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Xaaji Xunjuf

Our forces should not entrust security of Kismayu to Somali government yet

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Our forces should not entrust security of Kismayu to Somali government yet

 

Posted Tuesday, May 21 2013 at 19:00

 

ARALE: KDF should not entrust security of Kismayu to Somali government yet

 

At the height of the Iraqi war and before the US government sent more troops there, Jack Kelly, a national security writer for the Post-Gazette of Ohio, wrote: “It finally appears that President Bush is ready to light a fire under Premier Nuri al-Maliki of Iraq.”

 

He argued that if Bush gave al-Maliki veto power over military operations in Iraq, the birth of an Islamic fundamentalist state would be guaranteed.

 

I do not claim to be an expert on matters relating to national security; however, I wish to point out how the events currently unfolding in Kismayu, the port city in Somalia that was liberated by the Kenya Defence Forces (KDF) in December 2012, might bear some resemblance to how Mr Kelly viewed the events of the Iraq war at the time.

 

The recent opposition by the Somali Government to partial reimbursement by the UN to Kenya to defray the cost of its warships at the Somali coast was troubling.

 

What is even more troubling is its recent opposition to KDF and Igad peace efforts in Kismayu. But first, let’s briefly revisit the liberation of Kismayu itself.

 

The operation was launched in September 2012. Dubbed Operation Sledge Hammer, it was executed with lightning speed and precision.

 

The battle for Kismayu involved an amphibious landing and simultaneous air, land, and sea bombardments. Al-Shabaab forces in Kismayu quickly collapsed.

 

Several factors made this success a possibility. First, the KDF facilitated the formation of a temporary administration council for the city, which comprised Somali force commanders and representatives of the liberated population.

 

Secondly, KDF efforts were supported by the Ras Kamboni Brigade, which fought alongside the KDF.

 

This force, led by Sheikh Ahmed Madobe, the current head of the temporary administration in Kismayu, consisted of well-disciplined and battle-hardened Somalis, who were waging a guerrilla war against al-Shabaab years before KDF came into the picture.

 

Far more important was the fact that all of the Somali forces accompanying the KDF, including the Ras Kamboni Brigade, hailed from Kismayu.

 

But unlike the Iraqi situation, where the US forces were bogged down in street-to-street sectarian fighting, KDF commanders were able to outmanoeuvre the al-Qaeda-affiliated al-Shabaab.

 

Getting back to my assertion that if Kenya were to yield Kismayu’s security to the government in Mogadishu, it could lose the war, let us examine the position towards Kismayu and KDF adopted by the newly-elected President, Hassan Sheikh Mahmud.

 

Somalia has not hidden its opposition to KDF presence in southern Somali from the beginning.

 

What is new are the bold moves it is making to undermine the peace efforts under way in Kismayu, particularly by Igad, to facilitate the establishment of a regional government in the Juba region as permitted by the new Somali Constitution.

 

To make matters worse, President Mohamud’s protégés in Mogadishu went around painting the KDF as an occupation force.

 

In a recent communiqué issued by the head of the notorious HAG Council in Mogadishu, Jihad was declared on KDF troops.

 

In the most recent development and the most dangerous, the Somali President dispatched to Kismayu hundreds of well-armed Somali troops led by former warlords Barre Hirale and Col Abbas.

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lol@Ahmed Chalabis school of stooge-ism. Yeah he is a Somali from the same clan as Ahmed Madoobe. Oodweyne a political clanish war is being fought and the Kenyans are in the middle of it , i so hope they know what they doing. The Ethiopians were well versed on Somali tribal politics i hope the Kenyans dont miscalculate in here.

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nuune   

Xaaji, I know Ahmed Arale, and he is not Madobe clan, he is actually from Siyeeloow and happens to be a Khatumitte fella(don't know which clan and which of Khatumittes).

 

He is now based in Gariisa by the way.

 

 

looool@Oodka's Chalabi, wallaahi this guy defends his mabda' to the core by using the Iraqi example.

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Carafaat   

Oodka, article is definetly written by a Somali-Kenyan. The only 'mabda' potrayed in this article, is the loyalty and the will to serve Kenyan interest rather then Somalias. These Somali-Kenyans are Somalias fifth column.

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