Kenya declares war on Al Shabaab!

Kenya declares war on Al Shabaab!

hi am new n am kenyan napenda kenya tanzania na afrika yote mashariki.hii majadiliano ya kenya kushindwa somalia yananiudhi.watz wengi kwa hii forum wameingilia kenya sana lakini mimi sichukui sides napenda tz sana nina marafiki wengi watz hata mkitudharau najua hii si tabia ya tz nyinyi ni watu wazuri sana na siamini mnaweza sema hivyo kuhusu kenya.nina marafiki wengi watz hapa kenya na tunasikizana vyema sana hata nyinyi kwenye hii forum mkiongea vibaya kuhusu kenya sitatoa upendo wangu wa tz pia nyinyi wakenya wenzangu mnaoingilia tz mkome tuishi kama mandugu na madada nawapenda wote.GOD BLESS KENYA and Tanzania n entire east african nations.
My 125 maneno yako yemesikika vizuri na nashukuru kwa lugha yako ya kiungwana. Hapa hatujadili kushindwa kwa Kenya bali vita baina ya Kenya na Al-Shabaab (Kenya declares war on Al Shabaab) ingawa kuna wachangiaji wanapenda kutoka nje ya mada na kuanza kujadili kuhusu tofauti baina ya Tanzania na Kenya. Huo ni ukichaa, uhayawani na upungufu wa akili!

MUNGU IBARIKI TANZANIA, Kenya na Shirikisho la Afrika Mashariki.
 
User Name: ilboru1995
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Word...

[QUOTE hi am new n am kenyan napenda kenya tanzania na afrika yote mashariki.hii majadiliano ya kenya kushindwa somalia yananiudhi.watz wengi kwa hii forum wameingilia kenya sana lakini mimi sichukui sides napenda tz sana nina marafiki wengi watz hata mkitudharau najua hii si tabia ya tz nyinyi ni watu wazuri sana na siamini mnaweza sema hivyo kuhusu kenya.nina marafiki wengi watz hapa kenya na tunasikizana vyema sana hata nyinyi kwenye hii forum mkiongea vibaya kuhusu kenya sitatoa upendo wangu wa tz pia nyinyi wakenya wenzangu mnaoingilia tz mkome tuishi kama mandugu na madada nawapenda wote.GOD BLESS KENYA and Tanzania n entire east african nations.
 
My 125 maneno yako yemesikika vizuri na nashukuru kwa lugha yako ya kiungwana. Hapa hatujadili kushindwa kwa Kenya bali vita baina ya Kenya na Al-Shabaab (Kenya declares war on Al Shabaab) ingawa kuna wachangiaji wanapenda kutoka nje ya mada na kuanza kujadili kuhusu tofauti baina ya Tanzania na Kenya. Huo ni ukichaa, uhayawani na upungufu wa akili!

MUNGU IBARIKI TANZANIA, Kenya na Shirikisho la Afrika Mashariki.
kenya ni wadu wetu sana-hatutaki washindwe-na hatutaki wachukue muda mrefu sana kueliminate millitias kama hawa-though ni tough-na soldier huwa hawaja trained kuface millitias-inakuwa ngumu sana as those militiamen wanabadilika kama vinjonga-
 
Kenya Navy at work 😛oa

 
Last edited by a moderator:
Posted Monday, November 7 2011 at 22:30. Nairobi, Kenya.

Speaking to the Nation at Ishakani Military Camp, about four kilometres from the border at the tip of Kenya, Lieutenant Colonel John Maison Nkoimo said the battle for Kismayu would be fought "on our own terms and at our own time".


Kenyan troops are on their third week of the incursion against the Somali militants, who are accused of having links to Al-Qaeda.


Somalia has been without a central government since 1991, when dictator Mohamed Siad Barre was ousted.


Meanwhile, the military denied reports by an Iranian news network that fifteen Kenyan soldiers had been killed in the Somali town of Tabda.

