Bush’s so-called war against terrorism entered
a further, cynical stage with the recent classification of a
Somali group as alleged “terrorists.” Al Shabab, the
military wing of the Union of Islamic Courts, was declared
by the US State Department to be a terrorist organization. The
Bush administration claims that “some” members of Al Shabab
are affiliated with Al Qaeda.
In order to understand the cynicism of this move
it is important to remember that Somalia was a basket case
for over a decade after the overthrow of dictator, Siad Barre.
Filled with clan-based war lords, the country had no stable
government. An international attempt to forge a transitional
national government resulted in no further stability or end
to the violence. The rise of a right-wing Islamist group known
as the Union of Islamic Courts, however, brought about a period
of relative stability and internal peace. While the group was
and is ultra-conservative in many of its tenets, it was successful
in crushing or co-opting many of the warlords. Further, it was
an indigenous group to Somalia and not an arm of
another country or an external social movement.
Using the pretext of an alleged - and unproven
- connection between the Union of Islamic Courts and Al Qaeda,
Ethiopian troops - encouraged and backed by the Bush administration
- invaded Somalia
in 2006 with the stated objective of supporting the Transitional
National Government, an institution that was on its last legs,
and had little support within the population. Though the Ethiopians
defeated the UIC in formal battle, the situation in Somalia
devolved into guerrilla war and chaos. The situation has been
going downhill ever since.
Al Shabab, whether one supports them or not,
is an armed resistance movement. It has been carrying out military
actions against troops of the country that invaded Somalia. One does not have
to support the UIC or the actions of Al Shabab to recognize
that a people have a right to oust those who invade their land.
The
Bush administration’s action in classifying Al Shabab as “terrorists”
further complicates an already difficult situation. As opposed
to recognizing that Al Shabab is the military wing of a legitimate
movement, classifying them as alleged terrorists makes efforts
towards a political resolution of the conflict unlikely, if
not nearly impossible, just as has happened in Iraq. One does not have to
like Al Shabab, or agree with its objectives, as long as it
can be demonstrated on the ground that this is a movement that
has a real constituency and is militarily confronting an occupying
army.
The Bush administration, as it has done in other
parts of the world, e.g., in Turkey with the Kurdistan Workers
Party (PKK), in the Philippines with the Communist Party of
the Philippines (and their New People’s Army), selectively chooses
when to classify an insurgency or resistance as terrorists,
based almost solely according to whether the target of the insurgency/resistance
is a friend of the Bush administration. In the case of Somalia, the Ethiopians are doing the bidding
of the Bush administration as well as serving their own regional
ambitions.
There is another piece to this which is worth
noting. Throwing around the label of “terrorist” is also aimed
at suppressing dissent here at home in the USA. Whether one is a Somali
émigré, Somali American, or simply someone who supports Somalia’s right to national
self-determination, the label of terrorist has a chilling effect
on one’s willingness to speak out. As witnessed during the Cold
War with the manner in which the charge of “communist sympathizer”
was used to suppress dissent, the suggestion that someone is
either soft on terrorism or, worse, aiding and abetting an alleged
terrorist group shuts down all reasonable discussion.
So, let’s be clear: the Bush administration is
not interested in reasonable discussion. We, however, should
be, so we need to push back against this latest outrage.
Bill Fletcher,
Jr. is Executive Editor of The Black Commentator. He
is also a Senior Scholar with the Institute for Policy Studies and the immediate past president
of TransAfrica Forum. Click
here to contact Mr. Fletcher.