Last weekend’s attack by al-Shabab militants on Westgate shopping mall in Kenya should be a wake-up call that more work is needed to stabilize Somalia and prevent it from falling back into another long period of chaos and famine.
Taking a Stand With Kenya and Somalia
Photo Credit: New York Times

Carried out by the radical Somali group loosely affiliated with al Qaeda, the assault was not aimed at Kenya alone. It was an indirect attack against all of Somalia's neighbors, the five African countries contributing troops to the Somali peacekeeping force and the international community supporting Somalia’s stabilization efforts.

The main goal was to inflict mass casualties and punish the Kenyan government for joining the African peacekeeping force in southern Somalia. But the bold strike on a high-profile target and al-Shabab’s conspicuous use of social media throughout the four-day standoff also revealed its determination to garner increased international attention for its on-going fight in Somalia.

The siege was also meant to demonstrate that al-Shabab has not been completely defeated and retains the capacity to strike beyond Somalia's borders. Moreover, the group sought to embarrass Somalia's year-old government, and - most importantly - to weaken the resolve of those nations that have contributed to its progress over the past four years.

The success or failure of the Westgate operation, which killed citizens from at least a half dozen nations, will be determined by the response of the international community. The United States and other nations pulled out of Mogadishu, Somalia’s capital and main seaport, 20 years ago after 18 American soldiers were killed in the “Black Hawk Down” incident. The country deteriorated into a famine-plagued failed state ruled by warlords and became a safe haven for the leaders of al-Qaida in east Africa.

To protect Somalia’s ascent from those depths, the international community must continue and expand support in four key areas:

Support Somalia’s rehabilitation and its fledgling institutions

After two decades of lawlessness, Somalia has begun to restore central government authority, improve security and revive the country's flattened economy. Over the past four years, Somalia has adopted a provisional constitution, and the Transitional Federal Government has peacefully given way to a recently-elected permanent government. There is a new president and prime minister and a smaller, better-educated parliament. This secular and democratically-oriented government poses a direct and serious threat to al-Shabab's efforts to establish a conservative jihadist state in Somalia.

The success of this re-establishment of government institutions is critical, and the international community is responding. Two weeks ago in Brussels, pledges of U.S. $2.4 billion dollars in reconstruction and development assistance over three years were made, including $1.5 billion by the European Union and $69 million by the United States. These funds will give the Somali government an opportunity to rebuild a society that provides an alternative to al-Shabab’s fundamentalism. The international community must fulfill these commitments.

Support Amisom, the African peacekeeping mission in Somalia

Less than four years ago, al-Shabab's authority stretched across all of south-central Somalia, while the Transitional Federal Government controlled less than two square miles of Mogadishu and exercised authority over no major towns or regions in the south. Intervention by Amisom (the African Union Mission in Somalia) reversed that picture. Under Ugandan leadership, with troops from Kenya, Burundi, Djibouti and Sierra Leone, Amisom has driven al-Shabab out of Mogadishu and every major city in southern Somalia. The African peacekeepers have helped restore central authority in places that have lacked it for nearly two decades.

Amisom's efforts have significantly disbursed and impeded al-Shabab, but they have not defeated it - as the Nairobi attack demonstrated. European Union, U.S. and U.N. support for Amisom must continue until al-Shabab no longer poses a serious threat and Somali troops are able to secure the country.

Stand with Kenya

Kenya has suffered a devastating blow, and its friends must move swiftly to aid its recovery. Although President Obama omitted Kenya from his June 2013 trip to Africa, the country has the largest economy in the region and is east Africa's commercial, financial, transportation, agricultural and industrial hub.

Since its independence in 1963, Kenya has also been America's oldest, strongest and most reliable partner in the area, and Nairobi is home to the largest and most regionally important U.S. embassy in sub-Saharan Africa. As it did after the terrorist destruction of that embassy in 1998, the United States must assist Kenya today. So must the international community.

Expand counterterrorism cooperation in East Africa

Under ever intensifying pressure in Somalia, al-Shabab is attracting more jihadists from abroad and will almost certainly attempt more attacks. Last week's operation was not their first mass casualty assault outside Somalia. On July 11, 2010, al-Shabab militants simultaneously detonated bombs at two restaurants in Kampala, Uganda, killing more than 70 people, including one American.

