Does US still consider Ethiopia a strategis partner in its war on terror in the Horn of Africa?

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US doesn't need Ethiopia in its war on terror in the Horn of Africa
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BY ALEMAYEHU G. MA...
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Earlier this month, U.S. Defense Secretary Jim Mattis visited the Middle East and Africa to "reaffirm key U.S. military alliances" and engage with strategic partners." Mattis only visited the tiny nation of Djibouti in the Horn of Africa where the U.S. maintains its largest military base. Ethiopia was conspicuously absent from the "strategic partner" lineup.

In September 2014, Barack Obama underscored the vital importance of Ethiopia in the U.S. war on terrorism. He noted that cooperation with Ethiopia "is making a difference" and that the "partnerships that we have formed with countries like Ethiopia are going to be critical to our overall efforts to defeat terrorism."

In July 2015, during his state visit, Obama called Ethiopia an "outstanding partner" in the fight against terrorism in the Horn and a "key partner" in resolving the crises in South Sudan. He praised Ethiopia for being "a major contributor to U.N. peacekeeping efforts", and for its unique role in "contribut(ing) more (peacekeeping) troops than any other country in Africa."

The Mattis visit to Djibouti comes as the U.S. intensifies its military pressure on al-Shabaab, the terrorist group in Somalia with ties to al-Qaeda, which has been fighting for over a decade to establish an Islamic state and force out African Union peacekeeping troops.





Late last month, President Trump ordered airstrikes against al-Shabaab and approved a Department of Defense proposal "to provide additional precision fires" to the African Union Mission in Somalia (AMISOM) and Somali security forces.

U.S. military command for Africa (AFRICOM) announced last week that a contingent from the 101st Airborne Division has been deployed in Somalia, the first since 1994, to assist the Somali government with logistical and training support.

In 2017, there have been no public statements by the Trump administration on Ethiopia's frontline role in the fight against terrorism. There has been no mentioned Ethiopia as ally or "strategic partner", and no acknowledgment of Ethiopia's role in maintaining regional stability. There has been no hint of re-opening the U.S. drone base, closed down in January 2016, used to surveil and launch strikes on al-Shabaab. Mattis' Djibouti visit, conspicuously avoiding Ethiopia, could suggest that the Trump Administration may not view Ethiopia as an indispensable counterterrorism partner in the Horn.



The only palpable evidence of any link between the ruling regime in Ethiopia and the Trump administration appears to be vague assurances by Senator James Inhofe (R-Okla.) in February asserting, "Ethiopia is one of the strategic allies of the US in the region in peace and security and the relationship will continue under the new Trump administration." In 2007, Inhofe zealously opposed legislation designed to promote democracy and human rights in Ethiopia.

In January, the Ethiopian regime showed its deep concern over potential changes in U.S. policy under the Trump administration by hiring SGR Government Relations, Lobbying (Washington, D.C) at a cost of $150,000 per month (for a total contract price of $1.8 million). In my letter to Trump, I argued that it made no sense for a regime whose population, some 20 million of them, is facing dire famine to spend nearly $2 million on lobbying.

Is the Trump administration signaling that Ethiopia is not a "key partner" or "critical to our overall efforts to defeat terrorism" in the Horn region?

One of the four questions on Africa the Trump transition team posed to the State Department in January may offer a glimpse into Trump's Horn policy: "We've been fighting al-Shabaab for a decade, why haven't we won?" This manifestly simple question is pregnant with profundity.

When the regime in Ethiopia invaded Somalia in January 2007, then-leader Meles Zenawi declared that it could "take a week or a maximum of two weeks" to wipe out the Islamists, "stay there for a few days to help the transitional government in preserving stability then pull out our troops." The "Islamists" were "wiped out," only to be replaced by the murderous al-Shabaab.

Ethiopian troops left Somalia in January 2009 leaving a good part of that country tightly in the hands of al-Shabaab and sundry other Islamist insurgents.

In 2014, 4,300 Ethiopian troops returned to Somalia as part of African Union Mission in Somalia (AMISOM). In the summer of 2016, Ethiopia began to withdraw some 3,000 non-AMISOM soldiers out of south-central Somalia following mass uprising against the ruling regime in various part of Ethiopia. Al-Shabaab swiftly recaptured and consolidated its control over a number of towns held by the departing Ethiopian and AU soldiers. Despite military pressure, al-Shabaab continues to attack AU bases and carry out suicide bombings.

The cost of fighting al-Shabaab has increased from an annual $300 million in 2009 to $900 million in 2016. The African Union (AU), which has 22,000 troops deployed in Somalia drawn from Ethiopia, Kenya, Uganda, Burundi and Djibouti, is scheduled to complete its mission by 2020.

