Is Al Shabab gaining or losing ground in Somalia?
Loading...
Last week, The Economist reported that 厂辞尘补濒颈补鈥檚 Al Shabab rebel movement in the capital, Mogadishu. 鈥淭he Shabab are far from beaten,鈥 the magazine continued, 鈥測et their ability to attack government officials and their buildings has been noticeably reduced.鈥
This week, has an op-ed in Foreign Policy that continues to advance the idea that the AU troops, in combination with the Transitional Federal Government (TFG) are gaining ground against Al Shabab.
Earlier this year, our government controlled about a third of the capital, Mogadishu, to the insurgents鈥 equal share. In recent months, however, our troops, in partnership with AU peacekeepers, have established control over territory that is home to more than 80 percent of the capital鈥檚 population. Our forces have gone from fending off attacks against the presidential compound to actively taking ground from insurgents deep in their former strongholds, sending Islamist rebel-group Al-Shabab and their foreign leaders into retreat and disarray.
[...]
Restoring peace throughout Somalia is unlikely before August next year, but we will achieve it in Mogadishu.
In a further boost to the TFG鈥檚 fortunes, the has 鈥渃alled on the African Union Mission in Somalia (AMISOM) to increase troops from 8,000 to 12,000.鈥 Uganda is set to provide most or even all of these troops; are already ready to go. stated yesterday that Ugandan forces will remain in Somalia despite threats of more terrorist attacks inside Uganda.
Finally, the TFG hopes to capitalize on reported that have worsened since the group suffered heavy losses during its Ramadan offensive.
Is Al Shabab facing defeat in Mogadishu, then? It鈥檚 hard to say. News reports from elsewhere in southern Somalia show Al Shabab making and political gains, including from their (former?) rivals, Hizbul Islam. If Al Shabab consolidates its control of other parts of the region, that won鈥檛 necessarily strengthen their position in the capital, but it won鈥檛 hurt either.
also makes the critical point that the TFG鈥檚 success has come just as much in the press as it has on the battlefield. That doesn鈥檛 mean, Gundun continues, that the TFG is lying when it says it controls half of Mogadishu 鈥 but it鈥檚 important to recognize that the current constellation of events pointing to an advantage for the TFG might not stay in alignment forever. The TFG鈥檚 success has coincided with Al Shabab鈥檚 weakness. Even if things continue to go in the TFG鈥檚 favor, Gundun concludes, 鈥渢he TFG and AU still have a long, hard fight before planting their flag over the entire capital.鈥
Optimism may be warranted then. Overconfidence is certainly not.
鈥 Alex Thurston is a PhD student studying Islam in Africa at Northwestern University who blogs at .