(Archived document, may contain errors)
I C 745 December 26,1989 PRESERmG AMERICAN SEcURlTy TIES TO SOMALIA
INTRODUCTION Trouble is looming in Somalia, the Horn of Africa's
easternmost country as political support for its regime appears to
be eroding.This is creating problems f or the United States.
Though the Somali government of President Mohammed Siad Barre was
once a Soviet client, since 1977 it has been one of America's few
allies in the region. Somalia granted the U.S. access to Somali
military bases and has served as a ba lance to Soviet military
involvement in the Horn of Africa and the Arabian Peninsula Rebel
Gains. Though Siad still enjoys strong political support from much
of his native Marehan ethnic clan, based in south-central Somalia,
his popularity outside these a r eas has diminished greatly. The
Ethiopian-supported Somali National Movement (SNM) rebels, who have
fought the Siad government since 1982, reportedly have taken
substantial control of the country's north em territories with the
exception of Hargesia, the r egional capital, and four garrison
towns. But early this month even Hargesia came under rebel attack
And last month the rebels claim to have captured Galcaio, a town in
central Somalia. Even in the capital, Mogadishu, support for Siad
is diminishing.The c al movement, the Somali Union Congress.
Hawieh clan, the largest in Mogadishu, recently formed an
opposition politi- F 1 p. 10; and Agence Fmnce-Parse Intensive
Offensive Reported December 7,1989, Foreign Broadcasf Information
Service (FBIS Robert Dowden S omalia is disintegrating into anarchy
77ze Independent (England), October 10,1989, Siad is also losing
stature in the international community because of his regimes
alleged human rights abuses. A U.S. State Department report this
August charges that the S o mali Armed Forces appears to have
engaged in a widespread, systematic and extremely violent assault
on unarmed civilians and a September 1988 Amnesty International
report contains similar char ges? Additionally, Siads advancing age
(he is believed to be o ver 80) and questionable health have led
even his trusted inner circle of advisors openly to discuss a
change of leadership.
Washington not only in the Horn of Africa, but also in the Indian
Ocean, Red Sea, and Persian Gulf. Siad grants American warplanes
landing rights at air ports and American warships use of port
facilities at Berbera, a northern Somali port town on the Gulf of
Aden, and at Mogadishu, the countrys capi tal, which borders the
Indian Ocean.
Access to these facilities have played an import ant role since
1980 in American military plans to respond to crises in the Middle
East, Southwest Asia, and Sub-Saharan Africa.The airstrip at
Berbera, constructed by the Soviets in 1976, is over three miles
long, making it among Africas longest.
During t he Iran hostage crisis in 1979, Jimmy Carter viewed the
Somali bases as one of the few potential launching points for
American forces attempting to rescue the American hostages
inTehran. The facilities also counter the Soviet air and naval
facilities in E thiopia, SouthYemen, the Socotra island off the
South Yemen coast, and on the Dahlak Archipelago off the Red Sea
coast of Ethiopia.
The loss of American access to Berbera and Mogadishu would diminish
greatly U.S. access to the region, and tilt the regional power
balance substan tially in favor of the Soviet Union.
Washington and Mogadishu are at the lowest point in Siads 20-year
reign.To hold back the rebels, Siad needs outside military
assistance. But American military aid, which amounted to $7.5
million in 1987, was suspended in July 1988 because of Somalias
poor human rights record.This has forced the Somali leader to shop
the globe for military equipment, even, it seems, re questing
assistance from Libya and the Soviet Union. Also because of human
rights abuses, the U.S. cancelled a proposed military exercise wi t
h Somalia called Bright Star, scheduled to have taken place last
month As it has turned out, Washingtons decision to trim its
strategic and military cooperation with the Somali government has
done nothing to improve human Critical Bases. Siads political w e
akness presents a dilemma for Shopping the Globe. To make matters
worse, relations between 2 Robert Gersony, Why Somalis Flee:
Synthesis of Accounts of Conflict Experience in Notthem Somali
Refiigees, Displaced Persons and Others Bureau for Refugee Progra m
s, Department of State, August 1989 p. 60; and Sotnalia: A
Long-term Human Rights Crisis (New York: Amnesty International,
September 1988 2 rights in Somalia. As recently as July, Somali
troops reportedly opened fire on demonstrators in Mogadishu,
killing dozens? With the govern ment facing an arms shortage, the
SNM has been able to attack areas in Somalia previously at peace,
thus endangering political stability in the nation and forcing the
government into a state of desperation. Human rights continue to be
vio lated and peace appears to be further away than ever. Americas
policy of suspending strategic and military cooperation with
Somalia, therefore, has failed to achieve its objec tives.
