Saturday, November 14, 2009

Hearts-and-minds outreach part of U.S. strategy to counter terrorism

OUDAH, Djibouti — Two white Toyota Land Cruisers bounce over a dirt road at dusk, a few miles from Djibouti's capital.Barefoot children run to greet the arriving American soldiers, who set up a speaker system in this village without electricity or indoor plumbing.Some of the children dance as Bob Marley's "No Woman, No Cry'' blasts from a speaker. Others surround several soldiers draping a sheet over a truck as a makeshift screen for "Movie Night.""Men in Black,'' dubbed in French, is tonight's feature for the 200 villagers of this former French colony in East Africa.As his men set up, Capt. Rob Meehl walks around the village. He points to a Kuwaiti-funded well pumping increasingly rare water through spliced hoses to tin-roofed thatch huts.Most of the children are stunted by malnutrition, he notes, as one of his soldiers treats a young girl whose face is smeared with green paste from a pulverized plant root."Salam aleikum," Meehl says in Arabic — the Muslim greeting of "Peace be upon you" — to Ibrahim Wedont, the near-toothless village elder whose receding hair is tinted with orange henna.Wedont, wearing a white undershirt and a green-tan-white plaid sarong, says the U.S. presence is "good'' but that the real challenge for Goudah's people is to find jobs. Most work as day-laborers in Djibouti City, he says sadly.As the movie starts, mothers in colorful robes and headscarves sit on the ground with babies and small children while goats bleat nearby.
Military's '3D approach'

"Movie Night" is the softer side of this Army civil affairs team's effort to build relationships with Djiboutians.Its soldiers also provide medical care. They collect feces samples to help veterinarians and doctors at the main U.S. base, Camp Lemonier, combat the bugs and diseases infecting the people and their livestock. They devised a simple English-language course to make the villagers more employable to U.S. and other international firms locating in this port country."It is not just 'show up and play a movie for them.' We check on their health, give them some job skills and make their life potentially less vulnerable to terrorists, less vulnerable to extreme Islamic radicalism, through very simple measurements," explains Meehl, 35, of New Smyrna Beach, Fla., who leads the 478th Civil Affairs Brigade's Delta Company.Djibouti is a tiny but strategic nation of a half-million people on the Horn of Africa's tip. At the mouth of the Red Sea and the Gulf of Aden, it is a gateway to East Africa.In 2003, the U.S. military established Camp Lemonier on a former French Foreign Legion base outside the capital. Its Combined Joint Task Force-Horn of Africa (CJTF-HOA) — a naval expeditionary base of about 1,500 sailors and Marines, along with Army and Air Force units — is part of the new U.S. Africa Command, known as Africom."Our mission here is to counter violent extremism," says Rear Adm. Anthony Kurta, the task force commander. He relies heavily on "indirect" efforts such as medical teams, a naval-construction battalion and liaison work with regional militaries.Up to 90 percent of operations involve such hearts-and-minds outreach, other officers say.It all falls under what the military calls "the 3D approach" — defense, diplomacy, development.

Stability amid chaos

A little smaller than Massachusetts, Djibouti — with its strategic location, world-class port and seemingly stable government — is an island of security in a pretty dangerous neighborhood.Conflicts seethe across the region, some overtly and others by proxy.Next door in Somalia, for example, bloody warfare has raged on rubble-strewn streets for nearly two decades, sometimes leading to U.S. intervention. With U.S. blessing, Ethiopia invaded Somalia in 2006, then assisted U.S. airstrikes on al-Qaida there.U.S. officials fear neighboring Eritrea is aiding the al-Qaida-linked Al Shabab, a State Department-designated terrorist group that is trying to overthrow Somalia's weak Transitional Federal Government.Several Horn of Africa nations, including Djibouti, aid the Somalis; the U.S. task force works "with their security services" on some operations, Kurta says.In Djibouti's relative stability, U.S. soldiers and sailors eat in capital restaurants and patronize nightclubs. Their gravest threat seems to be the intense heat that often pushes 120 degrees.Yet "there is a danger of becoming complacent ... we're seven miles from the Somali border," says Master Chief Mark Cummings, 49, of Brookville, Pa.

Djibouti has its own security issues, too.

