Al Shabaab og terroradvarsel i Kenya

Hans Rustad

Den ame­ri­kanske ambas­sa­den i Nai­robi sendte 23. april ut en advar­sel om at et ter­ror­an­grep var under plan­leg­ging i landet.

Strat­fors Scott Stew­art har en inter­es­sant ana­lyse av Al Sha­ba­abs utvik­ling og posi­sjon. Hundre­tu­se­ner har flyk­tet fra Soma­lia til Kenya og grense­om­rå­dene er usikre. Kenya har sol­da­ter inne i Soma­lia, og sål­des del av en koa­li­sjon som pres­ser al Sha­baab. Men al Sha­baab er hel­ler ikke helt enhet­lig, skri­ver Stewart.

The war­ning comes as thou­sands of Kenyan tro­ops occupy much of southern Soma­lia. Along with a force of Ethio­pian tro­ops, local militias and a con­tin­gent of Afri­can Union Mis­sion in Soma­lia (AMISOM) tro­ops, the Keny­ans are placing heavy pres­sure on al Sha­baab, the al Qaeda-linked Somali mili­tant group in southern Somalia.

This exter­nal mili­tary pres­sure has exa­cer­bated fric­tions wit­hin al Sha­baab between natio­na­list and trans­na­tio­na­list ele­ments. Mukh­tar Robow, aka Abu Man­sur, leads the natio­na­list faction, which is based in the Bay and Bakool regions. Ahmad Abdi Godane, aka Abu Zubayr, leads the trans­na­tio­na­list faction, which is based in Kismayo.

It has been almost two years since we last exa­mi­ned al Shabaab’s inte­rest in con­duc­ting and abi­lity to carry out trans­na­tio­nal ter­ro­rist ope­ra­tions. The cur­rent war­ning in Nai­robi pro­vi­des a con­ve­ni­ent opport­u­nity to do so once again.

Al Qaeda in East Africa and the Birth of al Shabaab

Al Qaeda and Somali mili­tants have long inte­racted. In a 1997 CNN inter­view, Osama bin Laden told Peter Ber­gen that his figh­ters hel­ped the Somali mili­tants in the 1993 battle of Moga­dishu, the events memo­ria­lized in Mark Bowden’s book Black Hawk Down: A Story of Modern War (1999). Bin Laden and a good portion of the al Qaeda lea­dership relo­cated to Sudan in 1992, where they remai­ned until 1996. During that period, they estab­lis­hed a network of busi­ness and ope­ra­tio­nal con­tacts across East Africa. By that point, they had trai­ned mili­tants in camps in Afgha­ni­stan for years. They could well have had ope­ra­ti­ves in Moga­dishu in 1993 and could have pro­vi­ded trai­ning to mili­tants involved in the incident.

After lea­ving Sudan in 1996, al Qaeda main­tai­ned its network in East Africa. It used the network to plan and exe­cute the August 7, 1998, twin bom­bings of the U.S. embas­sies in Nai­robi and Dar es Salaam, Tan­za­nia. The Nai­robi attack proved dead­lier. A mas­sive vehicle-borne impro­vised device (VBIED) heavily damaged the embassy in Nai­robi and seve­ral nearby buil­dings, inclu­ding the adjacent Ufundi Coope­ra­tive Plaza, a high-rise that col­lap­sed from the blast. The attack kil­led 213 people, inclu­ding 12 Ame­ri­cans, and woun­ded some 4,000 others.

Some of the men allegedly affi­li­a­ted with the 1998 attacks, such as Fazul Abdul­lah Moham­med, Abu Taha al-Sudani and Saleh Ali Saleh Nabhan, would later be accu­sed of plan­ning and exe­cuting the Nov. 28, 2002, attacks in Mom­basa, Kenya, in which a VBIED was used to tar­get the Israeli-owned Para­dise Hotel and two SA-7 shoulder-fired surface-to-air mis­si­les were laun­ched at an Israeli Boeing 757 pas­sen­ger jet departing Mombasa’s air­port. The mis­si­les mis­sed the air­craft, per­haps due to coun­ter­measu­res, but the VBIED kil­led 10 Keny­ans and three Israelis.

Abdul­lah Moham­med, al-Sudani and Nabhan all fled to Soma­lia, where they wor­ked with and were pro­tected by orga­niza­tions, such as al-Ittihad al-Islam, a long-standing Somali mili­tant group later fol­ded into the Supreme Isla­mic Courts Coun­cil (SICC), for­merly the Isla­mic Courts Union. When Ethio­pian tro­ops inva­ded Soma­lia in late 2006 and overth­rew the SICC, many of the more hardcore ele­ments joined the SICC youth wing, al Sha­baab, which then became a sepa­rate mili­tant orga­niza­tion. As noted, al Sha­baab is not a uni­fied orga­niza­tion. Instead, it is com­pri­ses seve­ral factions led by indi­vi­dual warlords who each adhere to a slightly dif­fe­rent ideo­logy. The al Qaeda-linked for­eign figh­ters in Soma­lia tend to associate with the more trans­na­tio­nally min­ded mili­tants, such as the group led by Godane.

