الثلاثاء، 13 يوليو 2010

Why al-Shabaab Would Attack in Uganda


101645761full.jpgJUL 12 2010, 11:21 AM ET
The Somalian insurgency al-Shabaab hasclaimed responsibility for the bombings that killed 74 civilians, including at leastone America, in Kampala, Uganda, on Sunday. Though global attention is focusing on the attacks' ferocity, the most curious detail is that al-Shabaab struck in Uganda at all. The group has never before attacked outside of Somalia and its decision to target Uganda is very unusual for several reasons. There are two likely explanations for this act of terrorism, both with dark implications for Somalia and East Africa.

Though militants did not begin using the name al-Shabaab until 2006, they are part of the same Islamist insurgency that has plagued, and at times partially ruled, Somalia since the 1990s. Al-Shabaab is often compared to al-Qaeda, but the two groups have little in common. While both are violently Islamist, only al-Qaeda is ideology-driven, espouses global ambitions, and a has history of terrorism simply for the sake of killing. Al-Shabaab seeks only to rule Somalia and to impose an extreme form of Islamic law. The group has long privileged its fight for control of Somalia over ideology. As many have pointed out, the attack on Uganda makes sense as part of al-Shabaab's fight against the African Union forces, to which Uganda contributes troops. Only days earlier, the East African block of the African Unionvoted to increase its peacekeeping force, which seeks to expel al-Shabaab from Somalia's south, from 6,000 to 8,000 troops.

But Uganda's participation in the African Union force does not fully explain Al-Shabaab's attack. After all, several countries contribute to the peacekeeping mission. Uganda does not even border Somalia. If al-Shabaab wanted to expand the borders of its territorial control, it would have pushed into Kenya or Ethiopia. If the militant group was simply seeking revenge against the African Union, it would have targeted Ethiopia, the country most responsible for its removal from power in 2006, when it was known as the Islamic Courts Union. Ideologically, Uganda is also an unusual target. Al-Shabaab's ideology is primarily concerned with fellow Muslims, on whom the group wishes to impose Taliban-like law, but Uganda is over 80 percent Christian.

The decision to bomb civilian gatherings in Kampala was almost certainly tactical. Al-Shabaab is not like the Taliban of 2000, which had secure control of Afghanistan and thus felt comfortable spreading violence and ideology outside the country's borders. But al-Shabaab is still struggling in Somalia's ongoing civil war. There are two likely tactical explanations for the attack. The first is that al-Shabaab is feeling increasingly threatened by the African Union force and is desperate to forestall or prevent the planned addition of 2,000 peacekeepers. In that case, this attack was a defensive act. Insurgents typically turn to terrorism when they are no longer able to challenge their opponents on the battlefield. While this may appear to be good news because it would mean that the group is weaker, a threatened al-Shabaab would become a threat to not just southern Somalia but all of East Africa. As Graeme Wood explained in his chronicling of the Lord's Resistance Army insurgency in the Central African Republic, "the smaller and more resoundingly defeated the rebels are, the more brutally they fight." This is how insurgencies, which can be negotiated or even reconciled with, become terrorist groups, which do not accept political compromises and can persist for many years. This attack on civilians outside Somalia would not be the last.

The other possibility is that al-Shabaab is stronger than we think and that this attack is the beginning of a push to expand its reach. Al-Shabaab only operates in Somalia's south. If it feels confident in its control there, it may be planning to assault north into the contested horn of the country or even into the relatively calm Somaliland region in the north, which has been called an "oasis of stability." This act of terrorism would be al-Shabaab way of opening a new front in a campaign to expel the peacekeepers from the regions al-Shabaab does not yet control. If the insurgency is indeed growing stronger, this would help explain why the African Union felt the need to increase its force strength by one third. It's difficult to know how long the peacekeepers could hold back al-Shabaab from taking more of the country.

Both of these possibilities should be of grave concern to the U.S. Violence in Somalia destabilizes all of East Africa, risking the tenuous stability in Kenya and worsening the conflict in Yemen. As Yemen struggles, its al-Qaeda offshoot becomes a greater threat to the U.S. Were Kenya to succumb to the terrorism that has long worsened its political fragility, it could become a threat to global security rivaling Yemen or even Afghanistan. After all, al-Qaeda's first major attack against the U.S., second in damage only to September 11, was its 1998 bombing of the U.S. embassies in Kenya and Tanzania. Whether al-Shabaab is adopting international terrorism out of defensive desperation or as an act of strategic assault, there is no clear and easy response.

Photo: Women and children demonstrate in Mogadishu, waving the flag of al-Shabaab. Photo by unknown photographer for AFP/गेट्टी

Max Fisher

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