Search This Blog

Friday, April 5, 2013

Hunting For The Most Dangerous Game



strategypage

April 5, 2013: AU (African Union) peacekeepers and government troops continue to chase down the remaining groups of al Shabaab gunmen. There are several thousand al Shabaab left, most of them armed and still dangerous. And even when you break up a group of al Shabaab, many of the surviving gunmen switch to more mundane criminal activities (theft and extortion).

These criminals and al Shabaab have one thing in common; they both hate journalists and anyone else who expose their crimes and name names. So do corrupt politicians, who are arguably the biggest crooks in Somalia. As a result it’s very dangerous to be a journalist or known critic of the bad guys in Somalia. It can be lucrative if you just take bribes to avoid news about certain bad behaviors. But those who report on the criminals are targeted for threats and often murder.

For more than a year now al Shabaab fleeing the Kenyan advance from the south and peacekeepers pushing out from Mogadishu ended up in the Gedo region (the southwestern area along the Ethiopian and Kenyan border). With the loss of Kismayo, the number of al Shabaab in Gedo is believed to have been as high as several thousand. That number has been shrinking over the last few months as AU peacekeepers and government troops move through the area seeking out al Shabaab camps and shutting them down. Gedo is thinly populated forests. There is good cover from air observation, but not much else. Supplies and new recruits are in short supply and these al Shabaab have to turn to banditry just to survive. The al Shabaab forces in this area are losing many men to desertion, but will sometimes put up a fight as the peacekeepers get close.

April 4, 2013: Japan will now allow its merchant ships to carry armed guards. Noting that nearly 40 percent of ships passing through Somali waters now carry armed guards and that this has helped halt pirates from seizing ships Japan amended its laws to allow the armed security personnel on Japanese flagged ships (which are about nine percent of those off Somalia).

April 3, 2013: AU peacekeepers and government troops have completed clearing al Shabaab and bandits from the 241 kilometer road connecting Baidoa and Mogadishu. This makes is easier to move foreign aid and commercial traffic between the two cities.

April 2, 2013: Al Shabaab detonated a bomb outside the headquarters of the largest bank in Somalia after the bank refused to obey al Shabaab orders to seize operations. Two security guards were wounded. Al Shabaab believes that Western style banks are un-Islamic, promote anti-Islamic materialism and business practices and should not be allowed to operate. But the banks also handle the $2 billion a year (over a third of GDP) that flows in from Somalis outside country and are a key element in the economic growth of the last few years.

March 31, 2013:  AU peacekeepers killed a senior al Shabaab commander (Mohamed Abu) 70 kilometers west of Mogadishu (near the town of Hurdur). Abu was leading one of the few al Shabaab groups still active in central Somalia. Most of the Islamic terrorists have been killed, captured, deserted or fled to Puntland and remote areas of the southeast in the last year.

March 24, 2013: Government troops returned to the town of Hudur (capital of the Bakool region) and chased out the al Shabbab men who had moved back in after government and Ethiopian troops left on the 17th. A local militia was supposed to provide security but these fellows were intimidated by over a hundred heavily armed al Shabaab who rolled in. The government is now working with the militia to improve their effectiveness.

First Sierra Leone peacekeepers arrive in Mogadishu




Sierra Leone President Ernest Bai Koroma (in cap) with the country's troops before they left for the peacekeeping mission in Somalia. FILE | NATION MEDIA GROUP
The first peacekeepers from Sierra Leone have arrived in the Somalia capital Mogadishu.

The West African troops become the latest to join the African Union Mission in Somalia (Amisom) contingent that continues to stay in the Horn of Africa state recovering from years of civil strife.

The Sierra Leonean troops were on arrival welcomed by the African Union’s Special Representative to Somalia, Mr Mohamed Salah Anadif.

The unit that arrived in Mogadishu Wednesday is an advanced team from the Republic of Sierra Leone Armed Forces (RSLAF).