Since al Shabaab’s spin­off, al-Sudani was kil­led in an air­strike in southern Soma­lia in January 2007. Nabhan was kil­led by a heli­cop­ter ambush in southern Soma­lia in Sep­tem­ber 2009, and Abdul­lah Moham­med was reportedly shot at a police check­point in Moga­dishu in June 2011.

Al Sha­baab Attacks Out­side Somalia

Just over a month after we pub­lis­hed our assess­ment of al Sha­baab as a trans­na­tio­nal threat, the group con­ducted suicide bomb attacks against two tar­gets in Kam­pala, Uganda, on July 11, 2010. The attacks, which targe­ted people watch­ing a World Cup soc­cer match, reportedly kil­led 74 and woun­ded anot­her 70.

Shortly the­re­af­ter, al Sha­baab spo­kes­man Ali Moha­mud Rage clai­med cre­dit for the attacks, say­ing they were a response to Uganda’s par­ti­ci­pa­tion in AMISOM. Rage threate­ned additio­nal attacks against Uganda and also threate­ned Burundi, which has fur­nis­hed for­ces for AMISOM. But the group has not followed up on these threats, and there have been no additio­nal attacks in Uganda or attacks in Burundi.

Kam­pala is not the only regio­nal capi­tal where mili­tants associa­ted with, or sym­pat­he­tic to, al Sha­baab have con­ducted attacks. On Oct. 24, 2011, a Kenyan who clai­med to be affi­li­a­ted with al Sha­baab con­ducted two hand-grenade attacks in Nai­robi, one at a bus stop and the second at a disco. The attacks kil­led one per­son and woun­ded 20 others. Then on March 10, seve­ral hand gre­na­des were thrown at a busy bus stop in cen­tral Nai­robi while a bus was loa­ding pas­sen­gers hea­ded to Kam­pala. That attack kil­led six and woun­ded 63. Kenyan offi­ci­als have cal­led the March 10 attack the dead­li­est ter­ro­rist attack in Nai­robi since the 1998 U.S. Embassy bombing.

To date, the attacks in Nai­robi involved only gre­na­des and were all directed against soft tar­gets (as were the Kam­pala attacks). In Soma­lia, by con­trast, al Sha­baab has car­ried out deva­s­ta­ting attacks against hard tar­gets. For example, on Feb. 22, 2009, the group laun­ched a suicide VBIED attack against an AMISOM base in Moga­dishu that kil­led 11 Burun­dian sol­di­ers. On Sept. 17, 2009, a suicide VBIED attack against the AMISOM hea­dquar­ters at the Moga­dishu air­port kil­led 21, inclu­ding AMISOM’s deputy com­man­der, and woun­ded 40. And on Oct. 4, 2011, al Sha­baab deto­nated a mas­sive VBIED out­side a compound that housed govern­ment offices in Moga­dishu. The attack kil­led at least 65 people and woun­ded hund­reds of others. Al Sha­baab can also con­duct stand­off attacks with rocket-propelled gre­na­des or mor­tars laun­ched at harde­ned tar­gets, as seen by the fre­quent targe­ting of the pre­si­den­tial compound in Mogadishu.

Al Sha­baab has also shown the abi­lity to attack hotels in Moga­dishu. On Dec. 3, 2009, a suicide bom­ber dressed as a woman attacked a gra­dua­tion cere­mony in a hotel meeting room and kil­led some 20 people, inclu­ding four govern­ment minis­ters. On Aug. 24, 2010, al Sha­baab gun­men dis­guised as govern­ment security for­ces con­ducted an armed assault on a hotel near the pre­si­den­tial palace in Moga­dishu that kil­led 30, inclu­ding seven par­lia­ment mem­bers and two govern­ment offi­ci­als. On Feb. 8, 2012, a suicide VBIED was ram­med into a cafe out­side the Muna Hotel, kil­ling 11.

Capa­bi­lity and Intent

Whe­ne­ver jud­ging the threat posed by a group, one must exa­mine its capa­bi­lities and its intent to con­duct such an attack. In this case, we need to look at al Shabaab’s capa­bi­lity and intent to attack pro­mi­nent govern­ment buil­dings and hotels in Nairobi.

Al Sha­baab has proved that it can con­duct attacks against soft tar­gets in Nai­robi. The group has also demon­strated the abi­lity to strike soft tar­gets in Kam­pala, though it has not shown the abi­lity to follow up on its threats to con­duct attacks in Burundi. Inside Soma­lia, the group is capable of con­duc­ting deva­s­ta­ting attacks against harde­ned tar­gets and against hotels in Moga­dishu, as out­lined above.

