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The U.S. and Somaliland: A Strategic Guide to
Partnership
February 28, 2008
A great deal has transpired in the little over two months since I last raised
the question of Somaliland in this column, repeating a call I made two years
earlier: “Since the disintegration of the Siyad Barre’s oppressive Somali regime
into Hobbesian anarchy and warlordism, the international community has staunchly
defended the phantasmal existence of the fictitious entity known as ‘Somalia.’
Now, however, is the time for the United States to break ranks and let realism
triumph over wishful thinking, not only recognizing, but actively supporting
Somaliland, a brave little land whose people’s quest for freedom and security
mirrors America’s values as well as her strategic interests.”
In January, the president of the Republic of Somaliland, Dahir Rayale Kahin,
accompanied by his foreign minister, Abdillahi Mohamed Duale, and several other
members of his cabinet, were invited to Washington for a visit that was
officially acknowledged by the U.S. Department of State. According to the
statement from the department’s spokesman, Ambassador Sean McCormack:
A high-level delegation from Somaliland, led by President Dahir Kahin Rayale,
departed Washington January 19 after an eight-day visit. While here, the
delegation met with senior officials of the State Department, U.S. Agency for
International Development, Department of Defense, and National Security Council
staff, among others. This cordial and constructive visit demonstrated U.S.
engagement with Somaliland in furtherance of our common interests in the areas
of regional peace and security, economic development, and democratic reform.
Barely two weeks later, on February 3rd, Assistant Secretary of State for
African Affairs Jendayi Frazer arrived in Somaliland’s capital, Hargeisa, with
Ambassador John M. Yates, a veteran diplomat based in Nairobi, Kenya, who is
America’s special envoy for Somalia (the U.S. envoy to Ethiopia, Ambassador Don
Yamamoto, preceded the pair by one day). Dr. Frazer, the highest-ranking U.S.
official to set foot in the republic since it reasserted its independence in
1991, spent the day holding formal talks with top government officials as well
as meeting privately with representatives of Somaliland’s three registered
political parties – the Union of Democrats (UDUB), the Peace, Unity, and
Development Party (KULMIYE), and the Party of Justice (UCID) – and the
unregistered “Qaran” political movement. Speaking to the press, Dr. Frazer
explained the motivation of her visit:
Our visit to Somaliland is in connection and follow-up to President Dahir Rayale
Kahin’s recent, visit, to Washington and on top of that to continue to work with
the Somaliland authorities in the issues concerning peace, stability and
security of the region. Our visit is also an acknowledgement of the democratic
progress made by Somaliland…the U.S. assisted Somaliland in past elections and
will continue to do so in the coming elections. We are here, today, to show our
support for this and to mark the friendship and cooperation existing between the
two countries.
A few days after Dr. Frazer’s visit, the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP)
announced that it would “expand substantially activities designed to improve the
lives of citizens of Somaliland,” pledging “resources amounting to twice those
spent in 2007 will be spent on projects focusing on the rule of law and
security, democratic governance and on recovery and sustainable livelihoods, as
well as on additional staff to increase the range of the ambitious programme in
different regions of Somaliland” in concert “with the Somaliland government and
other UN agencies.”
Dr. Frazer was careful to emphasize that the recent flurry of activity did not
imply diplomatic recognition was imminent, noting that while “we have said on
many occasions that the U.S. will continue to work with Somaliland, in
particular, in the strong democratic values which Somaliland has succeeded in
implementing,” the issue of recognition should be left to the African Union
(AU), while America would “work with the AU and will respect whatever decision
it makes on Somaliland’s status.”
However, as I previously observed, while the AU’s own report on the matter,
presented by then-Deputy Chairperson Patrick Kayumbu Mazimhaka, acknowledged the
uniqueness of the case – “The fact that the union between Somaliland and Somalia
was never ratified and also malfunctioned when it went into action from 1960 to
1990, makes Somaliland’s search for recognition historically unique and
self-justified in African political history. Objectively viewed, the case should
not be linked to the notion of ‘opening a Pandora’s Box’. As such, the AU should
find a special method of dealing with this outstanding case” – the AU is simply
unable to actually address the matter as long as it continues to seat the
utterly ineffectual “Transitional Federal Government” (TFG) of Somalia, which
asserts sovereignty over the entire territory of the defunct Somali Democratic
Republic despite being unable to so much as safely police its putative capital.
Since Dr. Frazer is, undoubtedly, well aware of this reality, what is one to
make of the recent developments?
