
Drafted By: Dr. Michael A. Weinstein
http://www.pinr.com
Having followed Somalia's political history day by day for the 18 months since the I.C.C. sparked a popular revolution by removing the warlords from the country's political capital Mogadishu and then moving to rapid control of the south and central regions riding a wave of grassroots enthusiasm, PINR has concluded that a major chapter of Somalia's political history has been completed. A revolutionary cycle was broken by the Ethiopian intervention and a devolutionary cycle succeeded it. In the terms of historian Arnold Toynbee, it is a paradigmatic case of "challenge and response."
The basis for PINR's judgment that
PINR sees no new political actors on the horizon and does not anticipate further major fragmentation of primary solidarities. The revolutionary impulse of the Courts movement has been spent, although it is likely that Islamism has become a permanent part of
The complete devolution of Somalia's political community was settled in the weeks following PINR's October 3 report by the collapse of the country's internationally-backed Transitional Federal Government ( T.F.G.), which -- following the Ethiopian intervention -- was the only remaining possible organizational resource for creating a Somali state. PINR's judgment that the T.F.G. has collapsed is based on having observed a cycle of devolution within the transitional institutions that has rendered them riven by a factionalism that is reminiscent of the period prior to the Courts' rise.
The break-up of the T.F.G. began with a power struggle between its president, Abdullahi Yusuf Ahmed, and its then prime minister, Ali Mohamed Gedi, over control of exploration contracts for
Factionalism Rives the T.F.G.
PINR's October 3 report had taken the fight between Yusuf and Gedi to the point at which calls for a no-confidence vote on Gedi from Yusuf's parliamentary faction had begun, and officials from Yusuf's faction had arrested Somalia's chief supreme court justice on charges of corruption, paving the way for parliament, which Yusuf believed he could control, to resolve constitutional questions pertaining to Gedi's tenure without appeal. [See: "
By October 8, Yusuf's faction had drafted a no-confidence motion, citing a wide variety of complaints, including Gedi's failure to achieve security in
On October 9, Yusuf was in Baidoa leading a delegation of members of parliament and Ethiopian and Ugandan officers associated with the small and ineffective African Union peacekeeping mission (AMISOM) in
On October 10, Voice of America reported that the disaffected Hawiye sub-clans had decided not to support Gedi, as the Tradition and Unity elders appealed to the T.F.G. and its
On October 12, tensions had risen to the point that Ethiopian generals postponed their plans to disarm Yusuf's and Gedi's security forces, fearing an armed confrontation if they tried to do so. More than 20 T.F.G. cabinet ministers loyal to Yusuf issued a letter threatening to resign if Gedi failed to appear for a no-confidence vote, while cabinet ministers loyal to Gedi held a rival meeting, claiming that only the prime minister could convene a parliamentary session. With parliament temporarily out of session until October 14 for "security reasons," Gedi warned that if his government fell,
With parliament back in session and deadlocked over whether or not to debate a no-confidence motion, Ethiopia's prime minister, Meles Zenawi, held talks with Gedi and representatives from the United States, European Union and United Nations in Addis Ababa. At the end of the three-day meetings, Gedi held a press conference at which he announced that he would abide by a vote of no-confidence should it carry.
Back in Baidoa, Gedi met with his parliamentary faction, which comprised more than 100 members of the transitional parliament's 275 members, but fell short of a majority. In a miscalculation that would prove to be his undoing, Gedi defended his meetings with anti-T.F.G. Hawiye sub-clans and urged
Following the meeting, Gedi's faction declared itself to be a "political party" and issued a pledge "to protect the constitution and government." The new bloc, which opened up a division in the T.F.G similar to the one that had riven the transitional institutions before the Courts revolution, included powerful former warlords Mohamed Qanyare and Muse Sudi Yalahow, and Deputy Defense Minister Salad Ali Jeele.
The showdown came on October 22 and ended without resolution as parliament voted for a no-confidence measure, which passed 115-23-5, failing to achieve the 138 votes necessary to remove Gedi. Eighty members of Gedi's faction walked out of the session, emphasizing the rift that had opened up.