More info + Source: Al-Shabaab on the run in south zone - News |nation.co.ke




Noted:
So no more shock and awe is possible from KDF nor rush to take Kismayo port!

 
nimekupata kanzu, although kusema kweli sijui mengi ya vita hata kama naunga kenya mkono.al shabaab ni adui ya kila mtu jeshi letu limeenda huko ili wasiwe threat kwa east africa,hata kama jeshi letu ni weak jinsi watu wanavyosema,matokeo yao ndio yatakuwa majibu yetu.hapo ndipo tutapoweza sema kama ni bure au una ujasiri,na pia ningependa nchi za afrika mashariki kuingilia kati,kwa sababu vita hii haitashinda na kenya pekee yake.twaombea jeshi letu,familia zao na wasomalia wanaohangaishwa na al shabaab.MUNGU BARIKI AFRICA MASHARIKI.
 
kenya ni wadu wetu sana-hatutaki washindwe-na hatutaki wachukue muda mrefu sana kueliminate millitias kama hawa-though ni tough-na soldier huwa hawaja trained kuface millitias-inakuwa ngumu sana as those militiamen wanabadilika kama vinjonga-

Hello Edward, thank you very much and I know I speak for many when I say your kind words are greatly appreciated. The militia will be eliminated and you are correct in stating that being militias it is hard for every army to destroy the enemies especially since they can easily flow back into the general populace and therein lies the issue for the KDF. However based on the generals and spokespeople they have a solution. The KDF is being tactical by not attacking indiscriminately and allowing time and the fear of an impending final clash to sort this out. They are fighting this war in their own terms and not a rushed invasion as al shabaab would want. Consequently the most of the civilians are fleeing to safer grounds and the alshabaab have retreated to Afmadow and Kismayo to protect these critical towns. As the KDF as stated they will fight this war at their own time since the situation in Somalia is fluid and they are their not only to dismantle al shabaab but to win the hearts and minds of the people. That is also why they are providing much needed medical services and aid to these civilians who have been living under the tyrants for a while now. Thanks again, its heart warming to hear these words for a change.

