The fight against al-Shabaab is failing to achieve its objectives because African Union forces are “overstretched” and the Somalia National Army suffers “endemic deficiencies,” the US military commander for Africa said on Tuesday.
Gen David
Rodriguez, head of the the US Africa Command (Africom), offered a bleak
assessment of Somalia's security situation in remarks to the US Senate
Armed Services Committee.
His comments stood in marked
contrast to assurances of substantial progress in Somalia that other US
officials have repeatedly voiced.
Al-Shabaab did lose territory last year and was weakened in its ability to generate resources, Gen Rodriguez said.
But
he warned that Shabaab may respond to these financial and territorial
losses “by broadening its terrorist agenda throughout East Africa.”
AIR STRIKE
The group also retains the ability to stage lethal attacks inside Somalia, Gen Rodriguez acknowledged on the same day that other US military officials were reporting an air strike on a Shabaab compound that was said to have killed 150 militants.
The group also retains the ability to stage lethal attacks inside Somalia, Gen Rodriguez acknowledged on the same day that other US military officials were reporting an air strike on a Shabaab compound that was said to have killed 150 militants.
Recent military
operations against the Islamist insurgents “have been limited due to
overstretched Amisom forces and endemic deficiencies within the Somali
National Army.”
Shabaab may respond to its financial
and territorial losses inside Somalia “by broadening its terrorist
agenda throughout East Africa,” Gen Rodriguez warned.
He also noted that Shabaab is currently carrying out “almost daily lethal asymmetric attacks in Somalia against Amisom troops.”
The US commander's appraisal suggested that intensive efforts by the US and other powers to improve the Somali state's military and governance capabilities have produced few gains.
The US commander's appraisal suggested that intensive efforts by the US and other powers to improve the Somali state's military and governance capabilities have produced few gains.
FOREIGN FORCES
“The
Somali National Army remains dependent on foreign forces to conduct
operations and is challenged by leadership, logistical support and clan
factionalism,” he told the US Senate panel.
“Under-governed
areas outside the reach of the Federal Government of Somalia will
continue providing Al-Shabaab with territory in which it can evade
security forces and continue targeting East African regional governments
and security interests as well as European and American interests,” the
general added.
And there is little prospect that Somalia's central government will function more effectively in the coming months, he said.
Political
tensions within the government are likely to increase in the run-up to
scheduled elections in August, Gen Rodriquez predicted.
These
tensions “may be exacerbated,” he added, “if the government falls
further behind on the key transitional benchmarks of constitutional
reform, federal state creation, and the establishment of technical
commissions to oversee the electoral process, or if it tries to exert
its authority outside of a federally-styled government.”
Gen Rodriguez also sounded an alarm concerning “widespread deterioration of security situations” elsewhere in East Africa.
He attributed this negative trend to “contested elections and constitutional referendums.”
“As
seen in Burundi,” the Africom chief said, “election protests can lead
to politically motivated violence between the opposition, security
forces, and civilian militias.”
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