By Sudarsan Raghavan
Sunday July 17, 2022
Rescue workers survey the site of a suicide car bombing near a security checkpoint in Mogadishu, Somalia, in February 2021. (Abdirazak Hussein Farah/AFP/Getty Images)
MOGADISHU, Somalia — In the predawn hours, the militants of
al-Shabab attacked the peacekeepers’ base from every direction with lethal
precision.
Suicide bombers detonated three cars filled with explosives.
Islamist fighters then pounded the facility with heavy gunfire and
rocket-propelled grenades, killing several dozen African Union peacekeepers
from Burundi. Footage posted on social media showed bodies in military uniforms
scattered around the base.
“The Burundians were caught unaware,” said Sadaq Mokhtar
Abdulle, a Somali Parliament member representing the village of El Baraf, where
the base was located. “They were killed in cold blood. And the others fled.”
The May 2 assault claimed more than 50 lives, according to
local officials and Western security personnel in Somalia, making it the
deadliest strike on the U.S.-backed peacekeeping mission here in six years. Its
success underscored the resurgence of al-Shabab and the challenges that African
and American troops will face in containing the group.
Two weeks later, President Biden approved the redeployment
of some 450 American troops to Somalia — reversing a 2020 order by the Trump
administration to end U.S. counterterrorism operations in the country after
more than a decade.
The militants now control roughly 70 percent of south and
central Somalia, a country nearly the size of Texas. While the fragile
government rules Mogadishu and provincial capitals, al-Shabab and its 5,000 to
7,000 fighters oversee much of the countryside. In other areas, they use fear
and mafia-like tactics to extort taxes while providing health, educational and
judicial services in an effort to undermine the government and build loyalty.
“We’ve seen an expansion of their territory,” said Samira
Gaid, executive director of the Hiraal Institute, a think tank focusing on
Somalia and the Horn of Africa. “We are seeing them be more audacious.”
The group’s attacks nearly doubled from 2015 to 2021,
according to data compiled by the Africa Center for Strategic Studies in
Washington. Last year, much of the violence involved confrontations with
security forces. If the current pace continues through December, attacks will
have increased another 71 percent overall in only a year.
This surge coincides with a deadly sweep of violence across
Africa by Islamist groups affiliated with al-Qaeda and the Islamic State. Both
are seeking to revive their fortunes on the continent after the fall of the
latter’s self-declared caliphate in Iraq and Syria and the weakening of
al-Qaeda in Yemen and Afghanistan. Al-Shabab, which in Arabic means “the
youth,” accounted for more than a third of all Islamist attacks in Africa in
2021.
“Al-Shabab remains al-Qaeda’s largest, wealthiest and most
deadly affiliate, responsible for the deaths of thousands of innocents,
including Americans,” Gen. Stephen J. Townsend, head of the Pentagon’s U.S.
Africa Command, said in February during a visit to Mogadishu, the Somali
capital.
A constellation of factors have converged to bolster it
here. They include Somalia’s myriad political crises, the waning of American
support last year, an ineffective African Union force, and the lack of a
cohesive counterterrorism strategy among the Somali government and its
partners. A struggling national army remains a work in progress, despite years
of training by the United States and other nations.
As U.S. troops return to support Somali and African Union
forces, they will face a militancy that is seeking to build up its financial
coffers and its international jihadist credentials. Even as it remains a
national insurgency, al-Shabab is searching for opportunities to push beyond
Somalia’s borders and create a regional caliphate enforcing a strict
interpretation of Islamic law.
“Al-Shabab’s lethal insurgency continues with no end in
sight,” the International Crisis Group, a Brussels-based think tank, said in a
report last month. “The group consistently stays a step ahead of local and
regional military operations. Combined with dysfunction and division among
their adversaries, the militants’ agility has allowed them to embed themselves
in Somali society. It also makes them hard to defeat.”
What unfolded at the African Union base helps reveal why.
This article, which includes previously unreported details about the events at
El Baraf, is based on interviews with local officials, a doctor who treated
civilian victims’ wounds, Western security personnel with knowledge of the
attack, and top officials in the African Union, Somali military, U.S.
government and United Nations. The Washington Post also obtained internal text
messages detailing the attacks as well as videos and photos that villagers or
the militants posted afterward on social media.
On that May morning, al-Shabab fighters seized control and
planted their black flag at the base. They also seized artillery and other
heavy weaponry, including a ZU 23mm, a Soviet-made antiaircraft gun, according
to the Western security personnel with knowledge of the attack.
