Atlantic Wire
Thursday, July 14, 2011
On Monday, the U.S. pledged $5
million to assist Somalis battered by a severe drought that has, in the words
of U.N.
refugee agency chief Antonio Guterres, precipitated the "worst
humanitarian disaster" in the world right now. But over the last couple
weeks we've learned that the U.S. is increasingly getting involved in Somalia
for another reason: counterterrorism.
In an article for The
Nation yesterday, Jeremy Scahill reported that the CIA has set up two
secret facilities in Mogadishu as part of America's fight against the Al
Qaeda-affiliated Islamic militant group Al Shabab: a fortified compound near the
capital's airport for training Somali intelligence agents in counterterrorism
and a prison in the basement of Somalia's National Security Agency headquarters
for detaining suspected Shabab members. Scahill, who spoke with Somali
government and intelligence officials, Somali analysts and militia
leaders, former prisoners, and a U.S. official, explains that while the Somalis
technically run both sites, the CIA is pulling the strings behind the scenes and
directly interrogating prisoners. A U.S. official later downplayed the CIA's
presence in the country in an interview with CNN's Barbara
Starr, explaining that the agency's operatives occasionally support the Somalis
in interrogating terrorism suspects by "being present in the room or suggesting
specific questions," and that the CIA also sends personnel and aircraft into
Mogadishu to train Somali intelligence agents.
The news comes only a couple weeks after The
New York Times reported that the U.S. was expanding its covert drone
program against militants from Yemen
to Somalia, and after American boots hit
the ground in the country--albeit briefly--to collect the bodies of
insurgents killed in drone strikes (yes, you read that right: the U.S. is
reportedly picking
up Somali militants' bodies). What's the larger significance of all these
developments? The reports raise several key points:
- Shift in Militant Strategy: The CIA believes Al Shabaab is
increasingly communicating and partnering with Al Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula
in Yemen, CNN notes. The Shabab recently pledged allegiance to Al Qaeda and its
new leader, Ayman al-Zawahri.
- Shift in U.S. Strategy: In the "post-Osama bin Laden era,"
the Times writes, "some American military and intelligence officials
view Qaeda affiliates in Yemen and Somalia as a greater threat to the United
States than the group of operatives in Pakistan who have been barraged with
hundreds of drone strikes directed by the Central Intelligence Agency in recent
years."
- Serious Risks: Somalia, simply put, is one of the most
dangerous countries in the world. In an interview with Scahill, a Somali
intelligence official points out that the U.S. doesn't have control of the
protean political environment in Somalia like it does, to some extent at least,
in Afghanistan and Iraq. The U.S. wants "to help us," he explains, "but the
situation is not allowing them to do [it] however they want. They are not in
control of the politics, they are not in control of the security" (indeed,
Scahill writes that has casts its lot with Somali intelligence agents and
non-Somali African military forces, not the Somali government). The
Times adds that attacking Shabab fighters, many of whom oppose
Somalia's weak transitional government but not necessarily the U.S., could drive
them into the arms of Al Qaeda (so far, the Shabab have only carried out one
attack outside Somalia--a series of bombings in Uganda during the World Cup).
And, of course, the Pentagon is still haunted by the botched 1993 "Black Hawk
Down" incident, in which 18 elite American troops were killed in Mogadishu in a
struggle with fighters allied with warlords.
In this clip from an interview
Scahill did with Democracy Now today, The Nation reporter
gives the International Committee of the Red Cross the location of the secret
prison he discovered, noting how prisoners have been held there without charge: