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Al Shabaab issue new threat
Museveni
#11 Posted : Monday, September 30, 2013 11:39:29 AM
Rank: Member

Joined: 8/16/2012
Posts: 661
Our Man In Somalia: Reflections On The War On Terror - Oyunga Pala

Published: October 27, 2011 at 11:11am
… [ Re-Post by OP on Sep 23rd, 2013 ]

Quote:
It is almost two weeks into Kenya’s invasion of Somalia. If you don’t watch the news or read the papers you could almost forget that Kenya is at war. There is so much new information streaming in daily. It is getting harder to decipher hype from fact. Feelings of uncertainty are rising in the city because we fighting an amorphous enemy. Two grenade attacks in Nairobi, allegedly a copy cat terrorist pledging allegiance to Al Shabaab has brought the war on Somalia onto our doorsteps. It is no longer over there. The next man in the streets could be the enemy within. Given the amount of aggrieved jobless youth in our midst, it does not paint a pretty picture. The government has some great advice though, be vigilant and patriotic. We desperately need a man in Somalia to tell us what’s going on?

The news is not too racy as yet because the war has been ‘good’ so far. TV stations are groping for fresh angles. KTN had a clip on a captured Al Shabaab soldier, some smiling teenage in a loose T-shirt. I might be mistaken but think I saw a Kenyan soldier’s arm resting lazily on the boys shoulder. We clearly treat our prisoners-of-war amicably. Our military looks like the Salvation Army on a meet and greet tour. You almost half expect them to start handing out Brand Kenya flyers. NTV chose a depressing causality of war story and had me wondering how many body bags were making it across the border. Jeff Koinange on the bench at K24 had better pulse on situation on a recent interview with Dr. David Matsanga of the Africa World Media. Even as the outspoken Matsanga took a pro war stance in between the furious banter, a proxy war was alluded to that had all the markings of a NATO conspiracy. But our man in Somalia Michael Njenga of Citizen TV took the prize. His transition from business suits to combat fatigues was progressing well. By day 10 on the frontline he had bullets strapped across his shoulders, clutching a gun and grimacing like Arnold Schwarzenegger in the flick Commando. He was cautious as he delivered military intelligence to the captive audience at home something along the lines of, “The army will be moving to the town but we cannot tell you when because of security reasons but all we can say is it that is very soon”. Indeed.

War time reportage is clearly new territory. It is lucrative as it guarantees a wide captive audience and crucial eyeballs for advertisers. Audiences are hooked to the daily dose of depressing news and wars sell like hot cake. Worryingly though, prime time news casters are starting to look like spectators, seemingly uninformed as the rest, heavy on innuendos and speculation all delivered in a manner that is already starting to disrupt peoples’ lives. Between the opinion polls, controlled images and footage, objectivity has lost ground to patriotic duty. Our men in Somalia have the heavy responsibility of helping us understand the premise of this war. We do not need them to be part of a press junket facilitated the military’s PR machine.

The war on terror was a ‘surprise’ turn of events especially this close to Christmas and a General election. Kenya’s foreign policy though viewed as cowardly had always taken pragmatic decisions in regional conflicts. The drum beats of war against Al Shabaab and the sketchy detail around the cause for retaliation are not holding up too well to scrutiny.

Somalia is not a single country in the conventional use of the word and the political issues behind the perennial conflicts are complex. Ever since Said Barre was deposed in 1991, every foreign invasion has been expelled with heavy consequences and left the situation worse than they found it. Daniella Kroslak of the International Crisis Group in an All Africa article dated 26 June 2009, suggested that militant Islamists were trying to draw Kenya into a trap and argued strongly against getting drawn into the Somalia conflict. We are now in the early stages of an occupation with no clearly stated exit strategy. We are fighting an unorthodox enemy and guerilla units throughout history have been underestimated to everyone’s detriment.

