HOW TO END THE CIVIL WAR IN SOMALIA: NEGOTIATE WITH AL-SHABAAB, COMMENTARY REVEALS

When I worked in Somalia from 2016 to 2018 supporting
provision of military assistance to forces combating al-Shabaab, most
discussions with international partners acknowledged that our efforts could not
ultimately defeat the jihadist group. As part of the plan for transitioning
security responsibilities, the job of defeating al-Shabaab fell to the
fledgling Somali government, although we never clearly defined how the
government would achieve that end.
Even after punishing strikes, al-Shabaab has been able to
execute major operations in Kenya and Mogadishu in
recent months. The eventual departure of the African Union Mission to Somalia (AMISOM) and continued weakness of the Somali National Army leave grim prospects for a decisive
government victory over al-Shabaab. In light of diminishing returns from an
escalated military campaign, the United States needs to rethink its approach.
The U.S. intervention in
Somalia has focused on the tactics of the conflict – insurgency and terrorism – at the expense of viewing the
political violence in Somalia holistically. Faced with a weak Somali army and
overstretched partner in AMISOM, U.S. policymakers turned to the
counter-terrorism toolkit to arrest al-Shabaab’s gains in the past two years.
But this approach fails to see the conflict in Somalia for what
it is: another chapter in a civil war fought at varying intensities since the
end of the 1980s. As in many civil wars, rebel groups will resort to terrorism
based on a clear, if cruel, strategic logic.
If we accept that
al-Shabaab’s terrorist tactics are a symptom of the broader Somali civil war,
the most important security question for Somalia is not how to defeat
al-Shabaab, but rather, how to end a civil war.
Through this lens, the most
appropriate policy for the U.S. government is to pursue a negotiated settlement
ending the civil war driving al-Shabaab’s terrorist activities. To support
negotiations, the United States should reduce its military footprint in Somalia
and overall levels of military assistance as a signal that a counter-terrorism
campaign cannot end the conflict.
An amended approach that recognizes the
importance of political settlement between the federal government and
al-Shabaab should condition security assistance on political accommodations by
the Somali government, increase U.S. diplomatic presence to facilitate
negotiation, and ensure a sustainable presence of international forces to
provide credible security guarantees in a negotiated settlement.
Stalemate on the Battlefield
Since 2011, the combination
of a surge to 22,000 AMISOM troops, U.S. drone strikes, and hundreds of millions of dollars invested into the Somali National Army has successfully ejected
al-Shabaab from most major population centers. Yet these forces have been
unable to recover the group’s remaining strongholds in the south and central
regions of Somalia, as outlined in the Somali Transition Plan.
The Trump administration’s escalation of drone strikes has done
little to alter the basic stalemate that has existed since the last major AMISOM victories in Operation Indian Ocean and recovery of the towns of Dinsoor and Badheere in 2015. Since then, al-Shabaab
has recaptured a number of towns abandoned during the withdrawal of Ethiopian bilateral forces and severed the road connecting Mogadishu to the major inland city of Baidoa.
The group retains control of the town of Leego, which AMISOM and the Somali
government identified for recapture as part of the initial phase of transition almost a year ago.
AMISOM’s transition of
security responsibilities to the Somali government has largely stalled.
Prominent troop-contributing countries are threatening to leave the mission in the face of reductions of E.U. funding.
Despite the mission’s recent declarations that it had completed plans to initiate targeted offensive operations to support the transition process,
the long drought of offensive action does not spur confidence.
Additional casualties carry domestic political costs as Kenyan
politicians have called for bringing their troops home, while the Ugandan government swiftly investigated its operations in
Somalia in the aftermath of their losses. In light of these realities, caution
will likely to continue to carry the day, despite public statements to the
contrary.
The Somali National Army
remains a long way from presenting a long-term security solution in Somalia.
Efforts to build the national army offer a litany of cautionary tales about international
efforts to shape effective, responsible security institutions. Endemic corruption in Somalia is most salient in the security
sector, leading the U.S. State Department to suspend military assistance to non-mentored Somali forces in December 2017.
The army
has proven incapable of holding positions vacated by AMISOM, allowing
al-Shabaab to recapture abandoned AMISOM bases, as it did recently following Kenyan withdrawals.
When Ending a Civil War is More
Effective than Counter-Terror
Civil wars leave policymakers
with three potential outcomes – decisive victory, negotiated settlement, or
ongoing violence. Since Sept. 11, the prevalence of negotiated settlements has decreased over an unwillingness to negotiate
with organizations designated as terrorists.
The expansive language and vision
of the War on Terror led the U.S. government to perceive any insurgent group
that used terrorist tactics as a terrorist organization equivalent to al-Qaeda.
