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Zmeselo
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U.S. rejects African Union request to fund new peacekeeping mission in Somalia

Post by Zmeselo » 11 May 2025, 04:27



U.S. rejects African Union request to fund new peacekeeping mission in Somalia

https://somaliguardian.com/news/somalia ... n-somalia/

May 10, 2025



MOGADISHU (Somaliguardian) – The United States has categorically refused to provide financial support to the African Union’s new stabilization mission in Somalia (AUSSOM), pushing the already fragile operation closer to collapse.

A delegation of senior African Union (AU) officials traveled to Washington this week in a last-ditch effort to secure funding for AUSSOM, which is set to replace the current AU Transition Mission in Somalia (ATMIS) in July. However, U.S. officials reportedly dismissed the appeal, citing concerns over operational inefficiencies and the lack of burden-sharing among international partners.

Washington, during a meeting held in Kampala last month, made its position clear: no U.S. funding would be committed unless other donors contribute equally and structural reforms are made to the mission’s mandate to better reflect the evolving security landscape in Somalia.

Despite nearly two decades of AU military presence, the Islamist insurgent group Al-Shabaab remains entrenched, with recent offensives by the group reversing hard-won gains made by Somali forces. Al-Shabaab has reclaimed significant territory in the Middle and Lower Shabelle regions, just outside the capital, Mogadishu.

ATMIS, the outgoing AU mission, is reportedly grappling with severe financial shortfalls, including nearly $100 million in unpaid salaries and operational debts. The funding crisis has eroded troop morale and raised fears of a security vacuum if AUSSOM fails to launch on schedule.

Western donors have grown increasingly disillusioned after years of protracted engagement and limited progress. Critics argue that billions of dollars in international aid have been squandered, fueling what observers describe as donor fatigue and strategic pessimism.

Meanwhile, Somalia’s political landscape remains fractured. President Hassan Sheikh Mohamud has pledged to hold one-person, one-vote elections within a year, but mounting tensions with federal member states and the opposition cast doubt over the timeline. Much of southern and central Somalia remains under Al-Shabaab control or influence, undermining prospects for credible polls.

As international support wanes and militant resurgence gathers pace, the future of the AU’s security footprint in Somalia appears increasingly uncertain.

Contact us: info@somaliguardian.com

Fiyameta
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Re: U.S. rejects African Union request to fund new peacekeeping mission in Somalia

Post by Fiyameta » 11 May 2025, 06:12

Eritrea trained 10,000 Somali soldiers and sent them back home to stabilize their country.

Other African countries like Ethiopia send their mercenary troops to Somalia to make money in the name of "peace-keeping" but do nothing to help stabilize the country, because they stand to lose their mercenary jobs if Somalia is stabilized.

I think it has become abundantly clear which country has vested interest in peace and stability in the Horn of Africa region.

Zack
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Re: U.S. rejects African Union request to fund new peacekeeping mission in Somalia

Post by Zack » 11 May 2025, 14:54

Well some one has to pay for it it’s either the USA or the European Union if not the Arabs other wise if they don’t well u risk that alshabaab might take over


Dr Zackovich

Somaliman
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Re: U.S. rejects African Union request to fund new peacekeeping mission in Somalia

Post by Somaliman » 11 May 2025, 14:55

No a single soldier from the AU should be in Somalia, in the first place. For what?

They're not even engaging Al Shabab, leave alone trying to defeat it.

Ages ago, they used to protect the presidential offices, parliament, etc. No longer, as Somali security forces have taken over.

The West, led by the US, has no intention whatsoever of fighting and defeating Al Shabab. It only pays lip service to the rhetoric - and we Somalis are not being fooled.

The Somali Army alone is more than enough to defeat these little fuc'kers, but the West does not want to supply armes to Somalia.

Eritrea and Turkey alone have trained way more troops than what's needed to defeat Al Shabab. All these forces need is a few helicopters, armoured vehicles, weapons, and ammunitions. And the West does not want to provide any of these, as it doesn't want to see Al Shabab defeated.

Each time the Somali forces defeat Al Shabab on a front, AFRICOM intervenes and asks Somalia' Defence Ministry to halt the offensive indefinitely, and guess what - Al Shabab forces regroup themselves, get arms supply from Ethiopia paid for by the US, and are back in full force. This cycle has been in place since the existence of Al Shabab.

Al Shabab is a self-contained project which is part of the overarching money making business - "War on Terror".