Earlier reports released by Amisom Command indicated the RSLAF battalion would be deployed to southern Somalia where they would operate alongside peacekeepers from Kenya.

According to the peacekeeping mission, the Sierra Leonean contingent will enable Kenya to withdraw one battalion from the sector as per UN Security Council Resolution 2036.

Mr Anadif appreciated the efforts of the West African nation, saying: “Integration (of the RSLAF battalion) into Amisom signifies the commitment across Africa to stabilising Somalia.”

He added that their involvement would be invaluable in consolidating security in south - central Somalia.

Joining Djiboutian, Ugandan, Kenyan and Burundian contingents, the RSLAF will be the fifth party to contribute to the stabilisation of security in the Horn of Africa country including the fight against the Al-Qaeda linked Al-Shabaab, a fanatical Islamist movement vehemently opposing the Somali government.

South Africa should have heeded Black Hawk Down



“South Africa has not learnt any lessons from the bitter experiences the Americans had in Somalia, writes Greg Mills.”
 By Dr. Greg Mills

The Somali episode epitomized the African guerrilla operation (John McCann)
Nearly 20 years ago, in October 1993, the hunt for the Somali warlord Mohammed Farah Aidid led to the Battle of Mogadishu – 18 American soldiers and one Malaysian dead, 73 Americans wounded and the deaths of as many as 1000 Somali militia and civilians.

This event, made famous by the harrowing 2001 movie Black Hawk Down, also killed Operation Restore Hope, the United States’s bid aimed at bringing stability and humanitarian relief to the Horn of Africa nation. US troops were withdrawn soon after the Mogadishu disaster. In the aftermath, then-president Bill Clinton ordered a review of US policies and programmes, hoping to develop a comprehensive policy framework suited to a post-Cold War world. This became presidential decision directive 25, released in May 2004, which imposed a new discipline on decision-making for US involvement in UN peacekeeping and peace-enforcement operations.

Fast forward two decades and the South African National Defence Force (SANDF) has just had its own Black Hawk Down moment in the Central African Republic (CAR). Its mission there has never been clear and it went badly wrong, resulting in the deaths of 13 soldiers, the wounding of another 27 and (we are informed, apparently as confirmation of our soldiers’ bravery) as many as 700 of their opponents, members of the rebel coalition Seleka, dead.

The Somali episode epitomised the African guerrilla operation: centred on tribal or clan structures, operating in urban as well as rural areas, heavily armed and working alongside humanitarian and international organisations, while existing because of (and contributing to) a collapsed state environment. This is pretty similar to the Seleka rebels, now the government, that the SANDF faced in Bangui.

Apparently Pretoria knew, or at least hoped for, better. But its lack of war experience is telling. For South Africa’s foreign policy is essentially about not doing what the West stands for. Pretoria apparently hopes to engineer a more favourable global system on Brics (Brazil, Russia, India, China and South Africa) foundations but, in the interim, this puts South Africa at something of a disadvantage – it’s the only Brics country with an interest in making peace in Africa. Also none of the Brics is, for example, directly involved militarily in the most complex contemporary nation-building-cum-peace-support operation today – Afghanistan. Had it been involved, South Africa would, first, have acquired leverage to use in Africa (a down payment to be among those who make the rules) and, second, it could have learned a lot that would have helped in the CAR.

Afghanistan offers South Africa several lessons.

Conflicting accounts
At the outset, it is critical to be absolutely clear about your mission. There are, at best, conflicting accounts of what the SANDF was sent to the CAR to do.

Unity of purpose across the force is vital and unity of command essential. Neither was achieved in the CAR, with fragmented local commands and various interveners ­operating with different goals.

This is linked to the need for effective command and control (C2), followed by good logistics. If they are inadequate and poorly arranged, it does not matter how good a contingent is at the operating level. Omar Bradley, the American World War II general, noted that “amateurs talk strategy, professionals talk logistics”. Or, as General Sir David Richards, the current British chief of defence staff, who commanded ISAF IX (the international security assistance force) in Afghanistan in 2006-2007, has observed: “With my experience of modern coalition ops, I say professionals talk C2 first, logistics second and tactics third.”

