The headlines from the Horn of Africa are grimmer than ever this week. Machine
gunfire, mortars, rape, disease and more are plaguing the African
nation of Somalia, and civilians are taking the brunt of yet another
mess created by the United States. The poor, the voiceless, the
dispossessed are once again dying, with little or no debate on the
issue. The Medecins Sans Frontieres (Doctors without borders) reports
that "columns of people," fleeing the violence in Mogadishu, are
heading for makeshift refugee camps where health conditions are
deteriorating due to lack of sanitation and water. Mainstream political
analysis has largely ignored the fact that the Bush administration is
involved with one of the most oppressive governments in Africa, trying
to force yet another “regime change,” this time in Somalia. How often
can Bush get away with it? In 2002, George Bush squawked that there “would be no telling how many wars it will take” to defeat terrorism. In
June of 2006, the Associated Press reported that Bush was “expressing
concern” that volatile conditions in Somalia could lead al-Qaeda to use
it as a staging ground to plan attacks. "The first concern,
of course, is to make sure that Somalia does not become an al-Qaeda
safe haven - it doesn't become a place from which terrorists can plot
and plan,” Bush warned. In the same month, without offering
any details, analysis or explanations, the State Department’s
spokesman, Sian McCormack said the United States has “a strong interest
in fighting foreign terrorists in the Horn of Africa.”
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