*What does wadu mean? lol
 
[h=1]Kenya's military might[/h]
Kenya is to unleash its full military might on Al Shabaab in coming days as President Kibaki on Monday gave a firm thumbs-up to the ongoing operation reiterating that there would be no turning back.Kibaki, who is Commander-in-Chief of the Kenya Defence Forces (KDF), made the remarks during a National Security Council (NSC) meeting at his Harambee House office in Nairobi.The NSC meeting came against the background of stepped-up security operations in Garissa town led by the police and KDF.At least 20 people were detained for questioning following an attack on the East African Pentecostal Church by suspected Al Shabaab sympathisers that left two people dead, including an eight year-old boy.Eight men were arrested from a hotel in the town during the operation that insiders said was to thwart further attacks in the area.Three other suspects, who police believe may have been suicide bombers, escaped in the operation.Police said they had intelligence that the men, some of whom are employees, were planning to blow up buildings in the area before they were arrested in the operation.Other reports indicated that police had seized two grenades from a bus headed to Nairobi at a roadblock on the Tana River Bridge, Garissa highway.Military personnel launched a house-to-house search for more explosives near their camp, but there were no details by the time we went to press.Police said they were questioning a number of suspects in connection with the attack on the Pentecostal church.More anti-terror, General Service Unit (GSU), regular and military personnel have been sent to major towns in the province that seems to be under siege of the criminals, who could be Kenyans.In Garissa, an explosive that failed to detonate was collected from under a power transformer after people in a saloon car dropped it.Sources at the NSC meeting said it resolved to intensify security surveillance and physical checks by security forces in vulnerable areas, including the border with Somalia.Details were scanty but officials said those present were informed of the presence of Al Shabaab remnants or sympathisers.Commissioner of Police Mathew Iteere is said to have briefed the meeting on the attacks that have occurred since the military ventured into Somalia mid last month.Kenya's military is the most superior in terms of assets and resources in the East and Central African region, and has the most disciplined Army, Air Force and Navy.The operation against the Al Qaeda-linked militants comes at the peak of the modernisation of the full range of weaponry available to KDF.The Ministry of Defence believes that its move to replace ageing equipment - including fighter jets and helicopters as well as to buy armoured personnel carriers, surface-to-surface and surface-to-air missiles and anti-mine equipment - is about to pay off when the KDF finally moves to capture Afmadow, Kismayu and Baidoa. The three towns form the nerve centre of Al Shabaab's insurgency.Among Kenya's array of weapons are several attack helicopters, including the MD 500 Mi-35 and Harbin z-9w gunship from China. The latter is a big war craft with powerful guns, including anti-tank missiles used for ground attack and air assault, although it can ferry cargo and up to 10 soldiers when fully armed.Against this beast, the Al Shabaab's truck-mounted anti-aircraft guns called technicals and donkeys are no match, especially when it gets support from the versatile but much smaller MD 500 attack helicopter from the US.Puma helicopters will be rearming troops on the field and bringing in cargo and extra soldiers when needed. Although quite old, it is still fast enough and can fly at night as well as during daytime.In addition, the KDF has deployed its upgraded and superfast F-5 Tiger attack jets that combine speed and precision bombing and also sport modern radar and anti-aircraft fire detection and evasion systems.Battle tanks, armoured personnel carriers and MRAPs, or Mine Resistant Ambush Protected vehicles, will back the attack helicopters. The KDF can also deploy missile launchers for its variety of long-range surface-to-surface missiles and surface-to-air missiles.Among the battle tanks is the reliable MK3 tanks sporting 105mm guns and an intimidating size.In readiness for the muddy conditions that have hit the Jubaland region, KDF also have ARV recovery tanks equipped with hydraulic-operated mechanism for rescuing vehicles stuck in mud, or that have broken down.The military will be moving around in Panhard armoured car and personnel vehicles. Made in France, the Panhard is a fortress on wheels made for rugged terrains. Its thick, protective body gives soldiers inside the feeling of invincibility, and it is preferred for its speed and agility. It can reach speeds of up to 90km per hour.The Panhard M3 has more space to carry troops. Scores of these have been deployed across the border. A single soldier can mount several kinds of guns on the hull for operation.Al Shabaab have been deploying mines that kill indiscriminately, but the KDF has a solution in the shape of Mine Resistant Ambush Protected vehicles to glide over the scrublands of Jubaland. Bought from South Africa, the vehicles are specially reinforced to survive small explosions, ensuring that soldiers are protected.The soldiers will have the choice of the much-feared American M16 assault rifles that can accommodate silencers and a powerful scope allowing them to silently take out Al Shabaab sentries.In his daily briefing on Monday, Military Spokesperson Major Emmanuel Chirchir advised the Press to be alert to Al Shabaab propaganda being fed to certain media, including Press TV."Attention of the Ministry of State for Defence has been drawn to the influx of propaganda and false information in regards to the on-going operation in Somalia. The continued false reporting by Press TV and other like minded media is un-acceptable and should not be taken as factual information and events," said Major Chirchir."The Kenya Defence Forces continues to caution the media to be vigilant and wary of being used to propagate propaganda set up by Al Shabaab or their sympathisers by relaying such information to the general public before thorough examination and consultation with our Public Affairs Office," he added.-Reporting by Cyrus Ombati, Boniface Ongeri, David Ochami and Patrick Mathangani
 


''The state of a demoralized Kenyan Army'':

Some former officers say that if the military were to table the records of promotions, dismissals and forced retirements so far, "Kenya would literally faint".


These dismissals were done casually without a second thought or due consideration of the ripple effects.


In fact, the practice of retiring officers through age-based colonial rule has no room in the modern Kenya.


Today's smart war is brain and machine based. It is aimed at ‘convincing' your opponent to stop fighting. It is like football, not boxing.