Countering Moscow.
Because the Soviets are deeply entrenched mili tarily in the Horn
of Africa, the U.S. needs some military presence to counter them.
Somalia is one of the few ap propriate locations for this. If Siad
falls, how ever, a new regime could deny America access to the
Somali facilities.To prevent this, Washi ngton should modify its
policy of disengaging entirely from Somalia. The Bush
Administration should work to ensure that SOlMALIA Official Name
Somali Democratic Republic.
Area 246,000 square miles, about the size of Population 5.4
million.
Capital Mogadishu (estimated population Ethnic groups 98.8% Somali;
1.2% Arab California 700,000 and Asian. Major clans: Darod, Digil,
Dir Hawieh, Isaaq, and Rahanwein.
Religion 99% Muslim.
Work force -About 2.2 million: Agriculture 82 Industry and commerce
3%.
Government 5%.
Natural resources Undetermined quantity of various minerals,
including petroleum.
Agriculture products Livestock, bananas corn, sorghum, sugar.
GDP per capita (1987 267 Infant mortality rate 145/1,0
00. Life expectancy 47 years.
U.S. trade with Somalia Imports from Somalia (1988 1.4 million.
Exports to Somalia (1988 27.1 million.
Somali Trade with the World Total exports (1987 Total imports (1987
418 million 95 million Source: Sontafia: Backgroutid Nofes, U.S.
Department of State, Bureau of Public Affairs, April 1986, p.1. and
World Tables (Baltimore: The Johns Hopkiris University Press, 1989
p. 509, World Bank sources; and Foreign Economic Trends and Their
Implication s for the United States, U.S. Department of Commerce,
International Trade Administration, prepared by U.S. Embassy
Mogadishu, August 1988, p. 2 3 The human rights group, Africa
Watch, estimated that as many as 450 people were killed in this
lighting, but g overnment estimates were that the fatalities did
not exceed
23. Jane Perlez, Report for U.S. Says Somali Army Killed 5,000
Unarmed Civilians, 77ie New Yo& Tirites, September 9,1989, p. 5
3 Somalia does not fall into hostile hands and prod Siad to improve
his human rights record and to move toward free elections To
achieve these objectives, the U.S. should Revive the military
assistance program with Somalia.
Urge the Somali government to upgrade security at the military
facilities in Berbera and Mogadishu to defend them from attacks
from the Somali National Movement and other insurgents.
Extend the access agreement, first signed in 1980, to the Berbera
and Mogadishu facilities when it comes up for renewal in 1990.
Promote reconciliation talks between the Somali government and the
Somali National Movement the United Somali Congress, and other
opposition groups.
Open contact with the Somali opposition to encourage them to ac
cept a cease fire and initiate talks with the government.
Demand that Ethiopian le ader Mengistu Haile Mariam cease his
military support for the Somali insurgents FROM COLONIALISM TO
INDEPENDENCE Located in eastern Africa, Somalias coastline borders
the Indian Ocean and the Gulf of Aden. Before achieving
independence in 1960, Somalia wa s a colony of both Britain and
Italy, each of which controlled separate regions of the country.
Britain controlled what was called British Somaliland, now north em
Somalia; Italy controlled what was called Italian Somaliland, now
southern Somalia. British- c ontrolled areas remained under Londons
rule from 1886 until June 1940, when Italian troops, following
their declaration of war on Britain, overran British garrisons. As
part of its military operations against the Italian East African
Empire in 1941, Brita i n captured all of Somalia.The United
Nations General Assembly ruled in November 1949 that Italian
Somaliland should be placed under an international trusteeship for
ten years, with Italy as the administering authority. Following the
ten-year trusteeship, Italian Somaliland was to be granted
independence.
Britain, meanwhile, took steps to prepare for independence of
British Somaliland. Legislative assembly elections were held in
British Somaliland in February 1960, and the new legislature on
April 6,1960 ca lled unanimously for independence from Britain and
declared its intention to unite with inde pendent Italian
Somaliland. British Somaliland was granted independence on June
26,1960, and five days later, it joined Italian Somaliland to form
an inde pendent nation, the Somali Republic 4 MODERN SOMALIA
Somalia borders the African nations of Djibouti, Ethiopia, and
Kenya. With its Horn of Africa location, Somalia is Africa's
gateway to the Gulf of Aden and the Arabian Peninsula As such,
Somalia has been one of the few African nations whose trade and
travel contact with the Arabian peninsula dates back centuries.