In a matter of hours, the group had become stronger, flush
with potent weapons to use against the government and its allies.
‘Eyes off the prize’
Little more than a decade ago, al-Shabab was on the
defensive — on the verge of being pushed out of Mogadishu, with many of its leaders
already dead from U.S. airstrikes.
But the militants adapted and turned to guerrilla warfare.
In 2010, the group orchestrated suicide bombings in the Ugandan capital of
Kampala, targeting crowds watching the soccer World Cup final and killing 74
people. Three years later, it laid siege to a mall in Nairobi, leaving 67 dead.
Inside Somalia, it continued to stage hundreds of attacks,
many aimed at civilians. In 2017, two truck bombs in Mogadishu killed more than
500. In 2020, three American personnel died when al-Shabab targeted a military
base used by U.S. forces in Kenya.
During the past two years, U.N., Western and African Union
officials say, the group has taken advantage of political crises surrounding
delayed legislative and presidential elections.
“Intense political fighting to a dysfunctional level, at
multiple levels of society, caused a lack of governing and attention to
security,” said Larry André, the U.S. ambassador to Somalia. “There were still
some efforts, but in general they took their eyes off the prize and al-Shabab
came back with a vengeance.”
President Donald Trump’s decision to withdraw most U.S.
forces to a base in Djibouti stymied efforts to tackle the insurgency. It meant
troops had to “commute” to Somalia for short-term training missions. U.S.
strikes against the group, which had intensified under Trump, slowed
dramatically during the first year of the Biden administration, according to
data from the U.S. Africa Command.
These days al-Shabab’s “tax base” includes all kinds of
businesses, hotels, real estate developments, construction sites and even the
port in Mogadishu. At the same time, it has set up schools, clinics and police
departments in areas it controls. It also deploys mobile courts, where its
judges resolve land and family disputes, further undermining the government’s
authority.
“We cohabitate with al-Shabab” said Isse Mohamed Halane, a
top official at the Somali Chamber of Commerce and Industry. “Wherever they are
ruling, it’s known we have to abide by their rules. Some people like the way
they deal. They prefer them when it comes to the justice system. Other people,
they complain.”
African Union peacekeepers provide security at the Halane military camp in Mogadishu in May. (Farah Abdi Warsameh/AP)
Despite the threats of bombings and assassinations, life in
the capital appears normal, at least on the surface. Streets and markets are
bustling. Lido Beach is crowded daily with people sunbathing or meeting friends
in cafes overlooking the ocean.
But the landscape remains dangerous, especially for anyone
who speaks out against the militants or appears close to Westerners and other
foreigners. Many lawmakers stay or hold meetings inside a fortified enclave by
the airport known as the Green Zone.
“The places I can go as a member of Parliament are limited,”
said Mohamed Moalimu, a lawmaker who has survived five assassination attempts,
including one outside his home in January. He now lives in a heavily secured
hotel in front of the airport. “It means that even Mogadishu is not safe.”
Too few connections, weapons, funds
In El Baraf, the Burundian peacekeepers never made real
connections with residents. Aside from occasional patrols, local officials
said, the soldiers mostly stayed inside the sprawling base surrounded by
sand-filled barriers. They were so isolated that food and supplies were flown
in from Mogadishu, about 85 miles to the south. Al-Shabab had planted roadside
bombs along routes into the village.
“They were inside the base in defensive positions,” said
Abdulle, the village’s representative in Parliament. “They didn’t engage
al-Shabab very much.”
Other local officials and lawmakers, as well as U.S.-trained
commanders, echo that. They contend that the African Union has no will or
appetite to wage operations against the militants — despite having more than
19,000 peacekeepers — and prefers to keep its troops safe on bases.
But Fiona Lortan, a senior African Union official in
Mogadishu, defended the mission in an interview last month. The Burundian
peacekeepers had no Somali military in El Baraf to help them build close ties
to the locals and gain intelligence on al-Shabab, she said. Nor did they have
the funds, the weaponry or the numerical strength to actively go after the
militants.
Even so, government forces in the area had far less. They
totaled about 900 soldiers and 600 mostly unarmed policemen and were
responsible for a region with a population of 1.6 million.
“Despite over a decade of training, we still haven’t reached
a point where we have sufficient Somali forces to be able to take control,”
Lortan said. The mission “can only succeed if the government is a viable
partner. … This has been the missing link.”
The Somali government did not respond to repeated requests
for comment about these issues or its army’s preparedness.
