ISIS In Somalia: Islamic State Claims First-Ever Attack In Mogadishu While Courting Al-Shabab
African Union forces arrive in Marka, Somalia, about 45 miles from the capital of Mogadishu, Sept. 14, 2012.
Photo: Simon Maina/AFP/Getty Images
The Islamic State group claimed responsibility Monday for its first
terrorist attack in Somalia. In an official statement circulated on
social media, the extremist group said its fighters detonated an
improvised explosive device (IED) targeting a military vehicle belonging
to African Union peacekeeping forces on the outskirts of Mogadishu, the
country’s sprawling capital. The blast damaged the vehicle, but it was
not immediately clear whether anybody was either killed or wounded, the
militant group aka either ISIL or ISIS said in its statement.
However, an African Union Mission in Somalia representative, Lt. Col.
Joe Kibet, told International Business Times by phone the claim was
“not true,” saying the explosion did not damage the vehicle and that
there were neither deaths nor injuries. Speaking for Somalia’s Ministry
of Internal Security, Abdikamil Moalim Shukri also denied the claim in a
brief phone interview Monday.
It’s the first time ISIS has officially declared its involvement in
an operation in Somalia. The incident signals the extremist group’s
desire to make inroads in a war-torn region dominated by its rival, al
Qaeda affiliate al-Shabab. While it’s no easy task, increasing its base
in Somalia could translate into big rewards for ISIS, including access
to Africa’s longest coastline and the neighboring nations of Djibouti,
Ethiopia and Kenya, all key U.S. allies.
“Setting off an IED is hardly a major achievement in Somalia,” said
Matt Bryden, a Somalia expert and director of Sahan Research, a think
tank based in the Kenyan capital of Nairobi. “But it does testify to the
presence of Islamic State sympathizers on the ground in Somalia, and
the potential for the group to inspire fissures among al-Shabab fighters
and sympathizers.”
Somalia’s conflict-ridden past, high unemployment rate,
Muslim-majority population and Western ties make it a hot spot for
jihadi groups, so ISIS has been courting al-Shabab members there for
some time. The Syria-based extremist group released a recruitment video
last year that showed Somali fighters urging their compatriots to join
ISIS.
Somalia would be a strategic move for ISIS. The African country sits
close to the world’s busiest shipping routes in the Gulf of Aden. The
East African region also hosts U.S. military troops and bases, and is
the recipient of millions of dollars in U.S. aid and investment.
“Looking at Somalia, ISIL is trying to insert itself and then may
threaten to move into Kenya,” Rose Gottemoeller, the U.S. State
Department’s undersecretary for arms control and international security,
reportedly said at a roundtable in Johannesburg, South Africa, in December.
Al
Qaeda-linked al-Shabab recruits walk down a street in the Deniile
district of the Somali capital of Mogadishu after their graduation March
5, 2012.
Photo: Mohamed Abdiwahab/AFP/Getty Images
But the push has had marginal success thus far. Al-Shabab commander
Hassan Mohamed, aka Hassan Fanah, was arrested by Somali forces in
Mogadishu’s Kahda district Sunday night. He had reportedly defected from
al-Shabab and joined ISIS at the end of last year, according to Mareeg.com. Another senior al-Shabab commander in Somalia’s semiautonomous Puntland region reportedly
defected from the group in October and pledged allegiance to ISIS
leader Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi. He took about 20 of his followers with him,
but the move represented a small split in the ranks as the vast
majority of al-Shabab members in the region have remained loyal to the
group.
There is also a new group calling itself Jahba East Africa, which this month gave bayah, or an oath of allegiance,
to al-Baghdadi and recognized him as the “rightful khalifa [leader] of
all Muslims.” The group may be made up of former members of al-Shabab. A
representative said the group included fighters not only in Somalia but
also in Kenya, Tanzania and Uganda and condemned al-Shabab for being a
“psychological and physical prison,” according to the SITE Intelligence Group, which monitors terrorist activity.
“The sentiment that Jabha reflects in its messaging is real: There is
a growing Islamic State constituency across East Africa. But whether or
not it has the potential to develop as a terrorist group remains to be
seen,” Sahan Research’s Bryden said in an interview Monday. “Over time,
if ISIS continues to project an aura of success and expansion, that
could prove a challenge to al-Shabab's cohesion and integrity.”
Controlling swaths of territory in Iraq and Syria, ISIS has gained ground in
recent months with its branches in both North Africa and West Africa,
amassing supporters and territory, but the militant group has been
struggling to establish itself in East Africa for a number of reasons.