Somalia is a member of the Arab League and (with almost all of its
citizens professed Muslims) the Organization of the Islamic
Conference OIC two inter national organizations dominated
predominately by Middle Eastern nations. It is also,
understandably, a member of the Organization of African Unity
(OAU).
Somalia's 5.4 million people inhabit a nation about the size of
California making it one of the more sparsely populated nations in
Sub-Saharan Africa.
The country lacks modern transportation and communication networks
which has discouraged foreign investment.There is no rail system,
and a large portion of the country lacks phone service.
Ethnic Tensions . Unique for Africa, Somalia is composed of only
one eth nic group, the Somalis, that share a common language
(Somali) and religion Muslim They are divided into six major clans,
the Darod, Digil, Dir Hawieh, Ishaak, and Rahanwein, that have
traditionally been rivals. With the independence of Somalia, these
tribe-like clans were forced to govern and live side by side,
causing ethnic tension.
Like its Horn of Africa neighbors, especially Ethiopia and Sudan,
Somalia is extremely poor. It lacks many of the nat ural resources,
such as copper diamonds, gold, and manganese, found in abundance
elsewhere in Africa. Its work force is largely unskilled, working
almost exclusively in agriculture, fish ing, and livestock. Though
petroleum exploration has been undertaken , the results have been
disappointing. Sound economic statistics are hard to come by in
Somalia.The U.S. Department of Commerce's most recent analysis of
the Somali economy reports that for 1987 gross domestic product per
capita was $267 (compared, for exa m ple, to $368 for Kenya 950 for
Nigeria, and 1,739 for Mexico In 1988, Somalia exported $1.4
million worth of products to the U.S mainly soybeans, corn oil,
wheat, and corn meal. The U.S. ex ported $27.1 million worth of
products to Somalia, mainly instrum e nts, ap pliances, and food
products Nationalist Parties. Somalia adopted its first national
constitution in June 1961, providing for a European-style
parliamentary democracy. Political par ties were numerous and based
on the different clans.The most promi n ent were the Somali
National League, the United Somali Party, and the Somali Youth
League. Though nationalist sentiments were strong, tension
developed between the clans in the northern and southern
territories. Political divisions 4 4 "Foreign EconomicTr ends and
Their Implications for the United States U.S. Department of
Commerce International Trade Administration, prepared by U.S.
Embassy Mogadishu, August 1988, p. 2; also, US.
Department of Commerce sources 5 also developed between those
nationalist par ties such as the Somali Youth League that wanted to
bring territories in Ethiopia and Kenya inhabited by ethnic
Somalis, under one unified Somali state, and the so-called moder
nists, represented by the Somali National Congress, a coalition of
former memb e rs of the Somali National League and the Somali Youth
League, who were more concerned with conomic modernization and
improving relations with other African nations One Somali political
party, the Somali Youth League (SYL won enough support from the
divers e clans to assume political power in Somalia in 1967.
The SWs party leader, Mohamed Ibrahim Egal, was elected prime
minister in 19
67. He maintained Somalias democratic political structure and
worked to foster closer relations with neighboring Ethiopia and
Kenya democracy ended in October 1969 when Somalias army and
police, led by Major General Mohamed Siad Barre, overthrew the
gover n ment in a blood less coup.The new regime governed through a
20-member Supreme Revolu tionary Council (SRC with Siad as
chairman. And in an apparent effort to obtain military and
political support from Moscow, Siad announced in Oc tober 1970 that
he was a socialist.
The U.S. was strongly allied at the time with Emperor Haile
Selassies government in neighboring Ethiopia, and Siads rise to
power offered the Soviets an opportunity for greater influence in
the Horn of Africa. The Soviets embraced Siad and signe d a treaty
of friendship and cooperation with Somalia in 19
74. In the three following years, the Soviet Union sent an es
timated $435 million in military support to Somalia.
In the mid-l970s, Siad began training a rebel movement in the
Ogaden region of eastern Ethiopia called the Western Somali
Liberation Front WSLF The Ogaden which is populated predominately
by ethnic Somalis was viewed by Scad as part of a greater Somalia.