This dynamic was exacerbated as groups like al-Shabaab, which had only
conducted attacks inside Somalia prior to its designation as a terrorist
group, sought
alliance with the trans-national terrorist organization.
This has placed the United
States in the difficult position of attempting to reverse battlefield victories
won by Islamist insurgencies like al-Shabaab and its predecessor, the Islamic
Courts Union.
These groups have been successful not only because of greater
military prowess than government forces and warlord militias, but also because
of their more predictable and legitimate forms of justice.
Having lost large swaths of territory, al-Shabaab stitched itself within the fabric of Somali society, often lending the organization far
more legitimacy and credibility than the alternative presented by the Somali
government.
Al-Shabaab is well situated
to continue fighting in Somalia indefinitely. It enjoys robust and sustainable
domestic financing through effective taxation. Further, my own research shows that rebel organizations capable of employing
conventional and irregular forms of warfare decisively win civil wars far more
often than they lose. Al-Shabaab is a remarkably resilient
organization that
has sustained worse losses than those it is incurring as a result of escalated
U.S. drone strikes. Indeed, leading experts see
little evidence of the group’s imminent defeat. The inability to decisively
defeat al-Shabaab leaves only negotiated settlement or prolonged fighting and
the certainty of continued terrorist activity as plausible near-term outcomes
to the ongoing conflict.
Correcting Course to Align Means with
Realistic Ends
I am hardly the first to propose
negotiation with al-Shabaab. Limited research has found support for such an approach among the Somali populace and the idea has been discussed within political circles in Mogadishu and by scholars.
What has been missing from these discussions is a pathway to bring al-Shabaab
and the government to the negotiating table.
Al-Shabaab maintains a position of
some strength and may be willing to bet that its opponents will eventually tire
of the conflict, offering it an opportunity to achieve a decisive victory.
Although the organization has experienced some notable
defections, it has not openly sought negotiations and may entirely refuse a
negotiated approach. However, a credible long-term AMISOM presence along with
select U.S. military pressure could change al-Shabaab’s calculus if it becomes
clear it cannot wait out international support to the Somali government.
Al-Shabaab has never been offered an off-ramp from the conflict granting it a
role in government. If faced with an ongoing stalemate and continued loss of
senior leaders, the group could be receptive to negotiation as the best
available outcome.
The Somali government, which
has aggressively asserted its sovereignty, must take the lead in a negotiated settlement with the United
States and international community playing a supporting role. To encourage
negotiations, the United States must be clear that it will not support the
Somali government in the unattainable goal of decisively defeating al-Shabaab.
Negotiations would require a multi-step process of initial talks guided by clan
elders between the government and al-Shabaab, followed by broader negotiations
including the international community with U.N. facilitation.
The United States would need to take the lead in conducting
regional diplomacy and in the Security Council to build international support
for a negotiated settlement. The transnational nature of al-Shabaab’s threat
will require African Union and regional participation in final negotiations to
assure that a negotiated settlement provides security to Kenya, Uganda, and
Ethiopia.
The Somali government and Somali society must decide how to
reconcile with al-Shabaab’s past atrocities. An end to the conflict will need
to be settled through negotiation by equal parties that gives al-Shabaab a
future role in governance. This approach must not repeat the experience of
previous high-level al-Shabaab defectors. The Somali government arrested popular former al-Shabaab spokesman Mukhtar “Abu Mansur” Robow last December for violating the
conditions of his surrender after he entered a regional election.
This reaction offered a poor precedent for future accommodations
with al-Shabaab: Following Robow’s arrest, al-Shabaab leaders considering
disarming now have every reason to distrust the Somali government, while the
government has signaled that former al-Shabaab leaders will not be allowed a
role in politics. The Somali government could reverse this misstep by releasing
Robow and offering a clear path for his reintegration into society.
From America’s perspective, a
strategic approach to pursue a negotiated settlement would tie diplomatic,
military, and programmatic means to an achievable strategic end. Initially, the
U.S. government should rethink how it engages with insurgent organizations that use terrorist
tactics and
have been defined as foreign terrorist organizations.
Current legal
restrictions could prevent effective negotiation with the group and would
certainly limit programming available to incentivize negotiation. Until
de-listed, leaders of al-Shabaab would remain sanctioned by the United States
if elected to office and would be ineligible to receive U.S. government support
if they integrated into security institutions like the army or police.
Former al-Shabaab commander Ahmed Madobe currently occupies a regional government
post, signifying that the United States has been willing to overlook al-Shabaab
affiliations in the past. Obviously, any U.S. action to remove al-Shabaab’s
listing as a foreign terrorist organization should only follow the group’s
unconditioned agreement to a negotiated settlement and pledges to reject
terrorism.
