Nairobi attack: impacts & implications

Since the horrific attack on the Westgate mall in Nairobi, there has been a flood of coverage, with thorough analyses unfortunately few and far between.  I wanted to share a few things that I’ve found worthwhile to read in one place.

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A common theme running through most thoughtful analysis of the impacts of the Westgate attack is the real risk of a backlash against ethnic Somalis in Kenya (including Kenyan Somalis), and perhaps even a broader wave of resentment towards Muslims in general in Kenya.  This is genuine concern, although the initial public discourse is focused on national unity, centred in social media around slogans such as We Are One (#WeAreOne). Unfortunately, the experience of the past two years fuels a sense of caution among Somalis, and there is a legitimate fear of being scapegoated for the attacks.

This has raised the question of why al-Shabaab would choose to make an attack that it surely understood carried the risk of triggering such a backlash — which would threaten both ‘ordinary’ Somalis and the Somali business elite, who maintain business links across the region, between parts of Somalia, Kenya, other parts of Eastern Africa, the Gulf States and further afield, including Europe, North America and Asia.  One argument would be that the attack thus signals the desperation of a militant group in decline, taking its most extreme option in an effort to demonstrate its continued relevance to the future of Somalia, after months of military setbacks and a recent bout of intense (and deadly) leadership infighting.

At this point, still very early in the process of understanding the import of the attack, my own initial impression is that the attack rather sends a different signal.  Despite the recent infighting, the group’s emir, Ahmed Godane, has retained control.  Moreover, the Nairobi attack comes in the wake of a string of high-profile attacks in Somalia — including the assault of the UN compound in Mogadishu in June; attacks on President Hassan Sheikh Mahmoud in Merca and ‘interim Jubba administration’ leader Ahmed Madobe in Kismayo in early September — alongside the usual range of targeted killings and attacks on AU peacekeepers and Somali National Army troops.

In this context, the Nairobi attack seems to be as much a signal for Kenya to withdraw from Somalia, as it is a signal to Somalis that al-Shabaab can wait.  It can wait for the AU forces, and their international donors, to exhaust the political will to maintain the financial support for the military intervention in Somalia.  Moreover, it is a signal to Somalis that in the context of an ongoing civil war, al-Shabaab’s political and societal vision is their only viable choice in the long term, that eventually any other choice cannot guarantee their security.  In this way, al-Shabaab appears to be betting that, if a backlash against Somalis is forthcoming in Kenya, the result will be for those Somalis to conclude that, in the end, al-Shabaab’s rule would be better than continued conflict and persecution.

This may well be a seriously flawed strategy, but in the context of a long civil war, I think it goes some way to explaining the logic of this Islamist movement’s continued attacks, and the significant escalation of the stakes that the Nairobi attack represents.

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