Siad hoped that by foment ing unrest in the Ogaden, he could
someday detach it f rom Ethiopia and annex it to Somalia 1977 to
support the WSLF in their fight against Ethiopia.The same month
however, in a startling reversal of policy, the Soviet Union
withdrew its sup PO-rt of Siad and began sending military
assistance to Ethiopias new leader Mengistu Haile Mafiam, who bok
power following a two and a half year struggle within the coalition
that had toppled Emperor Haile Selassie in Sep tember 1974.This
dramatic shift in Soviet policy was due in part to MOSCOWS
calculation that it could t ake advantage of the increasingly tense
relations be tween Washington and Mengistu, spurred primarily by
Mengistus human rights violations. Another reason for the switch
was Mengistus more sincere ideological commitment to
Marxism-Leninism f Socialist Reg i me. Egals rule lasted only two
years. Constitutional Strategic Prize. Siad ordered his forces to
invade the Ogaden region in July 5 Background Notes: Somalia, U.S.
Department of State, April 1986 p 4. I 6 Perhaps most important, in
the choice between alig n ing with Ethiopia or Somalia, the Soviets
simply viewed Ethiopia as the greater strategic prize as it surely
is. Soviet military presence in Ethiopia gave Moscow access to the
Red Sea at ports only 200 miles from oil-rich Saudi Arabia. The
Soviets also in h erited existing American military facilities,
like the communications cen ter in Asmara, near the Red Sea! Since
1977, Moscow clearly has valued its strategic alliance with
Mengistu, sending Ethiopia some 7 billion of military assistance
Breaking With Cub a . Following Moscow's embrace of Mengistu, Siad
ex pelled all Soviet advisers in November 1977 and abrogated the
friendship agreement with the Soviet Union.That month, too, because
of Cuba's exten sive involvement in the Ogaden War, Siad also broke
diploma t ic ties with Cuba? Without Soviet military backing,
Somalia's forces were forced to retreat from the Ogaden in March
1978, though the WSLF continues to carry out guerrilla activity in
the region to this day THE US. AND SOMALIA Upon breaking with
Moscow in 1977, Siad turned to the U.S. for military assistance,
though the U.S. was initially reluctant to help him because of his
support for the Ogaden insurgents in Ethiopia. Eventually, however,
the U.S became convinced of the need to counter Soviet involvemen t
in the region and responded favorably to Siad's request for closer
relations As a result, the U.S. opened an Agency for International
Development ATD) office in Somalia in 19
78. Current AID programs include a livestock quarantine station
designed to bre ed healthy cattle, management training programs and
health services. AID also provides the Somali government with
advice on export competitiveness.The U.S. has provided Somalia with
$300 million in economic assistance since 1985, most of which has
been us e d for economic development, food aid, and management
training programs U.S. Military Aid. The U.S. in August 1980 signed
an agreement with Siad giving the U.S. access to airfields and dock
facilities in Berbera and Mogadishu.The same year the U.S. began p
r oviding Somalia with military as sistance. Since then, the U.S.
has given Somalia $133.5 million in such aid, in addition to
military training. U.S. lethal military aid to Somalia has been
mainly rifles and other small weapons. When Ethiopian forces invad
ed Somalia in summer 1982, the U.S. airlifted military supplies to
help Somalia defend its territory.
Relations between Washington and Mogadishu were close from 1982
until last year, though military aid for Somalia was cut from
around $25 million a 6 Right s in Ethiopia Heritage Foundation
Buckgrounder No. 692, February 23,1989 7 Diplomatic relations
between Cuba and Somalia were just reestablished this year For a
fuller discussion of Ethiopia's strategic value, see Michael Johns
A U.S. Strategy to Foster H u man Cuba's Fidel Castro sent some
22,OOO troops to the Ogaden to assist Ethiopia in its fight against
Somalia 7 year to $5 million a year in 1987 because of
across-the-board reductions in the Pentagons African military
assistance budget. Siad visited the U.S. in 19
82. Along with Zaire, Somalia has been viewed widely as one of the
U.S.3 closest allies in Africa As reports of significant human
rights violations by the Siad regime reached the West, the U.S.
suspended its lethal military ,aid for Somalia in J uly 1988, and
$21 million in economic assistance was redirected to other African
countries this August. Another reason for the suspension was U.S.
