Since Ethiopian troops installed the Transitional Federal Government (TFG) in the city in late December, the Somali capital's brief interval of peace and security has given way to renewed fighting, with the Ethiopian invaders replying to mortar attacks on their bases with indiscriminate artillery fire in the middle of the city.
Almost all Somalis see Ethiopia as their country's main enemy, and behind the Ethiopians they see the United States. So when the Union of Islamic Courts that restored peace to the ruined city last June was forced to flee in late December, and U.S. aircraft attacked retreating UIC fighters (targeting suspected Al-Qaeda members, they claimed), resistance was inevitable.
The attacks on the Ethiopians by various Somali factions, some linked to the Islamic Courts and some to local warlords who returned to the city after the UIC was chased out, have grown so frequent that most of the TFG's members have withdrawn from Mogadishu back to Baidoa, their former "provisional capital." The plan was to replace Ethiopian troops with a multi-national African Union force as soon as possible, but the first Ugandan soldiers to arrive in Mogadishu on March 6 immediately came under fire as well.
Like his father before him, President George W. Bush has authorized a military intervention in Somalia, and once again it will end in tears. But there are two differences this time: the younger Bush is committing no American troops, and there are none of the genuinely humanitarian intentions that motivated the 1992 intervention. It's just a question of making sure that "our guy" runs
"Our guy," in this case, is Abdullahi Yusuf, one of the many warlords to rise out of the chaos that has been
While
The organizing force behind the popular uprising was the Union of Islamic Courts. Funded by local merchants in the hope that they could reduce the constant robberies and kidnaps that made it almost impossible to do business, the Islamic Courts quickly grew into a mass movement that embodied the longing of ordinary Somalis for an end to the violence. The peace they brought to
It was Somalis settling their own problems -- just what all the foreigners had been urging them to do for so long -- but unfortunately they had come up with the wrong answer: the courts were "Islamic", and they wanted to enforce sharia law. How else you might persuade Somalis to rise above their divisive clan loyalties, apart for appealing to their shared religious values, was not explained, but this solution was clearly unacceptable to the
As an amorphous popular movement, the UIC had no control over its more loud-mouthed supporters, some of whom prattled freely about unifying all Somali-inhabited areas (which would mean invading
That's over now. Since the Ethiopians took
If Abdullahi Yusuf could bring peace to
The Islamic Courts will go on fighting the Ethiopians, Abdullahi Yusuf, and the other warlords, but they risk becoming just one more contender in the unending, multi-sided battle for control of
MS/HG
END
MNA
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