With the T.F.G. in crisis and
Immediately after Gedi's resignation, Yusuf began a series of meetings with stakeholders on Gedi's replacement and prepared to go to parliament for approval of a constitutional amendment, requiring a two-thirds majority, to allow a non-member of parliament to assume the post of prime minister. After a reported and unspecified compromise with Gedi's United Somali Parliamentarians bloc, parliament voted unanimously for the amendment, opening up the field of candidates and satisfying external actors, particularly
From Yusuf's viewpoint, anybody whom he believed he could control and who was acceptable to
Determined not to erode the gains in power that he had made through Gedi's resignation, Yusuf was able to finesse the forces pressuring him and settled on Nur "Adde" Hussein Hassan, a 69 year old former official in Siad Barre's regime who was currently director of
Through a combination of tactical skill and his adversary's desperate miscalculation, Yusuf had managed to regain his grip on his severely limited power. His strategy, foretold by Uloso, was made clear in a speech -- first reported by Voice of America -- that he had given the week before to a government budgetary and planning session, in which he proposed putting the T.F.G. in control of all sectors of the economy and social services, and limiting private enterprise and civil society organizations; and warned officials not to cooperate with aid agencies that did not coordinate with the T.F.G.
The T.F.G. Collapses
Yusuf's aspirations, which border on fantasy, have nothing to do with
Lacking charisma and a political base, Hussein was immediately caught between demands of donor powers that he name an "inclusive" cabinet involving members of the exiled opposition and diaspora intellectuals; and pressures from clan-based political factions to retain current members in cabinet posts.
Hussein held a round of meetings with members of parliament, leaders of clans, donor powers and Ethiopian officials -- with Yusuf's shadow in the background -- on how to staff his government. Yusuf reportedly was demanding his choices for the Petroleum, Finance and Defense Ministries. It was clear that Hussein had no power resources of his own and no mobilizing vision.
On December 2, Hussein announced his cabinet list, which -- out of 31 posts -- included only three nominees from outside parliament. Hussein had acquiesced to factional pressure and had closed the latest "window of opportunity" for
The condition of extreme factionalism in the transitional institutions became evident on December 3, when parliament failed to ratify Hussein's list and debate became acrimonious, with some demanding new faces in the cabinet and others defending the list, and some demanding a secret ballot, others calling for an open vote, and others rejecting the process entirely.
Garowe Online reported that during the debate, the parliament's deputy speaker, Mohamed Omar Dalha -- who was chairing the session -- received a call from Yusuf summoning him, tried to adjourn the session temporarily, met with opposition from vociferous members of parliament declaring "we do not take orders from the president," and finally adjourned the session altogether.
During the debates, objections to Hussein's list took on a clan character, with smaller clans complaining that they were under-represented in the cabinet and some larger clans complaining that they had not been consulted sufficiently on the list. On December 4, four cabinet nominees from the Rahenweyne clan family, including former warlord and national security minister, Hassan Mohamed Nur, resigned over issues of representation and consultation. On December 8, T.F.G. and Ethiopian forces broke up a meeting of 50 members of parliament at Nur's home, claiming that an armed protest was being organized there.
As Hussein failed to form a government, Yusuf entered the hospital with a chest infection, from which he appears to have recovered. His illness provoked a flurry of speculation about what would happen if Yusuf left the scene. The most pointed commentary was provided by South African analyst Richard Cornwell in a Voice of America interview: "It is very unwise to depend on a 72-year-old, who has had a liver transplant, to carry the whole political system." Cornwell's concluding judgment, with which PINR concurs, is that absent Yusuf, there will be a severe struggle for power in
Conclusion
In PINR's judgment, the power struggle within the T.F.G. has ended with its devolution into factionalism and a government divided between Yusuf -- an irreparably failed boss -- and Hussein -- an appeaser without a power base; both are weak and appear to have no possibility of providing national leadership. Yusuf is no longer the protagonist and Hussein is incapable of replacing him; the last piece of
As the T.F.G. collapsed, the patterns of devolution described by PINR in its reports throughout 2007 persisted and deepened. The insurgency against the Ethiopian occupiers and allied T.F.G. forces continues despite an Ethiopian attempt to mount a brutal crackdown and has spread beyond
With
A new strategy, the outlines of which have been floated by some strategists in the U.S. military, would be to cantonize Somalia in order to isolate and encircle its most unstable regions; that would involve as its central feature diplomatic recognition of Somaliland and an abandonment of the T.F.G. and of any possibility of a Somali state. Were a cantonization strategy to be pursued, its success would depend on substantial reconstruction aid for the most stable areas, which, in PINR's judgment, would be unlikely to be forthcoming.
Cantonization is simply a return to pre-Courts
Report Drafted By :
Dr. Michael A. Weinstein
The Power and Interest News Report (PINR) is an independent organization that utilizes open source intelligence to provide conflict analysis services in the context of international relations. PINR approaches a subject based upon the powers and interests involved, leaving the moral judgments to the reader. This report may not be reproduced, reprinted or broadcast without the written permission of [email protected].
PINR reprints do not qualify under Fair-Use Statute Section 107 of the Copyright Act. All comments should be directed to [email protected]
If you would like to unsubscribe, click here. You can also reply to this e-mail requesting to be removed.