In large measure, the recent engagement can be viewed as strategically sound at
several levels. In the short term, it is increasingly apparent that the TFG’s
lease on life is perhaps even more tenuous than that of its “president,”
Abdullahi Yusuf Ahmed, who, until last week, had not been in Somalia for months
and was evacuated to London from Nairobi last month for medical treatment. In
fact, just to get him back into Mogadishu last week, TFG forces and their
Ethiopian protectors sealed all roads from the airport to the presidential Villa
Somalia. In response, Islamist and clan insurgents fighting the regime fired
mortars at the bunkered-down peacekeepers of the undermanned African Union
Mission in Somalia (AMISOM) and, for good measure, lobbed half a dozen shells
into the presidential compound. Amid heavy fighting last week, TFG forces sealed
off the famed Bakara market, compounding the woes of those residents of
Mogadishu who have not fled since most of these people either earn their living
at the market or depend on it for basic staples.
Typical of the constant hit-and-run attacks by the insurgents, last Saturday at
least four Ethiopian soldiers were killed when the water truck they were
traveling in drove into an ambush in northern Mogadishu while, in the Wadajir
district just south of the capital, gunmen shot and wounded a local government
official as he stood in front of his house. On Sunday, heavily-armed insurgents
from the radical al-Shabaab (“the Youth”) wing of the Islamic Courts Union
(ICU), reportedly led by Sheikh Muhktar Ali Robow, a.k.a., Abu Mansur, the
former deputy defense minister of the ICU who fought with the Taliban in
Afghanistan, briefly occupied the southern town of Dinsoor before withdrawing.
With daily rounds of artillery duels, bombings, ambushes, assassinations, and
incursions, no one seriously believes that even the full deployment of AMISOM –
an unlikely occurrence in any event – would do much more than prolong the agony
of the passing of the TFG, the fourteenth attempt by outsiders to restore
central government to what was once Somalia. Hence it makes perfect sense for
U.S. officials to reach out to any effective powers in the region.
Over the longer term, given the apparent futility trying to reconstitute a
unitary state – a point I made more than a year ago in this column space – the
members of the international community, especially the United States and its
allies, have every reason to seek to engage Somaliland, not least of which is
its geopolitical significance as a Muslim country with authentic democratic
aspirations controlling over 900 kilometers of coastline along sea lanes along
the Gulf of Aden, just opposite the Arabian Peninsula. Having such an island of
relative security and stability is all the more important when, as veteran
Somalia scholar Dr. Ken Menkhaus of Davidson College, who served as a senior
advisor to the UN Operation in Somalia (UNOSOM) in the 1990s, has noted, “a
collapsed state such as Somalia is more likely to serve as niche role as a
transit zone, through which men, money, or materiel are quickly moved into the
country and then across borders of neighboring states.” Moreover, there is the
belated recognition in many quarters, of the validity of the warning which South
African analyst Kurt Schillinger delivered in a paper for the Royal United
Services Institute for Defence and Security Studies (RUSI): “Somaliland is a
fragile entity in a fragile region with large Islamic populations – all
demonstrably susceptible to radicalization.”
However, just because a consensus is slowly being built around these two
realizations does not mean that the United States will extend formal diplomatic
recognition to Somaliland any time soon despite the consonance of the admirable
efforts by its people to build a secure and democratic state for themselves to
the vision which President George W. Bush outlined in his second inaugural
address: “It is the policy of the United States to seek and support the growth
of democratic movements and institutions in every nation and culture, with the
ultimate goal of ending tyranny in our world…Our goal…is to help others find
their own voice, attain their own freedom, and make their own way.” Rather,
while the commonality of ideals provides a basis for moving forward, Realpolitik
dictates that not just ideals, but concrete national interests must be carefully
considered if a great power like the United States is going to break new ground
and recognize an aspiring state like Somaliland. In other words, as much as I
have been a consistent advocate for Somaliland – just last week I gave an
address at the University of Baltimore School of Law entitled “The Case for the
Republic of Somaliland: At the Frontiers of International Law, African Politics,
and Territorial Order” – I cannot foresee recognition from Washington unless the
government in Hargeisa convinces skeptics that there is substantial “value
added” in the relationship.
To this end, the following are some steps which President Kahin and his
government might take to build upon the recent progress in ties with the United
States with a view to eventually securing formal recognition of what their
citizens have accomplished in building a nation out of the wreckage of the
former Somalia:
First, one cannot understate the importance of the presidential election
scheduled for August 2008: it must be a model of free, fair, and transparent
balloting. One of the most important claims that Somaliland makes on the
attention of the international community is its democratic politics. While the
2005 elections for the House of Representatives marked a significant milestone
in that the incumbent president’s UDUB won only 33 seats in the 82-member
legislature (KULMIYE and UCID won 28 and 21 seats, respectively), following this
up with a successful second direct democratic presidential vote (the first took
place in 2003), would truly confirm Somaliland’s status in the company of
emerging democracies. The United States has provided over $1 million to the
International Republican Institute (IRI) to support training and other programs
in preparation for the elections, while the State Department expects to make an
additional $1.5 million available after the voting. The European Union is
likewise providing financial assistance for the electoral exercise.