Also, the burden on the Kenyan taxpayer in pension payments to young and 100 per cent productive people working elsewhere is brutally enormous.


A captain who retires at the mandatory age of 42 years and is paid a pension of say Sh40,000 a month, ends up costing the taxpayer about Sh9 million by the time he hits 60 years.


We are talking billions of shillings being paid out due to the colonial rule that should have been scrapped.


This article written by Maj (Rtd) Imaana Laibuta, who is a former Kenya Army officer presently running a security consultancy in South Sudan. Email: info@laisecea.com


Read more from the Source: Why African military trails the West*- Opinion*|nation.co.ke
 
Kenya sina shaka imekurupuka kutangaza vita na Alshabaab.Ubaya zaidi wametangaza kutaka kuiteka ngome ya Alshabaab kwa maneno yao-Kismayuu.Halafu wakawatangazia wasomali wahame miji mingine 10 eti wako karibu kuipiga kuwafurusha Alshabaab.Angalia sasa mbele hawaendi na nyuma wanaona aibu kurudi.Nakumbuka mkasa kama huu umeikumba Amerika.Imechoka na vita na hawajawamaliza Alqaeda wala Taleban.Mpaka sasa Taleban wamepata namna bora ya kuwashinda Amerika kwa kuripua malori hadi 100 ya vifaa vyao vya kijeshi na mahitaji kama chakula na mafuta.Amerika imebaki kubwata bwata kuwabembeleza Pakistan wapambane na watu wao wanaowapiga.Ni kama vile mtu anayeshindwa katika vita halafu anaanza kupayuka na watu wanaomwangalia akipigwa.
Hiyo ni hadithi ya Amerika inayodhoofika kwa tabia za kibabe.Najiuliza itakuwaje kwa Kenya ambayo tangu hapo iko taabani kwa njaa karibu sawa na Somalia.Hatimae wasemaji wao wa jeshi wameanza kugwaya.Hali itakuwaje baada ya miezi michache katika miji kumi Alshabaab wakionekana na nguvu kuliko awali.Sina shaka vita hii itawaadhibu wakenya wenyewe kabla ya adhabu kwa Alshabaab haijjatimia.sheikh Ali Mohammed Rage wala hayuko Kismayu bali Mogadishu.
 
Kenya sina shaka imekurupuka kutangaza vita na Alshabaab.Ubaya zaidi wametangaza kutaka kuiteka ngome ya Alshabaab kwa maneno yao-Kismayuu.Halafu wakawatangazia wasomali wahame miji mingine 10 eti wako karibu kuipiga kuwafurusha Alshabaab.Angalia sasa mbele hawaendi na nyuma wanaona aibu kurudi.Nakumbuka mkasa kama huu umeikumba Amerika.Imechoka na vita na hawajawamaliza Alqaeda wala Taleban.Mpaka sasa Taleban wamepata namna bora ya kuwashinda Amerika kwa kuripua malori hadi 100 ya vifaa vyao vya kijeshi na mahitaji kama chakula na mafuta.Amerika imebaki kubwata bwata kuwabembeleza Pakistan wapambane na watu wao wanaowapiga.Ni kama vile mtu anayeshindwa katika vita halafu anaanza kupayuka na watu wanaomwangalia akipigwa.
Hiyo ni hadithi ya Amerika inayodhoofika kwa tabia za kibabe.Najiuliza itakuwaje kwa Kenya ambayo tangu hapo iko taabani kwa njaa karibu sawa na Somalia.Hatimae wasemaji wao wa jeshi wameanza kugwaya.Hali itakuwaje baada ya miezi michache katika miji kumi Alshabaab wakionekana na nguvu kuliko awali.Sina shaka vita hii itawaadhibu wakenya wenyewe kabla ya adhabu kwa Alshabaab haijjatimia.sheikh Ali Mohammed Rage wala hayuko Kismayu bali Mogadishu.

