One of the most potent intoxicants
in Africa today is the canned phrase "African solutions for African
problems".
While "ASAP" is an
acronym that connotes a timely and efficient result, most if not all,
operations that are veiled with the romantic motto, have proven that they are
not indigenously conceived, funded or driven.
Since this phrase entered the
African lexicon in 2007, it has proved to
be of no substantive value to the continent or its people. Contrary to what
it was originally intended, the phrase has been taken hostage by domestic
political sloganeers and foreign elements eager to advance zero-sum
interests. It also became the ideological impetus that helped establish
multi-national African forces such as AMISOM.
As is clear in Somalia, this kind
of politico-military system - especially when neighbouring states are
directly involved - routinely contain or "solve" a problem by
creating several newer ones that perpetuate dependency, exploitation and
indeed subjugation.
"When one asks a powerful
neighbour to come to aid and defend one with his forces…These forces may be
good in themselves, but they are always dangerous for those who borrow them,
for if they lose you are defeated, and if they conquer you remain their
prisoner," forewarned Niccolo Machiavelli several centuries ago.
In Somalia, not only did our
current leadership, and that of the last decade, fail to heed the
aforementioned warning, they obediently competed and outperformed each other
to prove themselves as unyielding loyal subjects. It is clear that no Somali
can pursue a political career in his own country without first getting
Ethiopia's blessings. Already, Ethiopia has installed a number of its staunch
cohorts in the current government and (along with Kenya) has been handpicking
virtually all of the new regional governors, mayors, etc.
Byproduct of vicious fratricide
Recently, while reading on
poverty, I came across the anthropologist Oscar Lewis' (controversial) theory
"the culture of poverty" in which he argues that while poverty
might be systemic and generational, it fosters unique self-perpetuating value
system that ultimately becomes engrained in the poor person's way of life.
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People who are altered by that
attitudinal phenomenon commonly have "a strong feeling of marginality, of
helplessness, of dependency, of not belonging. They are like aliens in their
own country... (and) have very little sense of history".
I could not help but reflect on
our own self-defeating, self-perpetuating predicament.
As in Stockholm syndrome, a
good number of the Somali leadership have become emotionally and politically
bonded with the very power that abused them and fuelled enmity between them
(off and on) since the seventies.
Capitalising on that psychological
advantage, Ethiopia has managed to get the exclusive right to set up an
embassy inside the Villa Somalia (government compound), independent
"consulates" in Somaliland and Puntland, and independently operating
intelligence command centres in each of these balkanised political entities.
To further complicate matters, Ethiopia has signed independent "military
treaty" with each of these political entities.
Yet, the current leadership - as
those before them - seems content with such arrangement. That, needless to
say, motivated Kenya to follow the same effective
strategy - isolate the centre from the periphery, and lure the
latter entities into deals that they can't refuse.
Exposing the lame ducks
Only a few weeks into the
Ethiopia-led (AMISOM) military operation, the UNSGR warned the next violence
that targets the UN may force it out of Somalia.
"I am deeply conscious that
if we make a mistake in our security presence and posture, and suffer a
significant attack, particularly on the UN, this is likely to mean to us
withdrawing from Somalia," said UN Special Representative Nicholas Kay.
To underscore his message, he adds
this: "There are scenarios in which if we take further significant
losses, then that would have a strategic effect on our mission."
Was this a reckless telegraphing
intended to implicitly dare al-Shabaab with a "Go ahead, make my day; force
us back to Nairobi" message? Or was it a cryptic warning intended to
preempt the Ethiopia/Kenya tag-team from getting too creative in their covert
operations intended to manipulate facts on the ground?
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While you ponder, consider adding
this into your calculus: The UN deliberately bypassed AMISOM when it
commissioned a Ugandan contingent of over 400 Special Forces to guard its
facilities and staff. This particular contingent is neither officially part
nor does it take any orders from AMISOM. Why?
Because, the controversial
implanting of Ethiopia and Kenya into AMISOM has changed its dynamic from a
peacekeeping force into a political vehicle.
Ambassador Kay is too experienced
to make haphazard security-related statements. He was well aware of what he
was saying and where he was saying it. He affirms that awareness in his presentation. Between the lines he was
signalling his frustration with the Ethiopia-driven AMISOM, and how he and
UNSOM ended up biting the dust. I have argued before that the Ethiopia/Kenya
and US/UK interests are in an imminent collision course.
Musical chairs and revolving doors
Though the next election/selection
is more than two years away, the usual suspects of mostly political
conformists who are devoid of any transformative ideas or strategies are
already in their hysterical manoeuvring and counter-manoeuvring routine. They
are dutifully eager to demonstrate their capacity to perpetuate the status
quo.
Intoxicated with the rhetoric that
our "good neighbours are making self-sacrifice for us" these
politicians are determined to hinge the future of our nation on the question
of "Who would be the next president and the next prime minister?"
rather than "What new vision and strategy would these individuals bring
in order to help heal or repair our broken nation?"
Against that backdrop, on May 5,
over 100 MP signed a non-binding resolution demanding the resignation of
President Hassan Sheikh Mohamud or face impeachment.
Make no mistake, Somalia is held
in a nasty headlock by a neighbourhood tag-team unmistakably motivated by
zero-sum objective. It is their so-called African solution (not so much of
the extremist group al-Shabaab) that is setting the Horn on fire.
Against that backdrop, our IDPs
(Internally Displaced Politicians) continue on their respective pipedreams.
Of course, where there is no vision, neither strategy, nor political will and
continuity matter.
Ambassador Abukar Arman is the
former Somalia special envoy to the United States and a foreign policy
analyst.
The views expressed in this
article are the author's own and do not necessarily reflect Al Jazeera's
editorial policy.
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