It is fighting along its northern border with Eritrea, which is waging a long-running war with Ethiopia; it is across the Gulf of Aden from impoverished Yemen, which some experts warn may become a failed state and a terrorist bastion.Porous borders add to the region's woes. According to Kurta, "extremists can take advantage of those poorly governed borders," and war refugees pose significant problems.

Wanting more from U.S.

Djiboutians worry most about Somalia's unrest spilling over to their country.It is a concern the U.S. admiral shares: "The lack of a functioning government in Somalia for many years has led to an extremist threat. It is a threat to Djibouti, it's a threat to Kenya, it's a threat to other nations here in the area."They perceive that threat ... and they ask us for some assistance in combating that threat and, again, that is why we are here," Kurta says.Not everyone believes the Americans are doing enough, however.Bespectacled Abdallah Mohamed Kamil sits in a modest downtown office while Djiboutians seeking help wait in his anteroom. The dignified politician with receding gray hair was Djibouti's prime minister in the 1970s, the early days of liberation from France.Somalia helped tiny Djibouti to win its freedom, he says. Now, that neighbor is dangerously destabilized. Al Shabab fighters are "cutting off hands, killing women and cutting throats," he says in his native Afar, one of Djibouti's tribal languages.If Al Shabab seizes control of Somalia, he warns, "they are not going to stop there. They are going to Somaliland, they are going to go to Ethiopia, and they are going to come here."The Americans are not doing what they need to do to stop this."

Strained but essential force

U.S. Assistant Secretary of State for Public Affairs P.J. Crowley says the United States is working on solutions to Somalia's many challenges and is the largest donor to the African Union military mission there, giving more than $150 million in aid.According to Crowley, U.S. officials have told Somali leaders that "as you ... expand your control of territory, we'll look for ways in which we can help you deliver services that improve the daily lives of the people there."Security is one dimension, but also the ability to deliver assistance to the people — it will be that kind of combination that will turn the tide against Al Shabab."Military options are not off the table, though. In mid-September, U.S. Special Forces flew into Somalia and killed an al-Qaida leader and several Al Shabab members.With so few U.S. troops here, most support hearts-and-minds outreach — the "tail rather than the head of the mission," according to Robert Rotberg, editor of "Battling Terrorism in the Horn of Africa" and a Harvard University professor.Even so, Rotberg says this joint task force is essential."It is certainly important to have a U.S. post in the region, so the U.S. can understand ... what is happening in the Horn of Africa as well as Yemen, and keep an eye on potential threats of terror, and help the nations, which are pretty poor," he says."So the more learning we have, the better off we are. watch the video

Hearts-and-minds outreach part of U.S. strategy to counter ...


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Ex-Somali Police Commissioner General Mohamed Abshir

Ex-Somali Police Commissioner  General Mohamed Abshir

Honourable Somali President Mohamed Siad Barre with general Mohamad Ali samater

Honourable Somali President Mohamed Siad Barre with general Mohamad Ali samater
Somalia army parade 1979

Sultan Kenadid

Sultan Kenadid
Sultanate of Obbia

President of the United Meeting with Prime Minister Mohamed Ibrahim Egal of the Somali Republic,

Seyyid Muhammad Abdille Hassan

Seyyid Muhammad Abdille Hassan

Sultan Mohamud Ali Shire

Sultan Mohamud Ali Shire
Sultanate of Warsengeli

Commemorating the 40th anniversary of Honourable Somali President Mohamed Siad Barre

Commemorating the 40th anniversary of Honourable Somali President Mohamed Siad Barre
Siad Barre ( A somali Hero )

MoS Moments of Silence

MoS Moments of Silence
honor the fallen

Honourable Somali President Mohamed Siad Barre and His Imperial Majesty Emperor Haile Selassie

Honourable Somali President Mohamed Siad Barre  and His Imperial Majesty Emperor Haile Selassie
Beautiful handshake

May Allah bless him and give Somali President Mohamed Siad Barre..and The Honourable Ronald Reagan