Ami, how can you support a terrorist organization which is a threat for all of us East Africans, you included? Is it that you hate Kenyans so much or have you been brainwashed into believing that the Alshabaab are mujahideens fighting Jihad for all of us Muslims? Are you this naive? do you honestly think that Kenya will lose, or rather, is losing this war with this ragtag militias of religious fanatics and their sympathisers? What do you benefit from supporting these people? do you think that you will secure a slot in Jannah just because you supported what they do, or have you been ''enlightened'' to the extent of graduating from a computer soldier to strapping belt bombs on you so as to get the virgins? Does Islam really preach murder of innocents to get to heaven? I dont know which Islam y'all fanatics subscribed to, but damn, not what i was taught at Tawheed Muslim School.
 


''The state of a demoralized Kenyan Army'':

Some former officers say that if the military were to table the records of promotions, dismissals and forced retirements so far, "Kenya would literally faint".


These dismissals were done casually without a second thought or due consideration of the ripple effects.


In fact, the practice of retiring officers through age-based colonial rule has no room in the modern Kenya.



Today's smart war is brain and machine based. It is aimed at ‘convincing' your opponent to stop fighting. It is like football, not boxing.


Also, the burden on the Kenyan taxpayer in pension payments to young and 100 per cent productive people working elsewhere is brutally enormous.


A captain who retires at the mandatory age of 42 years and is paid a pension of say Sh40,000 a month, ends up costing the taxpayer about Sh9 million by the time he hits 60 years.


We are talking billions of shillings being paid out due to the colonial rule that should have been scrapped.


This article written by Maj (Rtd) Imaana Laibuta, who is a former Kenya Army officer presently running a security consultancy in South Sudan. Email: info@laisecea.com


Read more from the Source: Why African military trails the West*- Opinion*|nation.co.ke

Sijaielewa vizuri hii article, kwani huyu Maj. (rtd) anataka nini haswaa?
 
Artist hands out yellow baloons to commuters in Kenya
Posted on November 7, 2011

The APs Tom Odula reports on a fascinating story of how Kenyans are countering the effect of the terrorist group al-shabab. Yellow baloons were distributed, near a bus stop by an artist in honour of a Kenyan killed by a grenade attack carried out by al-shabab recently. The baloons are apparently meant to put a smile on the faces of commuters while they go about navigating Nairobi's rush hour.

Full AP Story here.




To be honest this is a very dangerous maneuver in the times like these...
 
Angalizo: Hii makala ni ndefu lakini inachambua maswala muhimu (kwa maoni yangu). Nimeileta hapa kama ilivyo ili kama una muda unaweza kuisoma yote hapa badala ya kubofya na kwenda kwenye chanzo.

Analysis: Kenya Enters Next Phase of War


Kenya's "Freedom of Action" May Lead to the Opposite
By Robert Young Pelton
untitled.pngThe Somali Diaspora Center of Eastleigh, Nairobi

Three and a half weeks into its punitive expedition, Kenya is feeling its oats. Without any major pushback from the global community Kenya now is throttling up. With no official mandate given, Kenya has now taken it upon themselves to run Jubaland as if it is under their control, imposing no fly zones, closing borders, blockaded the waters and warning residents willy nilly to either flee, stay put or whatever the latest official tweet dictates. There is nary a peep from the TFG or AMISOM on these arbitrary decisions. The Kenya army on its first major cross border adventure is operating with a giddy sense of purpose. Army Spokesman Major Emmanuel Chirchir is clearly enjoying his position as lightning rod for the media. The major fired off a tweet warning civilians in ten Somali towns to be ready for violence. It's not known why he thought Twitter was the appropriate medium, but he warned residents in Baidoa, Baadheere, Baydhabo, Dinsur, Afgooye, Bwale, Barawe and Jilib that the towns will be "under attack continuously".

He then had to correct his aggressive missive by explaining that he meant the camps outside the urban areas would be attacked, not the civilians in the towns.

