Arming Somalia

The United States sent RPGs, machine guns, mortars, and -- in the words of one U.S. official -- "cash in a brown paper bag" to Somalia last spring. Foreign Policy reports on how the shipments took place, and who's not happy about it.

BY ELIZABETH DICKINSON | SEPTEMBER 10, 2009

Late in May, as violence consumed the streets of the infamously violent capital city of Mogadishu, Somalia, packages of ammunition, weapons, and cash began arriving from the United States as part of an attempt to help the country's flailing Transitional Federal Government (TFG) stave off collapse. At the time, the Somali government was literally about to fail, reportedly controlling no more than a neighborhood in Mogadishu thanks to a fresh assault by two Islamist insurgent groups: al-Shabab and Hizbul Islam.

The contents of those shipments, not previously reported, included 19 tons of ammunition, 48 rifle-propelled grenades, 36 PKM machine guns (a model of the Russian-made Kalashnikov), 12 DShK machine guns (Russian-made anti-aircraft weapons, mostly used in Somali technicals), and 10 mortars (the firing apparatus for shells). The shipment was detailed in a letter from a U.S. official to the U.N. Security Council committee set up to oversee the 17-year-old arms embargo on Somalia. The U.S. official, Alejandro D. Wolff, deputy permanent U.S. representative to the United Nations, requested an exemption to the embargo, which was put in place in 1992 at the onset of civil conflict. In a second letter to the Security Council, Wolff explained that $2 million was also being sent to the Somali government "for the immediate procurement of equipment (weapons and ammunition) and logistics support (food, fuel, water, engineering services)."

All told, a State Department official admitted at a June 26 news briefing that it shipped "in the neighborhood of 40 tons worth of arms and munitions" to Somalia. "We have also asked the two units that are there, particularly the Ugandans, to provide weapons to the TFG, and we have backfilled the Ugandans for what they have provided to the TFG government," the official told journalists. The cost was "under $10 million." A different State Department official working on Somalia counterterrorism policy told Foreign Policy that of the total amount, the bulk was spent on ammunition, while the air freight bill was $900,000 and $1.25 million was "cash in a brown paper bag."

The letters from Wolff explain that the cash was to be transferred to Nairobi, Kenya, and then moved by air to Mogadishu. The money was intended to be spent locally to buy arms, ammunition, and other supplies. (In recent years, AK-47s have sold on the streets of Mogadishu for anywhere from $100 to $600, depending on how heavy the fighting is at the time.) Meanwhile, ammunition was to be shipped to Somalia's capital by air from Entebbe, Uganda. The transfer of the weapons is not described in the letters. However, a regional analyst, who was not authorized to speak on behalf of his affiliation, told FP that the shipments have been arriving in installments, doled out by the African Union peacekeepers who are guarding the Mogadishu airport.

The arms transfer was among the new U.S. administration's first moves toward Somalia, a country that many see as a test case for President Barack Obama's counterterrorism policy. The country has been in a state of war for nearly two decades, displacing a quarter of the country's population, with half a million refugees scattered across the region and another 1.5 million displaced internally within Somalia. But in recent months, the East African country has become a growing concern for U.S. officials as local groups, most notably an Islamist faction named al-Shabab -- some of whose leaders are thought to have been trained by al Qaeda -- have expanded their control of the country.

MOHAMED DAHIR/AFP/Getty Images

 

Elizabeth Dickinson is an assistant editor at FP.

Facebook|Twitter|Digg

DAVID LAOSHI

12:37 AM ET

September 11, 2009

Not surprising at all...

The US has consistently messed Somalia up, starting back in '06, when it approved the Ethiopian overthrow of the Islamic Courts Union, their only hope for peace for almost two decades. Today, things are getting worse from both a humanitarian and a security standpoint. If the US only acted in its own interests, we wouldn't see these sorts of problems. This is an issue I'm actually kind of passionate about. It's a lot more clear-cut that the US is in the wrong here than in Iraq: at least there, we aspired to bring them democracy, so one could at least claim good intentions. Here, we're shooting them in the foot at the same time we're shooting ourselves in the foot.

I wonder if anyone's ever seen fit to organize any large scale protests on this issue?

 

RWBTHE4TH

2:59 PM ET

September 11, 2009

The real result...

is that the US risks uniting the disparate Shabab factions. If the US wants the TFG to gain legitimacy, adding the US stamp of approval is the worst thing they can do. An op-ed in the Christian Science Monitor makes exactly this point.

http://www.csmonitor.com/2009/0909/p09s01-coop.html

 

JAY GETTY

10:55 AM ET

September 12, 2009

USA supports/funds/recruits Islime Terrorist: Afghan to Somalia

And you wonder why people think the USA knows more than it is telling about 9/11. Our troops are used as human sacrifices to the Islime G-d.

Sure the Americans beat up Al Qaeda: foot soldiers, generals and even policy implementers; but duplicitously invite those who sponsor/fund Al Qaeda to the White House for dinner! Sure the Americans send armies to beat up Iraqi’s and Afghanis but the US sets rules of war that preclude American victory under any circumstances; Generals Eisenhower, Patton, Sherman, Montgomery et al: are all war criminals under today’s “bazaar” rules of war that are unilaterally adhered to by the “West”; in this “War against free speech to criticize Islime” that is being waged against the “West”.

 

SOOMAALIYA

8:55 AM ET

September 17, 2009

Somalia

whether you agree with it or not, Somalis shall + will = never welcome the US into their country

the US is responsible for the mayhem in that country and for 20 years, it was the the same evil United States that was waging a silent genocide with multi-dimensions against the Somali people, and to my amazement like many Somalis, they expect us to abandon our views and turn around an embrace without restitution for the zillions of dollars worth of damages done to the Somali property, land as well as other vital organs that could have easily allowed Somalia to stand with its own two feet, but thanks to the US, they are now a distance memory and would take years and years to get them back.

the US foreign policy towards Somalia is a complete failure and no Somalis compatriot is going to do any favor for the US, other than to do the opposite of they expect.

the other day, the US ambassador for Kenya was speaking in the BBC and was subsequently air in Voice of America, and listening to his trash makes you wonder and then laugh. he said "all Somalis can contact me and we will work together in re-building Somalia, but with one condition, that you abandon the support for the Al-Shabaab" :)

very funny guy, I think he was drunk

just two weeks ago, 100 tons of weapons were shipped to Somalia, a special gift from the United States, and you really start asking yourself, ARE THEY ON COCAINE or do they assume we are blind to their evil deeds????

if the US is serious about making peace with the Somalis, they should consider

1. a compensation to every Somali = $10 million dollars per individual

2. apology

3. return of the HAWD AND RESERVED AREAD (OGADEN, the best grazing land of Somalia) to the MotherLand

4, re-stating the Socotra Island as part of Somalia

5. and the return of the NFD, once again to the motherland

 
January/February 2010