President-elect Trump accused Obama of "losing the war on terrorism" and pledged to "bomb the hell out of ISIS" and other terrorist groups and armies. On April 14, Trump authorized dropping the largest non-nuclear bomb in the U.S. arsenal on ISIS targets in Afghanistan. Is al-Shabaab next?

The Trump administration would be wise to delink its counterterrorism strategy from the Ethiopian regime, which barely clings to power by a state of emergency decree. Ethiopia's involvement in the domestic affairs of Somalia has made the military and political situation in Somalia worse, and resulted in documented large-scale war crimes and human rights violations. Ethiopia's involvement is arguably the principal galvanizing cause for the radicalization of large numbers of Somali youth flocking into the of al-Shabaab and other militant Islamic groups.

The Ethiopian regime has long been a beneficiary of U.S. aid largesse for its counterterrorism cooperation. But Ethiopia's counterterrorism role has been more self-serving. If not, "We've been fighting al-Shabaab (with the full support of Ethiopia) for a decade, why haven't we won?"

Alemayehu (Al) Mariam is a professor of political science at California State University, San Bernardino, a constitutional lawyer and Senior Editor of the International Journal of Ethiopian Studies.

The views expressed by contributors are their own and are not the views of The Hill.
 
Bye bye Amisom (Kenya and Ethiopia) the new administration of trump refused to meet them.


Secretary of State Rex Tillerson invited the African Union chairperson to a meeting in Washington only to drop out at the last minute, according to a new report.

Tillerson’s proposed meeting with A.U. Commission Chairperson Moussa Faki fell apart last week, Foreign Policy said Tuesday.

Sources told Foreign Policy that Tillerson invited Faki to Washington the week of April 17 after Faki finished meetings at the United Nations in New York City.



Faki reportedly scheduled a trip to D.C. for April 19 and 20 while waiting for details of his visit with Tillerson to be finalized, Foreign Policy reported.
Tillerson’s office then went silent, Foreign Policy's sources added, leaving Faki frustrated by the turn of events.

Faki, the head of a 55-nation bloc, canceled his visit to D.C. entirely over the misunderstanding.

Foreign Policy said Tillerson's team offered Faki a chance to see lower level State Department officials instead, but that meeting never materialized.

“African officials were incensed,” said Reuben Brigety, a former U.S. ambassador to the A.U. who was familiar with the circumstances surrounding to Faki’s visit.

“This is ridiculous, particularly at a time when Africans are increasingly becoming more and more aware of their choices in partners around the world,” he said, calling the mishap “the dumbest thing in the world.”

Arikana Chihombori, the African Union's ambassador to Washington, confirmed to Foreign Policy that Tillerson’s invitation to Faki did not end in a successful visit.

“The people I dealt with at the State Department were very attentive and did the best they could,” she said.

“We tend to rise above situations like this,” Chihombori added, noting the incident would not likely harm relations between the U.S. and A.U.
 
Strategic partner kulaha. Ethiopia is the Wests , but they have nothing to show fot it despite "not being colonized." The day all Somali regions and nations rise is the day they will cry tears of blood due to envy and fear. They wanna keep Somali's down, but can't even improve their own situation.
 
Strategic partner kulaha. Ethiopia is the Wests , but they have nothing to show fot it despite "not being colonized." The day all Somali regions and nations rise is the day they will cry tears of blood due to envy and fear. They wanna keep Somali's down, but can't even improve their own situation.


Trump fed up with them and it is time to,put them in their place
 
Strategic partner kulaha. Ethiopia is the Wests , but they have nothing to show fot it despite "not being colonized." The day all Somali regions and nations rise is the day they will cry tears of blood due to envy and fear. They wanna keep Somali's down, but can't even improve their own situation.


Actually they were colonized also but they hided and the semi ignorant people only that believe their lies
 
Is this xabashi spot? What is it with the bootyclapping from you


If you can read well, you would understand that we are talking about war on al shabab and Amisom. Listen there are Ethiopian troops in Somalia. Plus 4 millions Somalis who are under occupation of Ethiopia.
 
If you can read well, you would understand that we are talking about war on al shabab and Amisom. Listen there are Ethiopian troops in Somalia. Plus 4 millions Somalis who are under occupation of Ethiopia.
I can read well fool
Have asked on another thread if people donated for their village and the drought , i got only one answer, stop showing fake tears clanist
I hope you have donated for our people, i have and will be hoping it does good, there are even more than 4million in galbeed,this why everyone should help
 
I can read well fool
Have asked on another thread if people donated for their village and the drought , i got only one answer, stop showing fake tears clanist
I hope you have donated for our people, i have and will be hoping it does good, there are even more than 4million in galbeed,this why everyone should help


You are derailing the thread here, maybe you should make thread about this subject with links to gofundme accounts
 
You are derailing the thread here, maybe you should make thread about this subject with links to gofundme accounts
It not my job to tell people who their people are but themselves
I have donated and helped, hope you have too , that is all i will say
 
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