Predeployment training needs to be repeated, with demanding dress rehearsals. Units need to be capable of combined arms operations. The assumption at the start must be that it will be a tough fight. Peace enforcement is not peacekeeping. Too many contingents assume these missions will be easy. On the contrary, it’s a war.

There is also a need to know your enemy – and never ever underestimate their adaptability and motivation, as with the Taliban and the CAR rebels. Such an understanding is built on sound intelligence, not just of an operational nature but also one that offers a strategic picture of regional actors, group objectives and capabilities, plus network relationships and their morale.

Medical capabilities have also developed in Afghanistan, ramming home the importance of the wounded reaching top theatre care within the first “golden hour” of trauma. The South African contingent in the CAR reportedly had a medic with a rucksack.

Afghanistan also teaches that air power, especially in logistical support, wins battles. Begging safe passage and hitching a ride home should not be a necessity. If the Rooivalk attack helicopter was not to be used to bolster the South Africans in Bangui, then what is its purpose, except to loop the loop at air shows?

Other forms of offensive support, including artillery, remain important assets. So is the need for developed intelligence, surveillance, target acquisition and reconnaissance (Istar) capacity. But most African contingents have, as one Western military officer put it, “woeful” Istar and C2. South African intelligence was obviously either a catastrophic failure in the CAR or it was not supplied. If it was and was accurate, it was not understood or heeded.

Volatile situation
It is also imperative to get troop densities correct, even in a peacekeeping operation. Without that, you are simply sacrificing your forces. Although Nato-led forces in Afghanistan have enjoyed little more than half of the desired 20:1000 (ration of soldiers to population) counterinsurgency ratio and far less than the 32:1000 of the Soviets in the 1980s, inserting 320 soldiers to conduct a “training” mission and guard a president in a volatile situation, with a CAR population of 4.5-million and an estimated 3000 Seleka rebels, was exceptionally risky.

Finally, and perhaps most importantly, any military solution can only be to create opportunities for a political solution. Without that, it is all a waste of time. Co-ordination with local and other foreign forces (including national departments, those dispensing aid or engineering services) is critical. It does not look as if mediation was attempted at all in the CAR. If it was, it failed dismally.

But various accounts indicate that the force in the CAR, among the best of South African soldiers, acquitted themselves remarkably well in the situation, despite being where they probably should not have been and despite the lack of organisational support. They lacked the basic equipment to do the job and had limited logistics back-up; they were dependent, for example, on emergency ration packs for survival. The lack of air support – for firepower, supply and tactical withdrawal – suggests an inexcusable degree of military illiteracy.

Forgetting what one experienced South African soldier has described as “the dubious wisdom” of deploying in the CAR on a bilateral basis rather than as part of an integrated multinational effort, this disaster is, at base, a result of cutting the defence budget dangerously, while at the same time volunteering for more continental commitments: South Africa will probably be part of the new UN-sanctioned “intervention force” in the eastern part of the Democratic Republic of Congo.

For some time, there have been danger signals of declining capacity in the SANDF, related to the shortage of operational funding, the absence of suitable aircraft and poor intelligence – so notable in Operation Boleas in Lesotho in 1998, which resulted in 11 SANDF deaths, and again in Darfur in 2006, when 32 South African soldiers were ambushed and their weapons captured. There is also the general unsuitability of much of the current cohort, principally because of age – the average age of our soldiers is just too high. This also helps to explain why there are, today, more reservists (2200 of 20000) than regular troops (77 000) on operational missions.

If the government did place soldiers in the CAR with unclear strategic objectives for a lengthy period without sufficient armoured transport and air support and without due regard for these needs (from intelligence and medical services to command and control), it was taking unnecessary risks with its own blood and treasure.