un happiness with Siads refusal to talk with the SNM rebels. Siad
since has ex pressed willingness to talk u n conditionally with the
SNM has released most political prisoners, and has appointed a
commission to provide recommenda tions on a return to democracy,
but the U.S. ban on military aid to Somalia has not been lifted
Staying Engaged. As a result, U.S. polic y toward Somalia is in
1imbo.There is significant congressional opposition to reactivating
U.S. military and economic assistance to Somalia, though both the
Pentagon and State Depart ment reportedly have expressed support
for renewed assistance. We dont wa nt to give a signal of
withdrawal, a State Department spokesman com mented in October 19
88. We want to stay engaged.8 Earlier this month, the U.S. Deputy
Assistant Secretary of State for East Africa Irvin Hicks visited
Mogadishu for talks with top Somali officials. He reportedly
praised Siads recent decision to explore the possibility for a
multi-party system in Somalia but made no announcement about
restoring U.S. economic or military assis tance.
Congressional opposition to aid to Somalia has been led b y
Democrat Rep resentatives Howard Wolpe of Michigan and William H.
Gray, 111, of Pennsyl vania.This September, Gray introduced a Sense
of the Congress Resolution that insisted upon significant
improvements in the area of human rights as a precondition to the
resumption of foreign assistance to Somalia.1o 9 SOMALIAS STRATEGIC
IMPORTANCE Somalia-U.S. trade relations are very limited, and
Somalia possesses few natural resources required by the U.S. The
U.S. interest in Somalia is limited almost exclusively t o the
African countrys strategic value: its location along the coastline
to the Indian Ocean and the Gulf of Aden, two strategically im
portant waterways.
The Somali coastline is the second largest on the African continent
after South Africa. An estimated 500,000 barrels of crude oil
passes through the Gulf of Aden each day, much of it destined for
Europe, North America, and 8 David Ottaway, Congress Blocking Aid
to Somalia, The Washington Post, October 26,1988, p. Am 9 Mogadishu
Domestic Service, December 4,1989, Foreign Broadcast Infomation
Service, December 7,1989 10 Congressman William H. Gray, 111,
letter to congressional colleagues, September 25,1989 8 American
allies in Asia. Given the volatile nature of the region, created by
such unpredictable coun t ries as Ethiopia and Iran, as well as the
Soviet Unions deep military involvement, it is necessary for the
U.S. to maintain naval and air power in the region.The Soviets have
built a major military facility in the Dahlak Islands in the Red
Sea, and have a i r and naval bases on the southern tip of the
Arabian Peninsula at Aden and on the Yemeni Island of Socotra in
the Gulf of Aden.These facilities enable the Soviets to dock and
refuel ships fly reconnaissance flights in the region, and to
project air and na v al power in the Indian Ocean, Gulf of Aden,
and the Red Sea Renewing the Bases Agreements. The bases in Somalia
allow the U.S. to counter Soviet military power in the region. In
accord with the 1980 access agreement, the U.S. can operate Navy
flights out o f the air strips at Berbera and Mogadishu, conduct
joint exercises with Somali forces, dock and refuel ships, and
conduct military repairs.The air strips at Berbera and Mogadishu
enable the U.S. to fly reconnaissance flights in the region, and
could be us e d for combat air operations in the Persian Gulf, the
Red Sea, or the Indian Ocean. Berbera and Mogadishu also are used
for military training exercises in the region.The option for
discontinuing the agreement comes up next year, but the Siad
government has said it wants to renew it Political instability in
Somalia, however, could make renewal uncertain.
Siad is at war with the Ethiopian-backed Somali National Movement.
Given the SNMs close ties with Soviet-backed Ethiopia, its victory
over the govern ment p otentially could end U.S. access to the
Berbera and Mogadishu facilities. Such a development could lead to
not only greater instability in the Horn of Africa, but also to the
expansion of Soviet military power into Somalia SIADS RULE Major
General Mohamed Siad Barre has ruled Somalia with an iron hand
since taking power in October 19
69. He has permitted little dissent and at times has crushed such
dissent with force. Though his rule has been authoritarian,
Somalias human rights record, while heavily criti cized, has been
much better than that of Mengistu Haile Mariam in neighboring
Ethiopia. Over one million Ethiopians have died, primarily as a
result of atrocities committed by Mengistus government and by the
man-made famine created-by Mengistu in 1984 in a n effort to crush
areas of political opposi tion Unlike many dictators, Siad recently
permitted human rights inves- tigators from Amnesty International,
the Department of State, the General Accounting Office (GAO) and
other institutions to visit Somalia a n d inves tigate the countrys
human rights conditions 11 Petroleum Economist, October 1989, p.
