of Mogadishu controlled by their forces. Other factors
complicating a political settlement were the control of
Baardheere by Mahammad Siad Hersi Morgan, the son-in-law of Siad
Barre and leader of the Somali National Front, a Mareehaan
organization; and the control of Chisimayu by Colonel Ahmad Omar
Jess, a leader allied with the SDM and the Southern Somali
National Movement (SSNM). Jess was reliably reported to have
killed between 100 and 200 individuals whom he regarded as
potential enemies before United States forces reached Chisimayu.
As a symbol of support for United States forces and their
efforts in Somalia, President Bush arrived on New Year's Eve for
a one-day visit and received a warm welcome from Somalis. In
contrast, the UN secretary general faced an angry reception from
Somali crowds on January 3. The Somalis remembered Boutros-
Ghali's former cordial relationship with Siad Barre when Boutros-
Ghali served as Egyptian minister of foreign affairs. They also
faulted the UN for its long inaction in relieving the starvation
in Somalia; voluntary organizations, particularly the
International Committee of the Red Cross, had proved more
effective than the UN in sending food to Somalia and in setting
up kitchens to feed hundreds of thousands daily. Despite this
negative reception on January 4 the leaders of fourteen Somali
factions attended meetings in Addis Ababa chaired by the UN
secretary general at which the United States was represented.
After considerable discussion, on January 15 the faction leaders
signed a cease-fire agreement and a disarmament pact and called
for a national reconciliation conference to be held in Addis
Ababa on March 15. Despite the cease-fire, fighting and
instability in Somalia continued to exist in late January.
Because of the number of foreign forces that had joined
Operation Restore Hope--as of January 9 these numbered about
10,000--the first contingent of United States military personnel
began to leave Somalia on January 19. Overall, United States
forces were scheduled to remain at 25,000 in the immediate
future. The long-term goal was to turn over the operation as
rapidly as possible to a UN force; it was said that perhaps as
many as 5,000 United States logistical, transportation, and
engineering personnel might be assigned to the UN force.
With regard to Somalia's future, the role of Islamism,
sometimes referred to as fundamentalism, concerned the United
States and some of its allies. In the north, Islamic militants,
who were well trained and armed and supplied with funds primarily
by wealthy Saudis, had at one time controlled the town of Bender
Cassim in the northeast but had been driven out by the SSDF. From
Bender Cassim the Islamists spread westward into such SNM areas
as Hargeysa. Although Islamic militants, known as the Somali
Islamic Union or popularly as Ittihad (Union), had relatively few
supporters in Somalia, their numbers appeared to be increasing
somewhat. In the latter months of 1992 they became active in
Merca, the seaport south of Mogadishu, where they had sought an
alliance with clan leaders in the SSNM, which was aligned with
that section of the USC led by Faarah Aidid. Time would indicate
whether the Islamists could prove effective in providing services
that the government was not providing in such fields as education
and health. If so, the likelihood of their gaining followers
would increase greatly.
Other steps toward the creation of what President Bush termed
a "secure environment" included a discussion held in mid-January
between Aidid and Mahammad on reestablishing a police force. The
police force had traditionally commanded respect in Somalia, and
if such a force could be reconstituted initially in a number of
regions but ultimately nationally, it would help diminish the
power of the warlords and restore internal order. It was also
likely to strengthen the position of traditional clan elders.
Such steps would be consonant with the apparent goal of the UN
Security Council to create a national government in Somalia with
sufficient authority to maintain security but one that allowed
considerable autonomy to the various regions.
The situation with regard to the relationship of the self-
proclaimed Republic of Somaliland in the north and the rest of
Somalia in the south remained unclear. Most knowledgeable
observers noted that as yet there was no effective government in
the northern region that could negotiate with the remainder of
Somalia. Therefore, in the near future the establishment of
either a federation with Somalia or a unitary state combining the
two as in the past was unlikely.
January 29, 1993
Helen Chapin Metz
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