Horus
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Re: U.S. rejects African Union request to fund new peacekeeping mission in Somalia

Post by Horus » 11 May 2025, 15:41

Talk shop is no solution to a sea deep Somalia crises. It is simple to hate Ethiopia, but it is impossible to exist without Ethiopia. If Somalia want to avoid being the center world terrorism and a land of death and blood, it must ally with Ethiopia 100%, provide Ethiopia a secured Sea access where we can build a powerful Navy and man the entire coast of Somalia with Ethiopian million man Army.

There is no free lunch and hating Ethiopia has costs and consequences. In fact some of the Somalia regions must be federated or confederated with Ethiopia if they want secure a lasting existence.

Talk is so cheap it is a dozen a dime (for those with English challenge, it means you can buy talk 12 for 10 cents! አንድ ደርዘን ባስር ሳንቲም መግዛት ይቻላል!!!)

Zmeselo
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Re: U.S. rejects African Union request to fund new peacekeeping mission in Somalia

Post by Zmeselo » 11 May 2025, 16:42





Analysis | Africa
Why the US can't beat al-Shabaab in Somalia

The Trump team's discussion about closing our embassy there is a smokescreen for deeper failures in Washington's military approach.

Ahmed Ibrahim

https://responsiblestatecraft.org/b-21-bomber/

Apr 23, 2025

The New York Times reported https://www.nytimes.com/2025/04/10/us/p ... trump.html earlier this month that recent gains by al-Shabaab Islamist militants in central and southern Somalia has prompted a debate within the State Department about closing the U.S. Embassy in Mogadishu and withdrawing most American personnel. At the forefront of some officials’ minds, according to the Times, are memories of recent foreign policy fiascos, such as the fall of the Afghan government amid a hasty American withdrawal in 2021.

There are good reasons to question why the U.S. has been unable to defeat al-Shabaab despite nearly 20 years of U.S. military involvement in the country. But the scale of the U.S. role is drastically different than that of Afghanistan, and the U.S. cannot necessarily be described as the most significant external security actor on the ground. At the same time, the Trump administration https://responsiblestatecraft.org/tag/t ... istration/ has given no indication that it will scale down drone strikes — meaning that the U.S. will continue to privilege military solutions.

Flaws in the Afghanistan analogy

The Taliban takeover of Afghanistan in 2021 is often brought up as a potential outcome in Somalia. This analogy appears to have taken more urgency recently as al-Shabaab has regained some of the territories it had been evicted from since 2022. While the analogy is helpful in some regards — including, highlighting the stubborn pliability of al-Shabaab and the fragility of the Somali government — it is misleading in one important aspect: the American military presence in Somalia has never been comparable to the U.S. occupation of Afghanistan, which at its peak reached over 100,000 troops. https://www.cfr.org/timeline/us-war-afghanistan

By comparison, the U.S. has about 500 to 600 military personal in Somalia, largely because it has sought to avoid the costs that come with deploying significant numbers of its own troops, instead relying on Somali and other African troops to fight al-Shabaab. For the past decade, the U.S. has trained, equipped, and financed an elite commando unit, “Danab” (lightning), numbering between 3,000-5,000 soldiers. Alongside the European Union, the U.S. was a key financial contributor to the African Union (AU) mission in Somalia, which at one point included 22,000 forces. But the U.S. has recently signaled that financial support for the AU mission will be cut, and it’s unclear how the newly mandated https://issafrica.org/iss-today/funding ... he-balance African Union Support and Stabilization Mission will be financed.

Consequently, it is not certain that a drawdown of U.S. diplomatic presence would significantly alter the situation on the ground given the scope of U.S. military engagement in Somalia. Moreover, there are other players who shape the political, economic, and security landscape in Somalia, including Ethiopia, the UAE, and Turkey.

Turkey is arguably https://theconversation.com/somalia-and ... egy-240578 Mogadishu’s most important security and diplomatic partner today. Turkey has its biggest embassy and military training center, Camp TURKSOM, in Mogadishu. Somalia and Turkey have signed a raft of military/security and economic agreements over the past decade and half. The Turkish trained “Gorgor” (eagle) regiment, along with the American trained Danab are the two most effective fighting units against al-Shabaab. As al-Shabaab made some gains over the past couple of months, President Hassan Sheikh Mohamud made two trips to Ankara, where he has reportedly signed an agreement https://www.agenzianova.com/en/news/la- ... n-somalia/ that would allow Turkish private forces to actively assist and lead Somali security forces in the fights against al-Shabaab. In light of Turkey’s increasingly prominent role in Mogadishu’s security/military calculations, the scaling back of U.S. diplomatic presence in Mogadishu may have limited impact. We could, instead, see a deepening of Turkish military/security assistance to Mogadishu, and engagement in the fight against al-Shabaab.

