COLLECTIVE MADNESS


“Soft despotism is a term coined by Alexis de Tocqueville describing the state into which a country overrun by "a network of small complicated rules" might degrade. Soft despotism is different from despotism (also called 'hard despotism') in the sense that it is not obvious to the people."

Friday, December 29, 2006

Ethiopian Prime Minister Zenawi announces successes in rout of Islamists in Ethiopia.

Comment and Opinion:

This Zenawi is no fool and no angel. He has been rough on journalists and the press and may have some very strong motivations to rehabilitate his personal and political image.

He may be joining the anti-terrorism bandwagon for his own domestic political reasons. In the past he has been accused of some pretty nasty business himself.

Ethiopia has a population of more than 70 million. It is one of Africa’s most populous nations. The United States regards Zenawi as an important partner in its fight against terrorism, and British Prime Minister Tony Blair gave Zenawi a seat on his advisory Commission for Africa.

This may be a sign of some new US realpolitik in dealing with the Islamists. If true, this is the way the war against Islamists should have been fought from day one. This is not badminton sports fans.

A hattip to Allen, the Islamists seem to have been very motivated to get out of Dodge with some degree of urgency . It seems that Zenawi is not planning to open a Guantanamo East. The Islamists are not happy. Check out their reaction at the bottom of this post.


Ethiopian army accomplished 75% of mission in Somalia - Zenawi
Sudan Tribune
Friday 29 December 2006 00:10.

Dec 28, 2006 (ADDIS ABABA) — Prime Minister Meles Zenawi has said that the Ethiopian National Defence Forces have accomplished 75 per cent of their mission in Somalia. He vowed not to give up the fight until extremists and foreign fighters had been crushed.

In a press briefing broadcasted by the TV, he gave to local and international journalists on the situation in Somalia today, Prime Minister Meles said the leadership of the Union of Islamic Courts (UIC) has been disbanded and its existence has now come to an end. He further added that Etiopian army have accomplished 75 per cent of their mission in Somalia.

But there are many things that remain to be done, Prime Minister Meles said. He also said that the terrorist leadership of the UIC has been disbanded and that its existence has come to an end.

The prime minister said that the Islamists have last night and this morning left Mogadishu and fled to the Somali border towns of Kismaayo and Marka.

The prime minister, who said that the joint Ethiopian-Transitional Federal Government (TFG) forces are around Mogadishu town, went on to say that The National Defence Forces of Ethiopia has not gone into Mogadishu yet and are consulting with clan elders inside Mogadishu and leaders of the TFG leaders on the way forward.

Ethiopian troops, who had pledged not to enter the city, were stoned by local crowds on the northern edge of the city, witnesses said. "How could we welcome an invading enemy," said one protester, Faiza Ali Nur.

Ethiopia and Somalia fought a bloody war in 1977.

Prime Minister Meles said some 2,000 to 3,000 fighters of the terrorist group and their backers have been killed while some 4,000 to 5,000 others have been wounded. The extremist leadership shall be responsible for all the damage that has occurred, he said.

Prime Minister Meles said that militias of the extremist group are handing over the arms in their possession to clan leaders and have rejoined their clan bases, adding that we have no problems with those militia members as they are peaceful Somali citizens.

He said that the work of pursuing the extremist group named Shabab, which is a collection of international terrorists and remnants of Sha’biyyah — reference made to Eritrean government — forces who fled to Kismayo, Marka and other border towns shall continue before they regroup and disturb the peace in Somalia.

"We need to pursue them to make sure that they do not establish themselves again and destabilize Somalia and the region," he said, predicting it would take a few weeks longer.

Islamic fighters have gone door to door in Kismayo, recruiting children as young as 12 to make a last stand on behalf of the Islamic courts, according to a confidential U.N. situation report, citing the families of boys taken to the front line town of Jilib, 110 kilometers (65 miles) north of Kismayo.

The prime minister said there is a strong solidarity between Ethiopia and the USA in the democratization and economic sectors, adding that in the counter attack that was carried out in Somalia Ethiopia has not received any military or weaponry support from the USA.

“The United States has not contributed a single bullet, a single soldier, or a single military equipment in this operation.”

The Ethiopian army will come out of Somalia in the coming few weeks after accomplishing its mission, the prime minister said.

The Islamic movement took Mogadishu six months ago and then advanced across most of southern Somalia, often without fighting. Then Ethiopian troops and fighter aircraft went on the attack in support of the government last week.
_____________________________________________________

“Jihad Against the Hateful Christian Ethiopia” by Sheikh Hamed al-Ali
By SITE Institute
December 27, 2006

A statement composed by Sheikh Hamed al-Ali, distributed on his website and circulated among jihadist forums on Monday, December 25, 2006, titled: “Jihad Against the Hateful Christian Ethiopia,” seeks to incite Muslims for the purpose of the subject. Al-Ali, a contemporary jihadi Salafist scholar and ideologue who was designated as a terrorist by the U.S. Department of Treasury, provides a brief skewed history of Somalia and its position against Ethiopia and the West, and dispute over Ogaden province. Today, he finds history to repeat itself, and Ethiopia moves with the instigation and support of the West to “bury” Islam, which is supported by the Somali people, and create an unstable Somalia for its own purposes.

The sheikh states that Ethiopia’s war against Somalia is “unjust” and a clear case of aggression by an infidel country against a land of Islam. He charges that Ethiopia has no aim by “sabotage and destruction” and returning Somalia to chaos and misery. In addition to the Somalia Muslims who are stated by Hamed al-Ali to be obligated to join the jihad, Muslims in Yemen, Sudan, Africa in general, Saudi Arabia, and Egypt are called upon to participate.