It is inter­e­s­ting to note that two days prior to the Oct. 24, 2011, Nai­robi gre­nade attacks, the U.S. govern­ment pos­ted a war­ning that the U.S. Embassy in Kenya had rece­i­ved “cre­dible infor­ma­tion of an immi­nent threat of ter­ro­rist attacks directed at pro­mi­nent Kenyan faci­lities and areas where for­eig­ners are known to con­gre­gate such as malls and night clubs.” In the wake of the war­ning, it appears the attack­ers redi­recte from high-profile malls and places where for­eig­ners con­gre­gate toward sof­ter tar­gets in the form of a low-profile local bar and a bus stop. This is per­haps due to the increased security at high-profile venues because of the war­ning and Kenyan govern­ment ini­tia­ti­ves to crack down on al Sha­baab in Somali neigh­bor­hoods in Nai­robi. Likewise, the March 10 attacks were against a bus stop, which is a soft tar­get as well. This sug­gests the attack­ers were eit­her unable -- or unwil­ling -- to tar­get a more heavily secu­red faci­lity. Notably, none of the inci­dents in Kenya were suicide attacks.

The wor­ding in the April 23 war­ning is simi­lar to that of the Octo­ber 2011 war­ning, and the Octo­ber 2011 war­ning proved accu­rate. The­re­fore, the U.S. Embassy likely has rece­i­ved cre­dible infor­ma­tion that anot­her plot is being plan­ned. Unless the attack­ers change their mode of attack, they are highly unlikely to succeed in targe­ting a pro­mi­nent govern­ment buil­ding or a hotel housing Western­ers -- espec­ially in the wake of the war­ning, which undoubtedly has resulted in increased security at such sites.

To change their mode of attack from those using merely gre­na­des to an attack that could damage a govern­ment buil­ding or a well-secured hotel, such as an attack invol­ving a VBIED, al Sha­baab would have to devote sig­ni­fi­cant resources. While al Qaeda was able to do this in Nai­robi in 1998, the pre­sent security environ­ment in Kenya is quite dif­fe­rent. While ord­nance is still avai­lable in the coun­try, it is far more dif­fi­cult to obtain a large quantity of explo­si­ves today than it was in 1998. Even smugg­ling them in from Soma­lia in small batches would be a dif­fi­cult, though not impos­sible, task.

For al Sha­baab to under­take such a process, it would need good ope­ra­tio­nal security, somet­hing that would be dif­fi­cult to achieve given the frac­tious nature of the jiha­dist move­ment in Soma­lia. As the war­ning prior to the Octo­ber 2011 attack demon­strated, there was an intel­li­gence leak somewhere.

Furt­her­more, al Sha­baab would have to expect sig­ni­fi­cant bene­fits from such an attack to war­rant such a risky mis­sion. And it is doubt­ful they would. At pre­sent, Kenyan tro­ops with the help of local Ras Kam­boni mili­tants have occu­pied a buf­fer zone in southern Soma­lia, but they have not made much effort to approach al Sha­baab bases in cities farther sout­hwest than Afma­dow, such as Kis­mayo. The Kenyan pub­lic has been quite out­spo­ken about the price tag atta­ched to the Somali Surge, known as Ope­ra­tion Linda Nchi. Many Keny­ans con­si­der it an expen­sive ven­ture that adds to the country’s moun­ting debt. A repeat of the August 1998 bom­bing, only this time directed against a Kenyan govern­ment mini­s­try, could radi­cally change pub­lic opi­nion, ste­eling it in favor of dra­ma­tic mili­tary action against al Sha­baab. Even though the cur­rent Kenyan mili­tary offen­sive has been poorly sup­ported and plan­ned, an angry Kenyan pub­lic could see the mili­tary offen­sive become much more aggres­sive, directly targe­ting al Sha­baab. The issue would also gain notable poli­ti­cal tra­c­tion in the unfol­ding 2013 Kenyan pre­si­den­tial election.

Because of this dyna­mic, it seems the group is more likely to take any explo­si­ves it could devote toward a VBIED attack in Kenya and use them to con­duct attacks against Kenyan for­ces in Soma­lia to make their pre­sence in Soma­lia as uncom­for­table -- and bloody -- as pos­sible. The goal would be to influ­ence Kenyan morale enough to encourage them to wit­hdraw. Kenya, and spec­i­fi­cally Nai­robi, is also an impor­tant finan­cial and logi­s­ti­cal hub for al Sha­baab. If the group did somet­hing to rouse the anger of the Kenyan govern­ment and alie­nate the popu­la­tion, its abi­lity to use Kenya as a logi­s­ti­cal hub for its ope­ra­tions in Soma­lia could be severely hampered.

Due to the impor­tance of al Shabaab’s Isla­mic base in Nai­robi, Kenya’s back­lash against that com­mu­nity has been a point of con­cern in intra-al Sha­baab poli­tics. Notably, al Sha­baab has denied respon­s­i­bi­lity for the past attacks in Nai­robi, bla­ming them instead on its sup­por­ters. A major attack in Nai­robi demon­stra­ting an advan­ced degree of ter­ro­rist capa­bi­lity would make it dif­fi­cult for the group to deny responsibility.

Even if al Sha­baab could somehow mus­ter the capa­bi­lity to con­duct a specta­cu­lar attack in Nai­robi, it would seem unlikely it would want to con­duct a specta­cu­lar attack inside Kenya. We the­re­fore believe it will stick to low-level attacks in Kenya for the fore­se­ea­ble future.

Al Shabaab’s Threat to Kenya | Stratfor


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