The fallacy of a military solution

The discussion within the State Department appears to be debating two alternatives. The first is reduction and/or withdrawal of U.S. Embassy staff in Mogadishu with the fear that this would further undermine confidence in the Somali government and hasten its collapse. The second is staying the course and potentially increasing the drone campaign against al-Shabaab. It is not clear what U.S. policy makers hope to gain by increasing the drone campaign against al-Shabaab that has not been achieved over the past two decades of (undeclared) war with al-Shabaab. It is noteworthy that the Times failed to ask the more difficult question, namely, why is al-Shabaab on the front foot after over a decade and half of war? I offer two points for consideration.

First, alongside the military campaign against al-Shabaab, a range of foreign governments have supported a state-building project in Somalia since 2009. Theoretically, this endeavor was meant to accompany the military campaign against al-Shabaab by putting in place an accountable government. What has instead transpired over the past decade and half is the emergence of a government in Mogadishu that is dependent on external support, focused on the capture of foreign and domestic funds and contracts, and beholden to donor demands.

Rather than creating inclusive institutions and governance systems focused on service delivery, the state-building process has produced https://issblog.nl/2024/10/01/in-this-b ... -of-its-t/ a bargain between Somali elites and the donor industry that is removed from local realities and legitimacy. The government in Mogadishu is outward looking and detached, for the most part, from the concerns of the local population, except via lineage-based patronage networks to secure indirect and corrupt electoral advantages. Thus, basic governance and service delivery has progressed very little over the past 15 years. Al-Shabaab’s resilience is, therefore, a symptom https://africanarguments.org/2025/04/a- ... the-brink/ of these state-building and governance failures.

Second, it’s important to keep in mind a few things about al-Shabaab as an organization. Its rejection of the presence of foreign troops in Somalia is something that resonates with people. The fact that al-Shabaab itself has foreign fighters in its midst has been a point of contention within al-Shabaab, and in the larger society. In contrast to the Somali government, al-Shabaab has always had a more effective outreach campaign by, for instance, utilizing Somali oral poetry, a deeply-rooted cultural tradition, https://africasacountry.com/2023/12/poe ... al-shabaab to reach the local population. Its outreach campaign remains potent even as its wanton violence has alienated the majority of the population.

In its recent offensive, al-Shabaab is reported to have shifted its tactics and strategies. The group has reportedly de-emphasized the use of large-scale indiscriminate bombings. Furthermore, unconfirmed reports suggest al-Shabaab is offering to forgive government soldiers they capture, and telling communities that they will be allowed to continue their lives and no revenge will be meted out to those who previously worked with the government, in exchange for abstaining from associating with the government.

The continued governance failures by the internationally backed Somali government, combined with al-Shabaab’s strategies and adaptations makes it unlikely that a continuous American drone campaign will be any more effective now than it has been in the past. Without a more thorough examination of the shortcomings of the international military engagement and state-building activities in Somalia, the discussion about closing the U.S. Embassy in Mogadishu is in some ways a smokescreen and a knee-jerk reaction. What is needed instead is a more fundamental reconsideration of military solutions to what are ultimately political problems.



Ahmed Ibrahim

Dr. Ibrahim is a socio-cultural anthropologist who has researched and written on Islam in Africa, particularly the Horn of Africa. His larger research interest is a focus on the historical and contemporary entanglements of religion and politics in sub-Saharan Africa.

Somaliman
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Re: U.S. rejects African Union request to fund new peacekeeping mission in Somalia

Post by Somaliman » 11 May 2025, 16:46

Horus wrote:
11 May 2025, 15:41
Talk shop is no solution to a sea deep Somalia crises. It is simple to hate Ethiopia, but it is impossible to exist without Ethiopia. If Somalia want to avoid being the center world terrorism and a land of death and blood, it must ally with Ethiopia 100%, provide Ethiopia a secured Sea access where we can build a powerful Navy and man the entire coast of Somalia with Ethiopian million man Army.

There is no free lunch and hating Ethiopia has costs and consequences. In fact some of the Somalia regions must be federated or confederated with Ethiopia if they want secure a lasting existence.

Talk is so cheap it is a dozen a dime (for those with English challenge, it means you can buy talk 12 for 10 cents! አንድ ደርዘን ባስር ሳንቲም መግዛት ይቻላል!!!)


for those with English challenge
For those with limited English proficiency, those with limited English fluency, or those who have difficulty with English, etc.

Ethiopia can go fuc'k itself. No one wants to have anything to do with a cursed landlocked sh'ithole that's synonymous with famine in the minds of people across the world and whose people is fed by international humanitarian food aid.

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