Ultimately, if the United
States is serious about reducing military commitments left as vestiges from the
War on Terror, it will need to accept that political accommodations in civil
wars involving al-Qaeda-affiliated organizations that do not pose significant
threats to the homeland can be an effective means of reducing terrorism.
To be sure, Al-Shabaab has conducted regional attacks, but those
attacks targeted troop-contributing countries participating in combat
operations in Somalia. Moreover, they occurred as al-Shabaab lost territory,
which is often associated with a resort to terrorist attacks. Given the clear connection between al-Shabaab’s regional terrorist activity and the
civil war in Somalia, it is not unreasonable to think such attacks would end
through a negotiated settlement.
Rather than an increased
military presence, the United States must present an overt diplomatic presence in Somalia, which can help facilitate negotiations between
al-Shabaab and the government. Increasing diplomatic security spending for the
U.S. Mission to Somalia and allowing the ambassador and diplomatic staff to
travel off their compound on Mogadishu International Airport, as every other
major diplomatic mission currently does, is an important first step.
Denying al-Shabaab the
ability to decisively defeat the Somali government is critical to bringing the
group to the table. Military support to Somalia must be scaled in such a manner
that incentivizes al-Shabaab to negotiate by credibly demonstrating it cannot
wait out external intervention. This support includes external funding for
AMISOM, conditional security-sector assistance to the Somali government, and
limited U.S. military support.
AMISOM requires sustainable
funding for a force of at least 10,000 troops to secure key population centers
and potentially provide troops in a peace-keeping role to support localized
negotiated settlements. This number would be a dramatic reduction from the
current authorized force level of 20,626, but offers a middle ground of
providing sufficient force to guarantee the security of the federal government
and maintaining low enough numbers to ensure sustainable funding.
The European Union’s appetite for bearing the ongoing costs of maintaining AMISOM has
diminished, presenting a challenge to funding. But asking European allies to
continue bearing this security cost is precisely the type of burden-sharing the
Trump administration should be pursuing, rather than demanding payment for U.S. bases in Europe. Setting a significantly lower
troop level meets E.U. requests for reduced funding and provides predictability
to troop-contributing countries and European funders. If necessary, the U.S.
government should deploy points of leverage where it currently supports
European priorities in Africa, such as assistance to European forces in the Sahel, as a tool to incentivize the European
Union to continue this mutually beneficial burden-sharing agreement.
Although Somalia undoubtedly
requires security assistance, the United States should reduce spending that helps drive the
war economy and instead find a balance that moves away from the typical
largesse of U.S. military assistance while meeting the minimum requirements to
forestall al-Shabaab victory.
Bloated security assistance spending perpetuates conflict in Somalia as political-military elites traffic insecurity
for personal enrichment. The U.S. government alone has spent over
$2 billion combatting al-Shabaab in the past decade through security
assistance. The December 2017 pause in assistance to large portions of the
Somali army was an important step toward adopting a responsible approach to
security assistance.
Resumption of large-scale U.S. military assistance should
be tied to strict conditions based
on the federal government achieving key political accommodations with its
member states and between major clans, while reducing corruption levels.
Conditioning assistance on reduced corruption levels and maintaining lower
levels of assistance to prevent future corruption also gets at one of the
primary factors that de-legitimizes the government.
U.S. drone strikes have been
extremely effective in supporting the Somali government and AMISOM and preventing al-Shabaab from massing to overrun key bases. During a
recent review of AMISOM bases that I participated in, multiple officers
attributed the survival and security of their bases to the presence of American
drones.
But while it is important
to provide a military backstop for the government, the United States should
reduce external military support to the fight against al-Shabaab. To support a
sustainable force posture and demilitarize the American approach to Somalia,
the U.S. military presence should be limited only to the ability to strike
massing al-Shabaab forces and senior leaders. This approach would make strikes
rare occurrences rather than the norm and would entirely remove advice and accompany missions.
Conclusion
Reduced military commitments
privilege an approach to the conflict that respects the primacy of politics in
ending Somalia’s civil war. Reduced military support to Somalia forces the
issue of mobilizing the country to secure itself, while removing an enabler of
political elites pursing internecine political warfare as foreign militaries guarantee their security.
Ultimately,
the decision to pursue a negotiated outcome to the civil war in Somalia rests
with its Somali belligerents. Nonetheless, the United States and its partners
can offer a firm nudges by removing some of the implements of war and adopting
a strategic framework that recognizes politics as the arbiter of peace in
Somalia.
Source:
War on the Rocks Journal
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