18 comments:

  1. Thanks for the H/T. It really wasn't necessary. I would have made the report for free. (Oh, did I say something out-of-school?)

    It is shaping up to be a beautiful day in the neighborhood.

    With the usual flare for Islamic understatement, Mullah Omar and Sheik Sharif Sheik Ahmed had this to say:

    ___Afghanistan
    In the statement, the Taliban leader (Mullah Omar) accused foreign forces of "ruthless bombing" that had killed and displaced thousands of Afghans including women and children.
    "It has now become a permanent cruel practice and barbaric habit of our enemy. We must stand by the people to fight against the enemy and to take revenge of their blood," it said.

    ___Somalia
    " Sheik Sharif Sheik Ahmed, the executive leader of the Council of Islamic Courts told The Associated Press. "We will not run away from our enemies. We will never depart from Somalia. We will stay in our homeland."

    Ole Allah isn't smiling on the homies, today.

    ReplyDelete
  2. Yeah, those Ethiopians are winning hearts and minds the old fashioned way: Blam! Blam! “Dance Pilgrim!” Blam! Blam!

    ReplyDelete
  3. This is one very good reason for my disinclination to “arrest” unlawful combatants:

    Milblogger Wounded

    It is not improbable that the perps who set the IED had been caught previously and released.

    ReplyDelete
  4. Green Berets have had lots to do with this success.

    Just do a web search on, "U.S. training troops in Ethiopia".

    They've been there awhile now, doing what they do best!

    ReplyDelete
  5. Best news of the year, all the way around.

    Wonder when the sewer and water infrastructure works will begin, the Ethiopians cannot be considered the winners in the war against the Mohammedans unless the people in the cities of Somalia can flush their toilets

    ReplyDelete
  6. DR,

    re: flush toilets

    Don't forget sliced bread.

    ;-D

    ReplyDelete
  7. I'm with Rufus on that. Well said!

    ReplyDelete
  8. Are the Ethiopians going for death and demisable surety? Yes, if the movement of armored columns means anything. It may turn that the Ethiopians are going to provide some much needed lessons in occupation as well.

    A first rate job by Bill Roggio

    Carry a big stick and use it liberally. (Don’t go there, WC.)

    ReplyDelete
  9. Hooray for killing the enemy and taking no prisoners.
    There is no finer Rx for victory. I think John Lee Hooker said it best.

    Boom Boom

    ReplyDelete
  10. rufus,

    The Ethiopians were right up front: If you're in the way, you're in play.


    habu1,

    Oh, yeah. Boom! Boom! Boom! Boom!

    ReplyDelete
  11. That's when I knew that the hangin' tree
    Was a tree of life, new life for me
    A tree of hope, new hope for me
    A tree of love, new love for me
    The hangin' tree, the hangin' tree, the hangin' tree!

    M Robbins

    New life for Iraq or more fuel on the fire?

    ReplyDelete
  12. If not a fait accompli, my gut tells me Saddam will hang within the next three hours.

    Link

    I’ve got to get cracking on the opus to Saddam I call “Stretch a Rope”.

    Stretch a rope
    Stretch a rope
    Not that his children would get away
    Just no date with the hangman, that’s to say
    Stretch a rope

    That’s all for now, and thanks Jimmy Dean.

    ReplyDelete
  13. "... Griffin downplays personal security, but readily acknowledges humanitarian efforts and military concerns are interdependent. A secure environment is fundamental to Afghanistan's successful development.

    Creation of a safer and secure environment on the way to and from school and in the classroom is part of the strategy to boost school enrollment, especially for girls. A push for community-based schools speaks to the fears of parents who do not want daughters too far from home, or out on the roads with bandits.

    Safer learning environments include sanitary latrines and clean water. These are key Save the Children initiatives with government schools. Another helps teachers understand how to run their classrooms without use of corporal punishment.

    Griffin is mindful of her surroundings and utterly positive about the accomplishments and potential: "Those of us who have been here since 2002 see enormous gains in the past four years, despite the current security concerns."

    Information about donations targeted to the Save the Children program in one of Afghanistan's neediest regions, Sar-i-Pul Province, is available at www.savethechildren.org or 1-800-SAVETHECHILDREN.

    A commitment combined with results worthy of support. The roots of optimism.
    Lance Dickie's column appears regularly on editorial pages of The Times. His e-mail address is ldickie@seattletimes.com

    ReplyDelete
  14. A new book - "Saddam and the mother of all pratfalls"

    ReplyDelete
  15. Drudge is reporting that Saddam has been transferred into Iraqi custody.

    ReplyDelete
  16. This comment has been removed by a blog administrator.

    ReplyDelete
  17. Because it is 19:45 PM Iraq time, my guess has him dead and buried according to Islamic ritual.

    The US announcement will be in time for the evening news.

    Thus, any potentially embarrassing Iraqi rioting will begin in the wee hours of the ME morning.

    This scenario would follow State's habit of dropping bombs at the close of business on Friday, with no one answerable until the Sunday shows.

    Additionally, President Ford's ceremonies will take up most of the oxygen during the next several days.

    By the opening of regular business on Tuesday, many Americans will be saying, "Saddam, who?"

    Needless to say, this program relies on Iraqi officials staying as far away from State Department personages as possible.

    ReplyDelete