Recovery from this tragic embarrassment will not depend on the ejection of the Bangui putschists but in preventing, as with the Black Hawk Down episode, a recurrence. That outcome, rather than singling out instances of individual or unit bravery, would signal a national victory.

Dr Greg Mills is the co-author, with David Williams, of the best-selling Seven Battles that Shaped South Africa and was an adviser to ISAF IX in 2006. He has had three subsequent assignments in Afghanistan

US: Army general fired over alcohol, sexual misconduct charges



By Associated Press

WASHINGTON — An Army major general with U.S. Africa Command has been relieved of his post in connection with alcohol and sexual misconduct charges, defense officials said Thursday. Officials said Maj. Gen. Ralph Baker, commander of the Combined Joint Task Force-Horn of Africa, was fired from his command last Thursday and he was fined a portion of his pay by Gen. Carter Ham, head of U.S. Africa Command, after an administrative hearing and review. The officials said Ham lost confidence in Baker’s ability to command.
Baker has appealed the administrative action to Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel. But since senior commanders such as Ham have broad latitude in decisions to relieve subordinates of command, Hagel’s decision may focus more on the financial punishment doled out by Ham, officials said. Details of how much his pay was docked were not released.
The allegations against Baker involve harassment and inappropriate contact, said the officials, who were not authorized to talk publicly about the case so spoke on condition of anonymity.
Baker took over the task force, based at Camp Lemonnier in Djibouti, last May and was scheduled to leave the job in the near future.
He has returned to Washington and is temporarily serving as a special assistant to the director of the Army staff while he awaits Hagel’s decision. Such special assistant posts are routinely used as way stations for general officers who are under investigation and awaiting their fate, or for others who have been promoted and are waiting for their new job to open up.
Ham is retiring and is scheduled to turn over his command to Army Gen. David Rodriguez in a ceremony Friday.
Ham’s predecessor, Army Gen. William “Kip” Ward, was demoted in rank from four stars to three, and retired as a lieutenant general after investigators determined that he had misused government funds for lavish spending while heading U.S. Africa Command.
Baker is also one in a string of general officers who have been reprimanded or investigated for possible sexual misconduct.
The issue has raised the ire of Congress, where lawmakers have complained that military and defense leaders have not done enough to combat sexual assault and harassment in the ranks.
In particular, a recent decision by Air Force Lt. Gen. Craig Franklin to reverse the sexual assault conviction against Lt. Col. James Wilkerson, a former inspector general at Aviano Air Base in Italy, infuriated senators. And it triggered calls for a harder look at the military’s justice system.
Hagel has ordered a review of Franklin’s decision, but he has told members of Congress that neither he nor the Air Force secretary is empowered to overrule Franklin, who is the commander of the 3rd Air Force at Ramstein Air Base in Germany.
Copyright 2013 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

Djibouti becomes the first Nation to Arm Somalia Government

By Goth Mohamed Goth

Somali Prime Minister Mr. Abdi Farah Shirdon Sayid has on behalf of the government of Somalia received assistance from  the government of Djibouti in  form of military aid and consisting of armed personnel carriers and heavy duty vehicles to be used by Somali National Army.

The Somali PM who is currently visiting Djibouti was accompanied by Somali defense Mr. Abdi Hakim Mahmoud Haji Faqi minister who signed a military cooperation agreement with the Djiboutian defense minister Mr. Hassan Dharaar Hufane inside Sheik Osman military Base,Djibouti City.

Somali PM reiterated that this visit intends to boost cooperation in multiple areas particularly in trade, security and political cooperation.

During the handover ceremony the Djiboutian Defense said,”We shall continue to support the Somali government as we have been doing in the past”,.

Mr. Abdi Shirdon Sayid said that his visit aims at strengthening existing bilateral ties and will mainly focus on business, security and political ties between the two countries.
Djiboutian is the first nation to assist the new Somali government with arms since lifting of a two decade UN arms embargo.

Source: Somalilandpress.com