Second, beyond the voting, Somaliland must continue making progress on
democratic governance. The territory is characterized a “partly free,” scoring 5
on political rights and 4 on civil liberties in Freedom House’s annual report,
Freedom in the World 2008 (the scale is 1 to 7, with 1 corresponding to the
highest and 7 the lowest levels of freedom). While the scores are impressive in
contrast to that of the countries in its neighborhood – Somalia scores an
abysmal 7 on both indices, Ethiopia and Djibouti scores a 5 on both political
freedom and civil rights, while Eritrea manages to score 7 and 6 respectively –
there is still considerable room for improvement. The members of the upper
chamber of parliament, the House of Elders (Guurti), for example, have
repeatedly extended their own terms of office. Corruption, while not as
insidious as elsewhere in Africa, nonetheless needs to be systematically
combated; while President Kahin deserves credit for sacking a number of corrupt
officials during his tenure, the fact that they were even in place at all and
needed to be removed is still disconcerting. While Somaliland is a largely
homogenous society, there are nonetheless a few very small minority communities
whose concerns could also be better addressed in the overall political process.
Third, while President Kahin expressed the willingness of Somaliland to work
with U.S. regional counterterrorism efforts during his meetings with Defense
Department officials in Washington last month – and legal avenues for such
cooperation need to be found on the American side – Hargeisa must redouble its
efforts on the anti-extremism front. And while government agencies on the
American side may have unresolved issues with certain types of engagements with
their Somaliland counterparts, nothing prevents the latter from more increasing
the quantity and quality of intelligence which they share. This would be
particularly helpful since American military and intelligence officials have
very limited access to reliable information from southern Somalia, an area where
Somalilanders not only are better positioned to operate, but in fact already do
so extensively. While I realize that this proposal shifts the burden somewhat to
Somaliland, it is, after all, Somalilanders who are trying to make a case for
partnership with the United States. (For their part, American officials would do
well to shift responsibility for matters relating to Somaliland from the U.S.
embassy in Kenya to the one in Ethiopia given that while there are no direct
connections between Hargeisa and Nairobi, Somaliland officials and civilians
routinely pass through Addis Ababa en route to other destinations.)
Fourth, it is no secret that the former Somalia has significant potential
natural resources. Last summer, I reported on how the People’s Republic of China
was making a play for the oil in TFG President Abdullahi Yusuf’s home turf.
There is every reason to believe that similar wealth is to be found not only on
Somaliland’s territory, but also in its waters. While every state (and aspiring
state) has the right to make such commercial arrangements as it deems most
advantageous – there are reports of the Swedish-based Lundin Petroleum AB
(owned, since 2001, by Canada’s Talisman Energy) had approached Somaliland’s
Ministry of Water and Minerals for rights to oil and natural gas exploration –
authorities in Hargeisa would do well to consider the long-term strategic
implications of their decisions as well as the economic benefits.
Even if their foreign policy elites were not generally divorced from the
interests of their business classes, neither Sweden nor Canada would likely be
much of a strategic ally for anyone, much less a nascent state in a dangerous
neighborhood like the one Somaliland finds itself in. In contrast, as Walter
Russell Mead and other scholars have pointed out, there is a long tradition of
American business and government working in tandem, with the latter often
following the former’s lead and U.S. political interests adjusting themselves to
advance the economic interests of its citizens. Not only should the government
in Hargeisa be open to approaches by American firms, but it ought to actively
court them, realizing that without significant commercial ties to the United
States, any political relations – if they come about at all – will be very
tenuous. Conversely, the presence of American business interests, especially in
strategic sectors, reinforces the geopolitical case for diplomatic ties between
Washington and Hargeisa.
Commenting on Somaliland, I.M. Lewis, the British scholar who for half a century
has been the preeminent authority on the Somali peoples, observed: “The overall
achievement so far as truly remarkable, and all the more so in that it has been
accomplished by the people of Somaliland themselves with very little external
help or intervention. The contrast with the fate of southern Somalia hardly
needs to be underlined.” For these two reasons, among others, it is hoped that
Somaliland will take the steps necessary to take advantage of the momentum in
favor of advancing ties with its natural strategic partner, the United States,
to the next level.
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Source: Qaran News
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