This war has gained legitimacy over a very narrow range of discussion. There has not been sufficient public information and serious discussion on the repercussions of this engagement. The constitutional mandate has not been sought. The Commander in Chief and the Prime Minister have been very economical with the official position. The usually cackling Parliamentarians seem more preoccupied with their ICC witch-hunting. When the minister for Internal Security (the late) George Saitoti invoked UN article 51 proclaiming a country’s right to self defense, the constricted reason provided was the economy in this case protecting precious dollars attached to tourism and aid business revenue from rogue militia.

Nonetheless, the social economic consequences at hand and Geo-political interests hinted publicly by military sources such as ‘logistical support’ from NATO lords US and France cannot be ignored. It should not be long before we hear the words ‘freedom and democracy’ followed by aerial bombardments and drone attacks. The retaliation is likely to be disproportionate and portends open season for war crimes against a civilian Somali population condemned to a never ending humanitarian crisis.

Religious propaganda will likely form the ideological basis on both sides. Soon we will be all killing each other in the name of God. Especially worrying is the xenophobic wave that will tar the Kenyan Somali population weary from successive government ‘screening’ operations. The discriminatory treatment could be justified in the name of public good. Al Shabaab has becomes our bogey man, lurking in every corner making innocent civilians collateral damage in a war they do not understand.

The Somalia affair is an unlikely to be a 7 day raid. It has the potential to be long drawn out war that could involve the entire East African region lending Al Shabaab, a new lease of life as the underdog and rallying jihadists against the invaders. Alternatively, the assault might smother Al Shahaab, only to bring rise to a new resistance inspired by their predecessors. The world is not a safer place after the death of Sadaam, Osama or Gadaffi. As late American comedian George Carlin said, “Fighting for peace is like screwing for virginity”.

Therefore, can my man in Somalia drop the showbiz and tell us what’s going on?



Confucius says

Before you embark on a journey of revenge, dig two graves.

2011©OyungaPala™



Spot On
Live and learn; and don’t forget, nothing ventured, nothing gained.
FancyFace
#12 Posted : Monday, September 30, 2013 1:08:04 PM
Rank: Member

Joined: 7/31/2009
Posts: 743
http://www.thepeople.co....baab-target-city-centre/

Problems can get out of proportion, and not only in the wee small hours. Don't let the problems eclipse the Master. Let the Master eclipse the problems.
Tokyo
#13 Posted : Monday, September 30, 2013 3:29:55 PM
Rank: Veteran

Joined: 10/9/2006
Posts: 1,502
Alshabab will definetely hit again. Time and place no idea.
work to prosper
webish
#14 Posted : Monday, September 30, 2013 3:32:55 PM
Rank: Member

Joined: 10/19/2009
Posts: 671
Location: Nairobi
Quote:

Quote:

The Somalia affair is an unlikely to be a 7 day raid. It has the potential to be long drawn out war that could involve the entire East African region lending Al Shabaab, a new lease of life as the underdog and rallying jihadists against the invaders. Alternatively, the assault might smother Al Shahaab, only to bring rise to a new resistance inspired by their predecessors. The world is not a safer place after the death of Sadaam, Osama or Gadaffi. As late American comedian George Carlin said, “Fighting for peace is like screwing for virginity”.



Spot On


EISH...

Life is joy, death is peace, but the transition is very difficult.
poundfoolish
#15 Posted : Monday, September 30, 2013 3:37:31 PM
Rank: Elder

Joined: 12/2/2009
Posts: 2,458
Location: Nairobi
webish wrote:
Quote:

Quote:

The Somalia affair is an unlikely to be a 7 day raid. It has the potential to be long drawn out war that could involve the entire East African region lending Al Shabaab, a new lease of life as the underdog and rallying jihadists against the invaders. Alternatively, the assault might smother Al Shahaab, only to bring rise to a new resistance inspired by their predecessors. The world is not a safer place after the death of Sadaam, Osama or Gadaffi. As late American comedian George Carlin said, “Fighting for peace is like screwing for virginity”.



Spot On


EISH...