325, and Department of Energy sources 12 See Johns, A US. Strategy
to Foster Human Rights io Ethiopia, op. cir. Also, Michael Johns,
Gorbachevs Holocaust: Soviet Complicity in Ethiopias Famine, Policy
Review, Summer 1988, p. 74 9 Findings by these human rights
organizations over the past year, however have revealed significant
human rights violations under the Siad regime.
These conditions are widely reported to have deteriorated since May
1988 when the Somali National Movement (SNM) launched it largest
offensive to date against the Siad regime. A September 1988 Amnesty
International report found that Somalia had engaged in a consistent
pattern of torture lengthy and often arbitrary detention of
suspected political o onents of the government and often unfair
trials of political defendants. Amnesty Inter national is planning
a follow-up report on Somalias human rights conditi o n Room for
Miscalculation. Another human rights report by Robert Ger sony, a
consultant for the State Departments Bureau for Refugee Programs
concluded this August that the Somali government was responsible
for the murder of at least 5,000 unarmed civilia n s who belonged
to the Issak clan.14 The Gersony report must be viewed skeptically,
however, because it relies on interviews with Somali refugees and
displaced persons, which leaves room for miscalculation. Gersonys
1988 human rights report on civilian mur ders by the Mozambique
National Resistance (RENAMO) was done infi similar fashion,
prompting condemnations of the reports methodology.
Nonetheless, the number of accusations against Siad, coming from
diverse sources, leave little doubt that a very serious human
rights problem exists in Somalia. But such abuses are not
restricted to the government. Somalias major armed rebel movement,
the Somali National Movement, also has been criticized for
violating human rights. According to Gersony: During the first t h
ree months of its 1988 offensive in northern Somalia, SNM
combatants killed unarmed civilians in individual instances which
together may have resulted in the deaths of at last several hundred
or more persons During its presence in Burao (in northern Somal i a
the SNM conducted summary ex ecutions of fifty or more prisoners,
some after perfunctory court martia1s.l6 The fierce tactics of both
the government and the SNM in northern Somalia have forced some
400,000 Somalis to seek refuge in Ethiopia Positive Ste p s. Human
rights accusations have not been the only charges leveled against
Siad. Many Somalis contend that Siad has granted special privileges
to members of his native Marehan clan. Government positions and
trade licenses reportedly often have been grante d first to
Marehans which has been enormously frustrating to other Somali
clans, especially the Issaqs.
This practice has intensified ethnic-based tensions timated 100
political prisoners were released and last month a commission lP In
the past year, howev er, Siad has taken positive steps. In
February, an es 13 Somalia: A Lonttetm Human Rights Crisis, op. cit
p. 1 14 Gersony, op. cit p. 61 15 See, for instance, William
Pascoe, The Controversial State Department Report on Mozambique,
Heritage Foundation Bac k grounder Update No. 75, May 4,1988 16
Gersony, op. cit p. 62 10 was appointed to prepare constitutional
amendments that will allow a multi party political system. Siad has
also remarked recently that elections could be held as early as
next year U.S. POLI C Y TOWARD SOMALIA Washington now faces a
challenge in Somalia. Siad is an aging dictator with diminishing
support among his people, and his departure from power is wide ly
believed to be imminent.The Bush Administration must anticipate
Siads departure and p repare for relations with his successor. In
doing so, the Ad ministration should have two main objectives: 1)
continued American access to Somali airfield and seaport facilities
in Berbera and Mogadishu; and 2) a peaceful transfer of political
power in So m alia that will, among other things improve the human
rights condition In pursuit of these objectives, the U.S. should
Revive the military assistance program with Somalia. Denying
Somalia the military aid it needs to defend itself against a
foreign support e d insurgency and an aggressive Soviet-supported
neighbor Ethiopia, does not improve Somalias domestic human rights
climate and may aggravate the situation by creating a sense of
desperation among the Somali armed forces. Such a policy also could
push Siad into such hostile hands as Libya and the Soviet Union.
