I know that
events in Africa during the weekend of September 21st are, in terms
of American historical memory, a long time ago in a galaxy far, far away, but I’m going to pay them some belated attention. The attack on the Westgate Mall in Kenya was, after all, a horrific action by the Somali jihadi group, al-Shabaab,
lasting over a number of days, in which at least 61 civilians died. It was
also, as USA
Today opined: “the post-9/11 nightmare that Americans have been half
expecting: al-Qaeda gunmen attack a shopping mall, take hostages, leave behind
carnage and a sickening repeat question: ‘Why us?’"
I’m sure many Americans felt exactly that dread on watching the events unfold – and well they should, since, given the forces in play, it’s quite possible that something similar will, again, happen here.
I’m sure many Americans felt exactly that dread on watching the events unfold – and well they should, since, given the forces in play, it’s quite possible that something similar will, again, happen here.
For Americans
who might have more than a passing interest in understanding why such atrocities
happen, and who might want to do more than shake their heads,
after the fact, in bafflement and moral self-righteousness, one might start out
with the always-cogent Jeremy Scahill’s explanation of “where al-Shabaab came
from,” and how it came to target Kenya. It's a somewhat complicated story of how American special ops forces used favored Somali warlords as an “assassination squad” against perceived “al-Qaeda” militants. This was followed by American connivance with Ethiopia and Kenya to invade Somalia and break up the network of local institutions, known as the Islamic Courts Union, that had been established by a broad Somali movement to achieve some order and stability in the country. Al-Shabaab started as a marginal groupuscule within that movement, and only rose to prominence as a result of the foreign incursion.
As Scahill explains:
Most Somalia experts said that there were no more than a dozen al-Qaeda-connected individuals in Somalia right after 9/11. And so, the CIA hires these warlords ostensibly to go in and hunt these people down. Well, they end up murdering vast numbers of people who were imams or religious scholars, and in some cases, I was told, that they would literally like chop people’s heads off and then bring them to their American liaison and say, ‘This is so and so, and I’ve killed them.’ And so, you had this utterly thuggish collection of warlords murdering people, and doing so, they believed, with the backing of the United States of America, the most powerful nation in the world.
In this segment
(about five minutes) from Democracy Now
(full
interview and transcript), Scahill lays out quite clearly how the US “made
the very force they claimed to be trying to fight the most powerful force in
Somalia”: