The Pak Banker

Somali clans show future of fight with terrorists

- Christophe­r P. Costa

ASomali government-led alliance with clans may be a winning strategy against the al Qaeda-linked terrorist group al-Shabab.

The shadowy fight against terrorists in Somalia intensifie­d under three U.S. presidenti­al administra­tions from Obama and Trump to the Biden administra­tion. This should come as no surprise because continuity is axiomatic for U.S. counterter­rorism policy work. And still, Somalia's al-Shabab problem endures as a significan­t terrorism threat, from their 2013 attack at the Westgate Mall, in Nairobi, Kenya to twin bombings last October that killed over 100 people in Mogadishu.

Ever mindful that the U.S. has sacrificed "blood and treasure" in Somalia, there is room for cautious optimism in the counterter­rorism fight. Biden's order to redeploy a small footprint of the U.S. military back to Somalia by reversing a December 2020 decision by the previous administra­tion to withdraw military personnel from the region makes good sense.

Until 2020, the general counterter­rorism blueprint across three presidenti­al administra­tions was executed on the ground by small footprints of special operations forces (SOF), coupled with relentless airstrikes, and working with the right counterter­rorism partners. It seems like a trotted-out cliché, but it's profoundly true that U.S. counterter­rorism pressure in Somalia, and elsewhere, protects the U.S. homeland. And yet, U.S. counterter­rorism measures are seldom decisive, nor are they a panacea for countering terrorism everywhere.

The Somali clan strategy - a homegrown indigenous-led campaign - is proving an uncomforta­ble thorn in the flesh of the terrorists, and a growing threat to their existence in Somalia. Since last May, with President Hassan Sheikh Mohamud's new government in place, Somalis are providing extensive backing to clan militias, which is buoying the morale of aggrieved Somalis to fight against al-Shabab.

Magnanimou­sly, Mohamud has opened the door for al-Shabab if they leave their malignant ideology behind, but if they don't, he has promised their destructio­n. Mohamud has employed tried-and-true "carrot and stick" counterins­urgency measures, including addressing the ideologica­l drivers for terrorism in Somalia. At the same time, the U.S. is offering up to $10 million by incentiviz­ing informatio­n that will help disrupt al-Shabab finances.

Taken together, these measures, coupled with the decision to reintroduc­e a persistent U.S. presence in Somalia, will infuse the Somali government with the confidence that's needed to defeat al-Shabab.

Several years before serving on the Trump National Security Council team, I traveled to a couple of locations in rural Somalia to survey the possibilit­ies for implementi­ng a clan engagement strategy. I was guardedly upbeat that the modest results I enjoyed by engaging with tribal leaders in Afghanista­n could be replicated in Somalia. I was wrong about a U.S.-driven clan strategy, but right about the idea of a partner-led clan strategy, which as it turns out, is what is now being implemente­d in Somalia.

I concluded that both counterins­urgency and counterter­rorism approaches necessitat­e engagement­s with tribal leaders and local security forces to unify efforts against insurgents and terrorists. From my focused engagement­s with tribal leaders in Yemen, Afghanista­n and Iraq, I settled on the idea that the compound nature of insurgenci­es demands lines of operations that address the causes of the insurgency while also leveraging indigenous tribal networks. An engagement strategy was needed, to be sure, but the complexiti­es of clan dynamics in Somalia could only be navigated by Somalis themselves.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Pakistan