While Somalia’s location makes it an appealing place to establish a
base, its site also makes it a difficult one. Much of the country is
within reach of the government security forces, peacekeeping troops or
armies of neighboring countries.
“ISIS has not yet managed to establish a meaningful foothold in
Somalia,” Bryden said. “Its current presence, in the remote northeastern
highlands, is isolated enough to provide a degree of security, but also
consigns the group to irrelevance.”
Analysts have estimated there are several thousand al-Shabab fighters
in Somalia, and the group has threatened to kill any potential
turncoats, which has likely choked ISIS’ recruitment efforts. Most of
the defectors have been young fighters.
More al-Shabab members may choose to swap sides in the event they see
immense benefits in defecting, such as better pay or higher ranks. For
now, though, the group’s emir, Ahmed Omar, aka Abu Ubaydah, has clearly
chosen to remain aligned with al Qaeda.
“There are signs that ISIS is gaining a very small toehold in the
region. But they’ve been trying very, very hard to woo al-Shabab into
the ISIS fold,” said Joshua Meservey, policy analyst for Africa and the
Middle East at the Heritage Foundation, a conservative think tank in
Washington. “This is a group with real teeth, and joining ISIS would be a
feather in the cap.”
Somali
soldiers stand outside the ruins of the Jazeera Palace Hotel after a
deadly attack by al-Shabab in the capital of Mogadishu July 26, 2015.
Photo: Reuters/Feisal Omar
Al Qaeda and ISIS have a shared goal of establishing an Islamic
caliphate ruled by a strict version of Sharia and they have a common
enemy: the West and its allies. But they are locked in competition for
resources, recruits and operational spaces. There are also fundamental
differences between the two groups.
Al Qaeda leadership views the establishment of a caliphate as a
long-term project and sees the implementation of Islamic law as a slow
process, in contrast to ISIS and its affiliates, which have declared
caliphates quickly. Al Qaeda has traditionally relied on donor funding,
while ISIS is comparatively more dependent on illicit activities such as
selling oil on the black market. ISIS is also more brutal than al
Qaeda, using extreme violence to attract attention and recruit
followers, a tactic al Qaeda leadership has shunned.
Al Qaeda already has the upper hand in East Africa because its
affiliate has had a longstanding presence in Somalia. Al-Shabab, whose
name means “The Youth,” emerged in 2006 from the now-defunct Islamic
Courts Union, which once ruled Mogadishu. The Sunni extremist
group launched its own insurgency in major Somali cities in 2009, taking
control of Mogadishu and southern Somalia until it was pushed out by
domestic and foreign forces around 2012.
Al-Shabab frequently targets officials and peacekeeping forces in its
efforts to topple Somalia’s Western-backed government, as well as
civilians and non-Muslims. Although it’s based in Somalia, its fighters
have launched deadly attacks in neighboring countries such as
Kenya. Many areas of Somalia are still under al-Shabab’s control, and
the militants have increased efforts in recent months to recapture lost
territories.
A young Somali smokes and holds a weapon as he and his friends sit on a car in Baidoa, Somalia, Dec. 14, 1992.
Photo: Reuters/Yannis Behrakis YB/CMC
Decades of civil war has ravaged much of Somalia’s economic infrastructure,
government structures and other institutions. Clan warlords have
battled for power in the country after the collapse of a military
dictator’s regime in the early 1990s. After years of interim authority, a
federal government headed by the president and parliament was
established in 2012. But Somalia’s internationally recognized government
has failed to assert central authority over the nation, which, in
conjunction with a high unemployment rate,
has created a niche for armed groups and piracy. It also leaves the
door open for al-Shabab to expand or for ISIS to gain a foothold.
The youth unemployment rate in Somalia is among the highest in the world, at 67 percent, according to the United Nations Development Program.
That figure is even higher for woman and in certain areas of the
country. Somalia also has one of the lowest rates of school enrollment,
with more than 80 percent of primary-age children no longer in school or
have never attended. These issues verge on catastrophic, given that more than 70 percent of
Somalia’s population of 10.5 million is under 35. And with this
population almost entirely Muslim, Somalia is highly vulnerable
to extremism and radicalization.
With few or no opportunities, many young Somalis have turned to
joining militias or piracy as solutions to their problems in cases where
migrating is not an option. An armed pirate can earn between $6,000 and
$10,000 on a $1 million ransom, according to a 2008 report commissioned
by the U.N. Militant groups such as al-Shabab also make tempting
promises of income from their illicit dealings. ISIS could compete by
offering even higher wages.
“The U.S. really needs to pay attention and remain engaged on Somalia,” the Heritage Foundation’s Meservey said.
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