|
Nairobi,(insidesomalia.org)- As fighting rages on in Somalia after years of wars between Ethiopia and Eritrea, Kenya fears the bloodshed may soon be headed its way – lead by Al-Qa’ida.
After pushing for African forces to be deployed in support of Somalia’s transitional government, Kenya is having second thoughts about a possible showdown in neighboring Somalia.
A growing number of politicians and analysts fear a new war in Somalia could trigger hostilities against a badly-prepared Kenya, and turn it into a second battlefield of the Eritrea-Ethiopia conflict.
With Washington hostile towards the Mogadishu Islamists – some of whose members are close to Al-Qa’ida - the Horn of Africa may be set to become the next theater in the “war against terror.”
Speaking about the Somali conflict, U.S. Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice has noted that any potential partner of the U.S. could not “allow terrorists in your midst.” However, she said, “anyone who is willing to fight terrorism” in Somalia could expect Washington’s support.
There are fears that the Al-Qa’ida cells in Somalia plan to retaliate for the killing of Al-Shabaab leader Sheikh Aden Hashi Ayro on May 1 in a U.S. air strike, by staging attacks on American interests in Kenya, according to an anti-terrorism officer familiar with the details of the threat.
Al-Shabaab is classified by the U.S. as a terrorist organization.
The May 1 attack, which Washington has described as a major blow against an insurgency that has raged since 2007, was the fifth U.S. air strike in Somalia since the beginning of 2007.
On March 3 this year, the U.S. Navy fired two Tomahawk missiles from a submarine off the coast of Somalia at Dobley, in southern Somalia, killing several people, including at least three women and three children and wounding another 20.
Ayro, trained in terrorist and insurgency methods in Afghanistan and believed to have been in his 30s, was killed in a house in the small central Somalia town Dusamareb, 250 miles north of Mogadishu, together with another five insurgents, including his brother and another commander, Muhiyadin Muhammad. At least a dozen civilians in neighboring houses were also killed by the missiles.
The missile strikes were carried out in advance of a U.N.-sponsored meeting in Djibouti, at which TFG officials and Islamic leaders are negotiating a possible truce.
Regional security analysts rank Somalia as a “secondary front” in the war against terrorism. They say that the country’s profile was raised greatly following the Ethiopian invasion and the subsequent U.S. air strikes.
Al-Shabaab’s spokesman, Sheikh Mukhtar Robow, has vowed the group will retaliate.
“This does not deter us from continuing our holy war against Allah’s enemy,” Robow told The Media Line
“We will target all Americans irrespective of who they are, because the American government is killing all our people,” he said.
“Our leader Aden Hashi Ayro is a hero. Ayro’s killing by the Americans will not deter fighters of Al-Shabaab from stepping up their battle. The infidel and their cohorts will pay dearly for their deadly act...We shall avenge the death of our leader,” Robow said.
Several months before Ayro’s killing, the group intensified its daily attacks on Somalia’s Transitional Federal Government (TFG), which is backed by Ethiopian army soldiers, taking control of substantial territories in central and southern Somalia.
Analysts said Al-Shabaab’s aim was to destabilize the Ethiopian forces by increasing the chaos in central and southern Somalia, thus drawing off forces from the capital. It is also aiming to increase insecurity to the point that the population will call on the Islamists to save it.
But with the killing of Ayro, it is possible Al-Shabaab may either stage quick and violent revenge attacks or make a tactical withdrawal to plan their next move.
A Kenyan anti-terrorism official told The Media Line the May 1 operation succeeded after some Al-Shabaab members fell out and passed information to the Americans.
Kenya and the U.S. have been sharing anti-terrorism intelligence especially since the August 7, 1998 bombing of the U.S. Embassy in Nairobi and the Kikambala Hotel in November 2002. Their joint efforts have led to successful operations against Al-Qa’ida cells in Somalia.
According to Kenyan officials, the anti-terrorism unit is concerned the group may launch revenge attacks against Kenya following the killing of its leader. This has led to the beefing up of security along the Kenya-Somalia border, the officials say.
“We are very much prepared to avert these attacks. We have intelligence information that the terror groups are regrouping for possible attacks,” said an anti-terrorism police officer, who declined to be named.
Two Kenyans and two Britons were killed in Somalia in mid-April when Islamist insurgents carried out an overnight raid on a school in central Somalia.
The move by the Kenyan defense forces to increase security comes only days after the U.S. said, in a global counter-terrorism survey, that the country lacked the laws needed to wage an effective war on terrorism.
The report, however, applauded Kenya’s response to the upheaval in Somalia after the Ethiopian invasion in 2006. It noted that the Ministry of Defense’s efforts largely prevented the flight of violent extremists across the Somalia-Kenya border.
Source: Yemen Times
|