In early June of 2006, Islamic militants stormed Somalia’s capital city of Mogadishu–site of the 1993 killings of 18 American marines, captured in the movie Black Hawk Down–and wrested control from several allied warlord militias. The U.S. government, meanwhile, was found to be funneling military support to the warlords in a bid to prevent the spread of what it perceived to be radical Islam and terrorism. Understanding the puzzle of Somalia’s current state and charting a responsible U.S. foreign policy, however, require putting the fragmented pieces of Somalia’s history back together.
Unlike most of the countries within the Horn of Africa, Somalia
 does not possess wide ethnic and linguistic diversity. However, competition
 between clans for resources and political power fuels conflict and has been
 easily manipulated by foreign powers. With its close proximity to the oil-rich Middle East, Somalia has long been the site of
 geopolitical struggles, especially during the Cold War.
In 1960, Somalia received its independence from two separate
 colonial powers: Britain and Italy. In 1969, after a decade-long experiment
 with multi-party democracy, the army’s senior official, Mohamed Siad Barre led
 a military coup with the backing of the Soviet Union. Five years later, Barre
 attempted to expand the territory of Somalia by invading its neighbor,
 Ethiopia, which had been backed by the United States for the previous two
 decades. Thus, the Horn of Africa became a proxy for the larger Cold War
 struggle between the Soviets and Americans. The ensuing three-year war brought
 much loss of life, and alliances changed as the Soviets shifted their aid to
 Ethiopia.
The experience of war left Somalia splintered, and for the
 next decade, intermittent civil war ensued with various rebel factions, some of
 whom were funded by the Soviets. Following the Soviet shift, the U.S. Carter
 Administration began to support Barre’s regime in Somalia. In 1979, President
 Carter issued his Carter Doctrine, which stated that the U.S. would use
 military force if necessary to protect American security interests in the
 Middle East, especially access to oil. The Carter Doctrine ensured that Somalia
 would remain a strategic site in U.S. foreign policy for decades to come. For
 the next decade, the U.S. provided massive amounts of foreign assistance to the
 Somali warlord regime, including substantial military aid.
The end of the 1980s brought the advent of outright civil
 war in Somalia as a loose coalition of armed clans fought against the central
 regime. In 1991, the Barre regime was overthrown and the country thrown into
 anarchy as numerous clans contended for control. The turmoil was exacerbated by
 nationwide famine. The United Nations Security Council, led by the U.S.,
 quickly implemented a United Nations peacekeeping operation to make the
 country safe for humanitarian aid delivery. The U.S.-led mission had initial
 success, but withdrew prematurely after eighteen U.S. troops were killed and dragged
 through the streets of Mogadishu in October 1993. By 1995, the UN mission had
 completely abandoned Somalia to lawlessness and anarchy.
Yet, while U.S. troops were withdrawn from the country, the
 U.S. did not forget about Somalia. After the terrorist attacks of September 11,
 2001, the U.S. increased its presence in the Horn of Africa with the Combined
 Joint Task Force–Horn of Africa (CJTF-HOA), based in Djibouti. The stated
 mission of CJTF-HOA is “to detect, disrupt and defeat terrorists who pose an imminent
 threat to coalition partners in the region.” CJTF-HOA contains at least 1,600
 personnel, including at least 400 active duty U.S. troops. There is also
 evidence that the task force includes a large number of special operations
 forces. In recent months, further evidence has emerged that the U.S. has again
 been involved in Somalia, supporting warlord factions in the name of
 counterterrorism. Over the last year, battles between the U.S.-supported
 factions and Islamic militias have caused death, destruction and greater
 instability.
Yet, there is still hope for peace and stability in Somalia:
 both of which are in the interest of the United States. In 2004, after talks in
 Kenya, warlord factions and political officials agreed to establish a new
 parliament and appoint a president. This government has been unable, though, to
 unite the country, particularly because of fighting in the southern region of the country. In
 recent weeks, however, this fighting has stopped as the Union of Islamic Courts
 has taken control and sought to unite the various factions. There is potential
 that the courts and the northern-based government can engage in peace talks.
Responding to events of late, with the support of the US and
 many EU countries, diplomats in New York have established the International
 Contact Group on Somalia. The group has called for an end to the fighting and
 for peace talks to commence. There have been discussions, dating back to mid
 2005, to deploy a regional military force to stabilize the country. Now is a
 critical time for the world community, particularly the U.S. because of its
 tarnished history in the country, to act decisively in support of a robust
 Somali peace process. Such a process ought not to be fueled by geopolitical
 strategy, but by the wishes and needs of clan elders, religious leaders and the
 people of Somalia who have become tired of war.
A country profile for Somalia can be found here.
