The Somali Front of the
Global Jihad -- International Terrorism
Monitor --- Paper No.584
By B. Raman
Al Qaeda looks
upon its continuing jihad against the
so-called Crusaders --- thereby meaning
essentially the US, Israel and their
supporters--- as a global intifada waged on
many fronts and through many means. In this
global jihad, Afghanistan, Somalia and
Algeria are seen as battle fronts, which
will determine the ultimate outcome.
Afghanistan is seen as the core of the
battle, Somalia as its southern front and
Algeria as the Western front.
2. In a message
disseminated on December 20, 2006, Ayman al-Zawahiri,
the No.2 to Osama bin Laden in Al Qaeda,
said: “Brothers in Islam and Jihad in
Somalia: know that you are on the southern
garrison of Islam, so don’t allow Islam to
be attacked from your flank, and know that
we are with you, and that the entire Muslim
Ummah is with you. So don’t lose heart, or
fall into despair, for you must dominate if
you are true in faith. And know that you are
fending off the same Crusade which is
fighting your brothers in Islam in Chechnya,
Afghanistan, Iraq, Palestine and Lebanon. So
be resolute, be patient and be optimistic,
for by Allah beside whom there is no other
God, even if your enemies possess thousands
of tons of iron and explosives, in their
chests lie the hearts of mice. So be severe
against them like Muhammad was. "
3. To keep the
jihad going in Somalia is one of its
important objectives. For this purpose, it
uses not only recruits from the impoverished
local population, but also from the Somali
diaspora in the West----including the US---
as well as jihad-hardened cadres sent from
the battle fronts in the Af-Pak region. The
Tablighi Jamaat (TJ) of Pakistan has had a
long history of contacts with the Muslim
population in Somalia and East African
countries just as it has with the Muslim
population of Chechnya and Dagestan. Though
the TJ itself does not indulge in acts of
terrorism, it plays an important role in
facilitating the ideological motivation of
the population on behalf of Al Qaeda.
4. In September
2009, Al Shabaab, meaning “The Lads”, an
organization of Somali youths, was reported
to have disseminated through Islamic web
sites usually identified with Al Qaeda a
48-minute video documentary in which it
proclaimed its allegiance to Osama bin
Laden. It derives its name “The Lads” from
the fact that it used to be the youth wing
of a fundamentalist organization called the
Union of Islamic Courts (UIC), which had
established control over some parts of
Somalia and was ultimately crushed by
invading Ethiopian troops in 2006. While the
elders of the UIC disappeared after being
defeated by the better trained and better
armed Ethiopian troops allegedly inspired
and aided by the US, the Al Shabaab replaced
the UIC as a born-again jihadi organization,
which was determined to continue the jihad
against the troops of the African Union,
which had replaced the Ethiopian troops, and
of the UN-backed local Government, which it
viewed as apostate.
5. Though Somalis
had participated in acts of suicide
terrorism on behalf of Al Qaeda in other
countries, suicide terrorism was unknown in
Somalia itself till Al Shabaab made its
appearance in 2006. Even though it
proclaimed its loyalty to bin Laden only in
September, 2009, it had carried out a number
of acts of suicide terrorism against local
Government targets as well as the
peace-keeping troops of the African Union
ever since the AU troops took over their
peace-keeping responsibility in Somalia. Al
Shabaab has been waging a two-front
jihad---- against the AU troops and the
local Government being protected by the AU
troops. The first act of suicide terrorism
took place on September 18, 2006. Since
then, there have been 13 suicide attacks---
two in 2006, four in 2007, two in 2008 and
five this year.
6. The Al Shabaab
cadres, many of whom had allegedly served
with the Afghan Mujahideen, the Taliban and
Al Qaeda in the Af-Pak region, look upon
their jihad as similar to the jihad waged by
the Afghan Mujahideen against the Soviet
troops and those of the Government of the
then President Najibullah in the 1980s and
the early 1990s.
7. In a serious
attack of suicide terrorism, a male suicide
bomber dressed as a woman managed to find
his way into a graduation ceremony of
medical students in a Mogadishu hotel on
December 3, 2009, and blew himself up
killing 19 persons, including three
Ministers of the Cabinet of Prime Minister
Omar Sharmarke of the UN-backed Government.
Even though no organization has so far
claimed responsibility for the attack, Al
Shabaab is strongly suspected by the local
authorities.
8. Though there
is so far no evidence of any nexus between
Al Shabaab and the Somali pirates, the
dangers of money earned from piracy going to
the coffers of Al Qaeda and the availability
in Somalia of sea-faring people who could be
used by Al Qaeda for future acts of maritime
terrorism cannot be ignored.
9. A Reuters
report carried on December 4, 2009, by the
“Daily Times” of Lahore has quoted Bethuel
Kiplagat, who used to be Kenya’s special
envoy to the Somalia peace process from 2003
to 2005, as saying as follows: “Suicide
bombings are a worrying trend not only for
Somalia but also the region. There has been
a rise in fundamentalism in Somalia coming
from the Middle East and Pakistan. There’s a
worry Al Qaeda may be looking at Somalia as
a new sanctuary.”
10. On March 16,
2009, Mohamed Mohamed of the BBC’s Somali
section, reported as follows: “As well as
alleged links to al-Qaeda it is said to have
Arabs, Asians, other Africans and -
America's FBI believes - Westerners among
its ranks. These foreigners are said to be
involved in training Al Sabaab recruits in
various aspects of guerrilla warfare,
including suicide bombings and booby traps.”
11. On February
29, 2008, the then US Secretary of State
Condoleezza Rice designated Al Shabaab as a
Foreign Terrorist Organization under Section
219 of the Immigration and Nationality Act.
(The writer is Additional
Secretary (retd), Cabinet Secretariat, Govt.
of India, New Delhi, and, presently,
Director, Institute For Topical Studies,
Chennai. E-mail:
seventyone2@gmail.com)