Then Uhuru should simply pull out of Somalia and camp at the border and shoreline, to protect our interests within the country. The West would be left begging Kenya to stay.
Then there is the small matter of the military chiefs agreeing to let their 'new bread and butter' go. Me thinks they were the first ones to ask the CIC to stick to his guns regarding KDF in Somali
Rankaz13
#16 Posted : Monday, September 30, 2013 11:52:02 PM
Rank: Elder

Joined: 5/21/2013
Posts: 2,841
Location: Here
poundfoolish wrote:
webish wrote:
Quote:

Quote:

The Somalia affair is an unlikely to be a 7 day raid. It has the potential to be long drawn out war that could involve the entire East African region lending Al Shabaab, a new lease of life as the underdog and rallying jihadists against the invaders. Alternatively, the assault might smother Al Shahaab, only to bring rise to a new resistance inspired by their predecessors. The world is not a safer place after the death of Sadaam, Osama or Gadaffi. As late American comedian George Carlin said, “Fighting for peace is like screwing for virginity”.



Spot On


EISH...


Then Uhuru should simply pull out of Somalia and camp at the border and shoreline, to protect our interests within the country. The West would be left begging Kenya to stay.
Then there is the small matter of the military chiefs agreeing to let their 'new bread and butter' go. Me thinks they were the first ones to ask the CIC to stick to his guns regarding KDF in Somali


d'oh! ile makaa bado iko?
Life is like playing a violin solo in public and learning the instrument as one goes on.
wanyee
#17 Posted : Tuesday, October 01, 2013 10:39:22 AM
Rank: Member

Joined: 7/17/2011
Posts: 627
Location: Mbui-Nzau, Kikumbulyu
It's quite clear this war is all about economic sabotage aimed at some sort of stagnation ..for the backers to catch up ..or some other hidden agenda ..with that hindsight then strategy should change and let it be the same in terms of retaliation..punch to punch because the biggest beneficiaries of Al shabaab in Somalia are the business men there ..target them ..finish their business hell bomb them ..then the populace there can see other legit mean of making a living out of war- dependence ways or anarchist perpetuated business regimes and types
poundfoolish
#18 Posted : Tuesday, October 01, 2013 11:40:57 AM
Rank: Elder

Joined: 12/2/2009
Posts: 2,458
Location: Nairobi
Rankaz13 wrote:
poundfoolish wrote:
webish wrote:
Quote:

Quote:

The Somalia affair is an unlikely to be a 7 day raid. It has the potential to be long drawn out war that could involve the entire East African region lending Al Shabaab, a new lease of life as the underdog and rallying jihadists against the invaders. Alternatively, the assault might smother Al Shahaab, only to bring rise to a new resistance inspired by their predecessors. The world is not a safer place after the death of Sadaam, Osama or Gadaffi. As late American comedian George Carlin said, “Fighting for peace is like screwing for virginity”.



Spot On


EISH...


Then Uhuru should simply pull out of Somalia and camp at the border and shoreline, to protect our interests within the country. The West would be left begging Kenya to stay.
Then there is the small matter of the military chiefs agreeing to let their 'new bread and butter' go. Me thinks they were the first ones to ask the CIC to stick to his guns regarding KDF in Somali


d'oh! ile makaa bado iko?


Kwanza hiyo makaa ndio inafanya Godane aamuke kila siku na mahasira.
Tokyo
#19 Posted : Tuesday, October 01, 2013 12:03:42 PM
Rank: Veteran

Joined: 10/9/2006
Posts: 1,502
Solution To Alshabab :
Pull troops from Somalia.
Creat a buffer zone in the border manned by KDF.
Relocate somali refugee camps to Liboi border town.
Pay Somali informers for intelligence
Ensure weapon and terrorist panya route are closely manned
Random and sustained searches of terrorists and illegals in estates. eg today seal out all exits to and from South B. tomorrow another random estate to flush out only terrorism suspects. That is make it completely uncomfortable for them



work to prosper
livie
#20 Posted : Tuesday, October 01, 2013 2:06:06 PM
Rank: Veteran

Joined: 11/1/2008
Posts: 834
marko wrote:
You cannot protect every corner of every town in Kenya. Not with the calibre of police force we have and not with numbers we have.As long as "VIPs" get their personal police guards then Kenyans will always be shafted.


seconded!
If you are going to be thinking only one thing, you might as well be thinking big. -Donald J . Trump
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