The U.S should revive its military assistance to Somalia, providing
it with defensive-oriented military aid for use against rebel
advances while urging the Siad government to open peace talks with
the rebels designed to reach political reconciliation and democracy
Upgrade security at American military facilities in Somalia. As the
civil war in Somalia rages, chances increase that the Somali
National Movement (SNM) or other armed insurgents may attack A
merican facilities.The SNM is already fighting in Berbera.The U.S.
should en sure that these Somali facilities are properly defended
by upgrading their security. Because the bases are not owned by the
U.S this will require close cooperation with Somalia R enew the
U.S.-Somali access agreement to the Berbera and Mogadishu
facilities when it comes iip for review in 19
90. The air port and seaport facilities at Berbera and Mogadishu
respectively offer U.S. forces access to the Indian Ocean, the
Persian Gulf, a nd the Red Sea. Given the volatile nature of this
region, it is critical that the U.S. maintain such access to defend
U.S. security interests.The access agreement with Somalia enables
the U.S. to fly Navy flights 17 Siad Barre Says Free Elections
Planned f or 1990, Agence France-Presse, November 12,1989, Foreign
Broadcast Infomation Service, November 13,1989, p. 3 11out of the
air strips, conduct joint exercises with Somali forces, dock and
refuel ships, and conduct military repairs Open talks with Somalias
opposition. To foster reconciliation be tween the government of
Somalia and the Somali opposition groups the Bush Administration
should establish diplomatic contact with the Somali National
Movement (SNM) and other opposition groups.
The SNM refuses to ta lk with the Somali government until Siad
leaves power. The U.S. should urge the SNM to change this policy
Demand that Ethiopias Mengistu not destabilize Somalia Ethiopian
dictator Mengistu Haile Mariam is providing arms, trucks fuel and
other military ass istance to the Somali National Movement.
This aid in part, has been used to attack Ethiopian refugee camps
in Somalia, resulting in civilian fatalities. SNM forces, for
instance, at tacked two refugee camps in A abar and Las Dhure,
killing an es timated 43 people in May 19
88. The U.S. should inform the Ethiopian leader that unless he ends
his destabilizing role in Somalia, the U.S. will terminate all
diplomatic contact with Ethiopia 58 Link further U.S. economic
assistance to Somalia to improvements in th e countrys human rights
record and to progress toward democracy. Instead of terminating
military assistance to Somalia over human rights violations, which
will endanger U.S. security inter ests and potentially push the
Somali government into the hands of h ostile nations, the U.S.
should offer Somalia increased economic as sistance as human rights
improvements are made and steps are taken toward democracy. Siad
has already set up a commission to explore constitutional options
for a return to democracy, and t he U.S. should encourage this
commission to present such a plan as quickly as pos sible. Once a
new constitution providing for a restoration of democracy in
Somalia is agreed upon the U.S. immediately should restore the
economic assistance program, which w as estimated at $21 million
before Congress suspended it this August. The U.S. should in form
Siad that once free and fair elections are held in Somalia, the
U.S. will be prepared to double this assistance CONCLUSION Somalia
has been one of Americas close s t allies in Africa since 1980.This
useful relationship need not be sacrificed because of Siads
political weakness and poor human rights record. Instead,
Washington should use its limited in fluence in Somalia to
encourage political reconciliation between t he warring factions
and to promote human rights improvements, while at the same time 18
For a fuller discussion of human rights violations by the Somali
National Movement (SNM), see Gersony op. cil., pp. 40-42, pp.
51-52, and p. 62 12 safeguarding U.S. se c urity interests in the
region by ensuring continued ac cess to Somali air and naval
facilities Constructive Force. Human rights have been violated
systematically in Somalia, but Siad has made modest progress in the
past year. Political prisoners have been released, commissions to
explore steps toward democratization have been appointed, and Siad
has expressed interest in res toring a multiparty system and
opening negotiations ~th Somali opposition groups. Washingtons
abandoning Somalia will not improve hum an rights in Somalia, but
could only open the way for increased Soviet and Libyan in fluence.
Instead of disengaging from Somalia, the U.S. should work more
closely with Siad to democratize Somalia and respect human rights,
while still safeguarding U.S. se curity interests through a
restoration of the military assis tance program and greater
cooperation on protecting the security of the im portant base
facilities in Berbera and Mogadishu. As such, the U.S. can protect
U.S. security interests in the region w hile becoming a more
construc tive and influential force in fostering a more humane and
stable Somalia.
Michael Johns Policy Analyst