Other countries contributing troops to Amisom might also be on al-Shabab’s target list. And mass casualty attacks in any of those countries will likely involve foreigners, including American citizens. Supporters of peace and stability must find ways to help east African countries threatened by al-Shabab to improve their border security and counter-terrorism programs.

By taking these steps to help Somalia consolidate its progress, the international community will be able to defeat al-Shabab and the violent extremists who have joined it. Kenya has suffered a serious shock because of its participation in Amisom. This is a time to stand firm with Somalia and the African countries that are trying desperately to prevent its return to the chaos that defined it for two disastrous decades.

Ambassador Johnnie Carson - a former United States ambassador to Uganda, Zimbabwe and Kenya - served as U.S. assistant secretary of state for African affairs from May 2009 until March 2013. He is now senior advisor to the president of USIP. This article was first published by AllAfrica.

Related Publications

Kenya’s Crisis Shows the Urgency of African Poverty, Corruption, Debt

Kenya’s Crisis Shows the Urgency of African Poverty, Corruption, Debt

Thursday, June 27, 2024

Kenya’s public protests and deadly violence over proposed tax increases this week highlight some of the country’s most serious challenges: high youth unemployment, deepening poverty and the glaring gap between living conditions for the country’s elite and its urban poor. This social crisis is exacerbated by severe corruption, a stifling foreign debt and a too-violent response by Kenyan police, who have a poor record in handling large demonstrations. Steps to calm this crisis are vital to preserve Kenya’s overall stability, its role as an East African trade hub — and its capacity to serve as a leader for peace, which the United States increasing has relied upon in Africa and elsewhere.

Type: Analysis

EconomicsGlobal Policy

America’s Vital 21st-Century ‘Partnership With Africa’ — and Kenya’s Key Role

America’s Vital 21st-Century ‘Partnership With Africa’ — and Kenya’s Key Role

Wednesday, May 29, 2024

The state visit to Washington last week by Kenya’s President William Ruto provides a moment in which to assess not simply a major U.S. bilateral partnership in Africa, but the progress of the United States’ declared intent to build a strategic partnership with the continent overall. The U.S. government in 2022 declared that partnership vital to U.S. interests — a recognition of Africa’s rising economic potential and its inevitably central role in all efforts to build global stability and prosperity in this century. Former assistant secretary of state for Africa Johnnie Carson, now a senior advisor at USIP, assessed the visit and the progress in building that new, transatlantic partnership.

Type: Question and Answer

Global Policy

Kenya, a Key U.S. Partner, Needs Help to Foster Peace in Africa and Beyond

Kenya, a Key U.S. Partner, Needs Help to Foster Peace in Africa and Beyond

Wednesday, May 22, 2024

This week’s state visit to the United States by Kenya’s president — the first by an African head of state in over 15 years — is meant ceremonially to celebrate 60 years of formal U.S.-Kenyan relations. But Kenya’s current importance for America lies in its role as a valued partner, especially on the continent with the world’s fastest-growing population. President William Ruto can underscore both imperatives and opportunities for U.S. roles across the continent that will shape security and prosperity for next generations of Americans and Africans. Urgent issues include averting catastrophic famine in East Africa and activating economic investment to support stability and democratization.

Type: Analysis

Global Policy

How the World Can Better Support Women Peacebuilders

How the World Can Better Support Women Peacebuilders

Monday, May 20, 2024

Whether it’s providing clean drinking water to displaced persons, organizing education for at-risk youth or directly engaging in mediation between warring parties, the 2023 Women Building Peace Award finalists have all shown themselves to be impactful advocates of peace and stability in their communities. USIP spoke to award recipient Pétronille Vaweka of the Democratic Republic of Congo and finalists Dr. Marie-Marcelle Deschamps of Haiti, Abir Haj Ibrahim of Syria and Hamisa Zaja of Kenya about their work and how the international community can help to empower and expand the critical efforts of women peacebuilders around the world.

Type: Blog

GenderPeace Processes

View All Publications