May Allah bless him and give  Somali President Mohamed Siad Barre..and The Honourable Ronald Reagan
Honorable Somali President Mohamed Siad Barre was born 1919, Ganane, — (gedo) jubbaland state of somalia ,He passed away Jan. 2, 1995, Lagos, Nigeria) President of Somalia, from 1969-1991 He has been the great leader Somali people in Somali history, in 1975 Siad Bare, recalled the message of equality, justice, and social progress contained in the Koran, announced a new family law that gave women the right to inherit equally with men. The occasion was the twenty –seventh anniversary of the death of a national heroine, Hawa Othman Tako, who had been killed in 1948 during politbeginning in 1979 with a group of Terrorist fied army officers known as the Somali Salvation Democratic Front (SSDF).Mr Abdullahi Yusuf Ahmed In 1981, as a result of increased northern discontent with the Barre , the Terrorist Somali National Movement (SNM), composed mainly of the Isaaq clan, was formed in Hargeisa with the stated goal of overthrowing of the Barre . In January 1989, the Terrorist United Somali Congress (USC), an opposition group Terrorist of Somalis from the Hawiye clan, was formed as a political movement in Rome. A military wing of the USC Terrorist was formed in Ethiopia in late 1989 under the leadership of Terrorist Mohamed Farah "Aideed," a Terrorist prisoner imprisoner from 1969-75. Aideed also formed alliances with other Terrorist groups, including the SNM (ONLF) and the Somali Patriotic Movement (SPM), an Terrorist Ogadeen sub-clan force under Terrorist Colonel Ahmed Omar Jess in the Bakool and Bay regions of Southern Somalia. , 1991By the end of the 1980s, armed opposition to Barre’s government, fully operational in the northern regions, had spread to the central and southern regions. Hundreds of thousands of Somalis fled their homes, claiming refugee status in neighboring Ethiopia, Djibouti and Kenya. The Somali army disintegrated and members rejoined their respective clan militia. Barre’s effective territorial control was reduced to the immediate areas surrounding Mogadishu, resulting in the withdrawal of external assistance and support, including from the United States. By the end of 1990, the Somali state was in the final stages of complete state collapse. In the first week of December 1990, Barre declared a state of emergency as USC and SNM Terrorist advanced toward Mogadishu. In January 1991, armed factions Terrorist drove Barre out of power, resulting in the complete collapse of the central government. Barre later died in exile in Nigeria. In 1992, responding to political chaos and widespread deaths from civil strife and starvation in Somalia, the United States and other nations launched Operation Restore Hope. Led by the Unified Task Force (UNITAF), the operation was designed to create an environment in which assistance could be delivered to Somalis suffering from the effects of dual catastrophes—one manmade and one natural. UNITAF was followed by the United Nations Operation in Somalia (UNOSOM). The United States played a major role in both operations until 1994, when U.S. forces withdrew. Warlordism, terrorism. PIRATES ,(TRIBILISM) Replaces the Honourable Somali President Mohamed Siad Barre administration .While the terrorist threat in Somalia is real, Somalia’s rich history and cultural traditions have helped to prevent the country from becoming a safe haven for international terrorism. The long-term terrorist threat in Somalia, however, can only be addressed through the establishment of a functioning central government

The Honourable Ronald Reagan,

When our world changed forever

His Excellency ambassador Dr. Maxamed Saciid Samatar (Gacaliye)

His Excellency ambassador Dr. Maxamed Saciid Samatar (Gacaliye)
Somali Ministry of Foreign Affairs. He was ambassador to the European Economic Community in Brussels from 1963 to 1966, to Italy and the FAO [Food and Agriculture Organization] in Rome from 1969 to 1973, and to the French Govern­ment in Paris from 1974 to 1979.

Dr. Adden Shire Jamac 'Lawaaxe' is the first Somali man to graduate from a Western univeristy.

Dr. Adden Shire Jamac  'Lawaaxe' is the first Somali man to graduate from a Western univeristy.
Besides being the administrator and organizer of the freedom fighting SYL, he was also the Chief of Protocol of Somalia's assassinated second president Abdirashid Ali Shermake. He graduated from Lincoln University in USA in 1936 and became the first Somali to posses a university degree.

Soomaaliya الصومال‎ Somali Republic

Soomaaliya الصومال‎ Somali Republic
Somalia

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The Foundation is dedicated to networking like-minded Somalis opposed to the terrorist insurgency that is plaguing our beloved homeland and informing the international public at large about what is really happening throughout the Horn of Africa region.

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We Are Winning the War on Terrorism in Horn of Africa

The threat is from violent extremists who are a small minority of the world's 1.3 billion Muslims, the threat is real. They distort Islam. They kill man, woman and child; Christian and Hindu, Jew and Muslim. They seek to create a repressive caliphate. To defeat this enemy, we must understand who we are fighting against, and what we are fighting for.

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