"We're not attacking towns - I want to make that clear - we're attacking al-Shabaab camps. All we're saying is that people in Somalia, avoid being close to al-Shabaab camps," he told the BBC's Focus on Africa program.

His latest tweets about air strikes on donkeys seem closer to stand-up comedy material than useful information management: "Any large concentration and movement of loaded donkeys will be considered as Al Shabaab activity." Somalis are using donkeys to carry their possessions to flee from his first tweets. Chichir's latest written missive warns Somali's inside Somalia "to be cautious of people seeking treatment from bullet wounds and report any suspicious persons to the nearest police station or security agency". That curious Kenyan politeness seems to ignore the horrific realities of life inside Somalia now exacerbated by an air, sea and ground invasion

Major Chirchir admitted that "it was difficult to fit all the information into the 140 characters allowed in a Twitter message" and therein lies the lesson. Kenya's simplistic goal of seizing Kismayo and pacifying Jubaland (also known as Azania) is a simplistic strategic tweet that ignores the longer historical narrative of Kenya's relationship with Somalia. The very use of tweets from the confines of Nairobi to micromanage the war inside Somalia has an almost "Dr Strangelove in the bunker" feel to it. There have also been a number of contrasting, incorrect or confusing statements compared to the original mandate issued by the government:.

"The Kenya Government's objective is to pursue and curtail the operations of the terror organization Al-Shabab, which has become a threat to Kenya's Security and economy. To this end, the Kenya Government strategy is to destroy Al-Shabab's network within the shortest time possible. Our troops are fighting alongside those of the Transitional Federal Government of Somalia.

Kenya has no plans or intention to stay in Somalia an hour beyond necessary. Once our objective is met as per the framework of AU and IGAD, Kenyan troops will withdraw and leave the security operations to AU mission troops and TFG troops."

Although the original invasion day excuse was invoking article 51 of the UN Chapter which permits the self defense and protect the security of Kenyan citizens. The rationales have become more complex. IGAD supports the modeling of Azania on Somaliland and Puntland. not the centralized government supported by the AU, they also called for no fly zones (something the UN has not supported) and blockading Kismayo (something the international navies do not support). The Djibouti Peace Process specifically forbids Kenya from contributing troops to the TFG. The UN has an arms embargo but interprets the invasion as being part of a "bilateral agreement" between Kenya and the TFG. The Kenyan expedition, win or lose, will get interesting in creative shaping of interpretation and law. It may get lost in the historic retelling, but all of the public justifications and written approvals were created after the invasion of Somalia by the Kenya military. Might makes right. Not one to benefit from looking back on lessons learned over the last two decades of foreign intervention, Chichir confidently set his gaze forward and told local media that Kenyan troops "will enjoy freedom of action in Somalia for a long time" and said they will attack any aircraft that deliver weapons to al-Shabaab, effectively ignoring Somalia's concern about an invading adventurist army on an illegal outing and declaring war on Eritrea who supplies al-Shabaab with weapons.

As the battle of Kismayo looms, the blind confidence of Kenya's twittering virgin army may soon come face to face with some hard analog ground truth: civilian causalities, IEDs, snipers ambushes, a hostile population and dealing with that special Somali skill in frustrating the most well-intentioned, well-provisioned and well-prepared armies on earth.

The battle won't be just inside the region Kenya calls "Azania". The angry fundamentalist engine that powers al-Shabaab is as much in Kenya as it is in Somalia. Nairobi and Dar es Salaam are where al Qaeda's black banner of smoke was first raised 13 years ago.

It is logical and moral to strike back at an insidious and hostile force that hides behind a fictional border, but that fictional border also means that equal effort must be expended on both sides. Much like America in Afghanistan, which took ten years to realize it was fighting Afghans from Pakistan, Kenya will soon learn that there are enough disaffected Somalis within and without their own borders to keep them busy for decades to come. A quick or slow victory in Somalia will not remove the underlying problems that give Islamic fundamentalists purpose. The tiny grenade tossing terror attempts in Nairobi were not typical examples of al-Qaeda's or al-Shabaab's high explosive wrath. The odds are good that there is much more to come once materials and targets are selected.