With little protection, many residents lived in fear of
al-Shabab. That allowed the militants to mobilize their fighters in villages
around the base for several days before the attack, Abdulle said.
No residents alerted the peacekeepers.
The militants detonated at least three vehicles
simultaneously at different points along the perimeter of the base, recounted
Lortan. Then hundreds of militants attacked from every direction. The
peacekeepers’ leaders were among those killed, she added, describing the attack
as “psychologically very traumatic.”
“There was pandemonium everywhere,” she said. “People were
basically running for their lives.”
The Somali army sent no reinforcements, she said. She
acknowledged that the militants made off with heavy weaponry but said African
Union forces, aided by Pentagon-hired American contractors, destroyed some in
helicopter counterstrikes.
“We were terrified they would put on Burundian uniforms and
infiltrate bases,” she said.
Six civilians died, Ahmed said, and 13 were wounded in the
crossfire. According to a doctor who treated the casualties, their injuries
were caused by bullets and bomb shrapnel.
Nine other civilians remain missing and are presumed dead.
Officials suspect they were taken away by al-Shabab and executed as
collaborators.
Scores of villagers, whom the peacekeepers ostensibly were
there to help protect, ran onto the base and looted gasoline, food and other
items, as seen in the images on social media. The videos and photos show
al-Shabab’s flag fluttering over the base and its fighters using the victory to
further recruiting.
A renewed U.S.
presence
Inside a nondescript military facility near the airport last
month, two dozen Somali soldiers went through an hours-long training session
led by the U.S. Special Operations Command. All were part of the Danab, an
elite force of 1,600 fighters.
Their instructor discussed how to use information warfare to
counter al-Shabab’s grip on the population — a key reason it was able to
overrun the base. At one point, Jay asked for examples of how the militants
influenced villagers.
“They steal the aid and pretend they are the providers of
that aid,” one Somali commander said.
“They try to gain the trust of the people by telling them
they brought the aid,” another said.
“If we know this is their tactic, what can we do to counter
that?” replied Jay, who asked that he be identified only by his first name because
of security protocols.
Members of the Somali army's Danab commando unit attend a training session led by U.S. Army officers in Mogadishu in June. (Luis Tato for The Washington Post)
Lt. Col. Ahmed Abdullahi Nuur is the brigade commander for Somalia's Danab unit, an elite force of 1,600 fighters. (Luis Tato for The Washington Post/FTWP)
“We need to plant some military intelligence inside
al-Shabab,” a third commander suggested.
“Can we just tell the truth about what’s happening?” Jay
said. “Can we tell the population that we marked the aid in a way that it’s difficult
to change it, that it’s sent by the government?”
Many in the training nodded.
The announcement of the Americans’ return coincided with the
election in May of a new Somali president, Hassan Sheikh Mohamud. He had
previously governed the country from 2012 to 2017, the period when al-Shabab
was on the decline. U.S. and Western officials hope his government can stop the
militants’ momentum.
The Danab — the name translates in Somali to “lightning” —
insists it knows al-Shabab well and will now be able to defeat it. “We are not
afraid of al-Shabab,” Lt. Col. Ahmed Abdullahi Nuur, the Danab’s top commander
said in an interview. “We take the fight to them before they launch their
attacks.”
With the Americans back in place, “we’re expecting more
training and more operations,” Nuur continued. “We’re expecting more airstrikes
on al-Shabab. We want to fight shoulder-by-shoulder with the Americans, like we
did before.”
But with the insurgency stretching into its 15th year, many
analysts are convinced that the militants cannot be defeated militarily. The
International Crisis Group urged in its report that Somalia’s leaders engage in
political talks to end the conflict.
The African Union mission is separately winding down. Its
funding is running out; a departure date has been set for 2024. Yet Lortan said
the government “is not in a position to take over in 2024” if the Somali army
remains unprepared and militants continue to dominate much of the country’s
terrain.
“We don’t have control on the ground. You can’t fight a war
from the air,” she said. “This is one of the things that makes al-Shabab so
deadly. It makes it very difficult for us and the Somali forces.”
“Don’t ever underestimate the sophistication of al-Shabab,”
she added.
Two months after the attack on the base, African Union
helicopters are still traveling back and forth to El Baraf to recover the
remains of the peacekeepers. Before the militants left, they planted explosives
on some corpses.
“Not all have been recovered,” Lorton said. “Possibly some
may never be recovered. They have been blown up into bits and pieces.”