US Navy Seals Trainees Aiding Al-Shabab in the Eastern Somaliland Conflict

US Navy Seals Trainees Aiding Al-Shabab in the Eastern Somaliland Conflict

The uprising that began in Las Anod in response to recent extrajudicial deaths and later expanded into a larger movement for locals’ concerns about the Somaliland government’s executive branch has exposed how the US policy of “One Somalia” is out of touch with local reality as well as the covert relationship and cooperation between the ragtag military of South Somalia and the terrorist organization Al-Shabaab.

On the other hand, the forces against Somaliland statehood deliberately twisted the aims of the revolt.

The US Congress- particularly the members of the GOP – have taken notice of the State Department’s outdated foreign policy, which includes this “One Somalia” concept.

Given the current saga in Somaliland’s Sool region, Michael Rubin’s piece below, which was published by the “Washington Examiner,” discusses this problem in great detail.

The failure of American policies in Afghanistan and Iraq was highlighted in the article’s start.

These are the specifics for the Somaliland crisis:

“History now repeats in the Horn of Africa. Earlier this month, violence erupted in Sool, a district of Somaliland that abuts the Somali state of Puntland. The violence was not spontaneous : The Somali ambassador in Ethiopia bragged about planning it for more than four months. China apparently gave a green light, seeking to punish Somaliland for rebuffing it in favor of Taiwan. Under Presidents Barack Obama, Trump, and Biden, U.S. Special Forces and Navy SEALS trained Somali counterparts to fight the al Qaeda-affiliated al Shabab militia. Somaliland now claims that they have captured some of these U.S.-trained Somali forces fighting alongside al Shabab as well as police forces dispatched across the border from Ethiopia’s southern Ogaden region.

[evp_embed_video url=https://sii1991.org/wp-content/uploads/2023/02/x5K_w6A7jUIRMFOL.mp4 autoplay=”true” width=”640″ loop=”true” template=”mediaelement” preload=”auto”](South Somalia Ambassador to Ethiopia Amay is clearly stating that this war was planned about 5 months ago)

The question the State Department and the CIA should ask is how the U.S. embassies in Mogadishu and Addis Ababa, as well as their respective chiefs of station, managed to miss a major plot involving multiple political groups, militias, and even countries. In Afghanistan, a major problem was that U.S. personnel remained quarantined behind compound walls while both the Taliban and a hostile intelligence service in Pakistan roamed the country. In effect, the embassy operated blind even as it insisted it had forfeited no functional capacity.

US Ambassador to South Somalia

The U.S. Embassy in Mogadishu has no such excuse. Somaliland, with the exception of Sool today, is safe. Diplomats from other countries roam the capital Hargeisa without security. However, not only did U.S. Ambassador Larry Andre Jr. refuse to visit Somaliland except when visiting delegations demanded an appearance, but he also did not allow more junior embassy staff or the U.S. defense attache to make the trip. Once again, petulant deference to Mogadishu’s sensitivities trumped effectiveness. The result: Allowing reactionary forces and terrorist groups to try to destabilize the most democratic and stable country in the Horn of Africa.

The State Department often says it needs more money to do its job. Perhaps that is true in some areas, but so long as its diplomats are unable to or refuse to leave their compounds, no amount of money will enable embassies to do their jobs. Hiding behind security or prioritizing the sensitivity of unelected leaders over counterterrorism and American national security is not the way to defend democracy or the liberal order. The CIA has less of an excuse. It has now made the same mistake three times at the cost of U.S. national security, thousands of lives, and freedom for millions more.

If there ever were a time for Secretary of State Antony Blinken and CIA Director William Burns to ask tough questions of their subordinates, it would be now. If they will not do so, it is time for Congress to act”

Michael Rubin (@mrubin1971) is a contributor to the Washington Examiner’s Beltway Confidential. He is a senior fellow at the American Enterprise Institute.

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