Moral versus Illegal


The tipping point was supposed to be kidnapped tourists and aid workers, but Kenya has been abused by "Somali Raiders" for a very, very long time. Whether it is kidnapping its tourists, poaching its animals, hijacking its ships or kidnapping wives, the pleasant polite Kenyans have been a favorite plundering ground for Somalis. There is a historical sense of payback for the virginal army. That same army has been funded, trained and equipped by the US in its effort to bring stability to the region. There is also a need to push out terrorist elements by using locally trained intelligence and anti-terrorism assistance. It is no coincidence that the glowing green fingerprint machines visitors must use in immigration are identical to the ones used in Afghanistan, Tanzania and the US. Kenya is a proxy partner in the war on terror. It will not take long for al Shabaab to see the guiding hand of foreign nations behind the Kenyan invasion that began it's build up in March of this year.

Poverty, injustice and misery are the wellspring of terrorist recruiting and although there are about a million and a half internally displaced inside Somalia but the largest single concentration of displaced Somalis is actually inside Kenya.

Dadaab was created during the fall of the Somali government in the early 90s. Now it houses about a half million Somalis. Kenya would very much like those Somalis to go home. The scenic country has already complained about being a dumping ground for captured pirates, its tourism industry is dying on its feet and the Kenyan shilling is rapidly approaching par with toilet paper. So with an embarrassing lack of applause from France, the US and the UK, all of whom who have kidnapped citizens inside Somalia, what is the end state that Kenya is looking for?

Down on the Border


The flat arid border between Kenya and Somalia is one of the poorest regions in the world: a place of "durable disorder" much like the turbulent tribal border between Afghanistan and Pakistan. The Jubaland region has been described as lawless, impoverished, home to illegal trade and wilful clans. And that is without the Kenyan army and air force charging around looking for Somalis who support al Shabaab.

Like Pashtuns along the AfPak border and the Taliban, ethnic Somalis dominate both sides of this border and have deliberately opaque relationships with al-Shabaab. There are also constant flare-ups as clans seek to extend land holdings to compensate for degraded cattle forage and to increase political influence. It is a place where "galti" or Somali outsiders have come with weapons to take over from traditional power brokers. Kenyans with their heavy-handed military approach are neither welcome nor wanted. They are tolerated because right now they offer more than al-Shabaab can deliver. But once again, what they intend to leave behind has yet to be revealed. The AMISOM mandate only allows for 12,000 peacekeepers. So will Azania be a "government in a box" favored by COINdanistas? Will it be a gossamer-thin "local government" made up of toadies, or will it be a patch work of elders intimidated by Kenyan or paid militias? The clan is very much in effect here.

This friction between insiders and outsiders has led to numerous flare-ups on both sides of the border and Kenya has constantly been unable to fund, train, support or project governance to protect itself on its side of the border. So like the Durand line in AfPak, the region is managed as a "status quo" environment.

It could be argued that the current military campaign should have actually been up to Kenya's own border and not inside Somalia towards Kismayo. But the obvious logic is that this bold move in the face of legality is expected to create a buffer zone and by default a defensible border. The TFG has been truculent but ultimately supportive of this concept mostly because they have no way to stop Kenya. It almost dictates that once Kenya reaches the port of Kismayo, Western powers must step in with check books and proxies ready to maintain the momentum.

Victory at What Cost?


It is popular for the media to be defeatist and pessimistic in military matters. After all, it is the Kenyan and Somali population that must shoulder the burden of government adventuring, but let us look forward and assume the best. It is conceivable and likely that Kenya will take Kismayo and all of Jubaland paving the way for removal of al-Shabaab and opening the door to aid, governance, funding and development.

Let us ignore Ethiopia's indignation at Kenya letting Ogadenis play in their backyard, and the TFG's nervousness that they will lose sway over the money making machine that is Kismayo. Let us ignore the inter-clan rivalries, smuggling businesses and Eritrea's need to fund someone, anyone, to give Ethiopia a black eye. Let us assume that al-Shabaab's main source of support, rejecting outside invaders, is vaporized and that there is some political reconciliation with al-Shabaab entities like Aweys and Hizbul Islam and perhaps Robow in Baidoa.

But even with moronic optimism in effect, we are only talking about a tiny slice of Southern Somalia. The Somalialand-, Kenya- and foreign-based elements of al-Shabaab and al-Qaeda will simply resort to a long sporadic campaign of terror against Kenyan allies inside Jubaland and/or Kenya.

The other problem is that the Kenyan government uses western laws and the Somalis in Jubaland have reverted to xeer, the traditional form of clan and inter-clan management that often clashes with the western style of political cronies, democratic parties, western-backed transitional governments and even statutes.

It is not known what system of government Kenya intends to install, but the creation of Azania (Jubaland) under an Ogadeni intellectual and the current support of Ras Kambomi who had former ties to Hizbul Islam already seem dissonant. The rain may be falling and the aid may be flowing but Somalia's multiple problems will not go away just because Kenya has an army on the move.

Kenya's army was designed to fend off attack from once Soviet-supported Tanzania or loony Idi Amin's Uganda. It was never designed as a blitzkrieg mobile force used in much the same America retrained Ethiopia's army to be in 2006. It has been trained by the US to do modern counterinsurgency, call in air strikes and manage the media, but like the Ugandans of AMISOM in Mogadishu they are new at this. Mistakes will be made and Somali civilians will die.

Although the Kenyan military gives lip service to the very American-sounding hearts and minds philosophy they espouse in Somalia, Kenya has a hard time making ends meet even for its own citizens, most of whom (75%) are farmers, and those who aren't suffer an unemployment rate of 40%. Kenya is not going to end the drought or replace the lost livestock, jobs and farmland anytime soon but it could be a stabilizing influence on southern Somalia. Kenya's view of this region as troublesome goes far back before al-Shabaab was born, and there is no reason to think that they would simply leave and let things go back to the way they were. Ergo the Azania buffer zone concept. But what will power Jubaland aka Gedo, Lower Juba and Middle Juba and the approximately 1.3 million residents?

If fighting stops, Somali refugees in Dadaab could start flowing back into Somalia if Kenya creates enough security to allow camps and aid delivery inside Somalia. Securing Kismayo would help start that process. Business between nations would flourish and foreign support would flow to Kenya's military.

Currently the "misery business" is headquartered in Nairobi. It's not a given that the aid and development crowd will leave the cool, polite climes of Kenya for the sweaty destroyed locales of Kismayo and Jubaland.

For example the UNHCR's budget for 2011 in Kenya will be around $225 million dollars and a local staff of 232 out of 366 people. USAID will have spent just under a billion dollars by the end of 2012 since 2008 on Somalia, but managed through Nairobi. It would be refreshing to see aid efforts for Somalia be located and focused in Somalia, but that is not a given.

The United States' dual enthusiasm and coyness for training and supplying the Kenyan military is personified in the US embassy's decade-long financial support of Kenya's army while at the same time having had no idea that Kenyan Defence Force was invading Somalia. This is all the more surprising since the American ambassador to Kenya, a former air force general, Scott Gration actually trained Kenyan pilots to fly the same used Northrop F-5s now being used to bomb Somalis back in the 80s.

America provides unknown millions in covert and overt military and security aid to Kenya and its neighbors Uganda, Ethiopia and Djibouti in their battle against Somalia. Indications are that there is a surprising lack of ownership for the current invasion. Without regional support, Kenya will be as isolated in the south as Uganda is in the center of Somalia.

Freedom of Movement, For How Long?


Freedom of movement is the positive side of an incursion. Once al-Shabaab fighters hand over control, voluntarily or after combat, the army will begin to coagulate and create the same World War One style defenses manned by African Union peacekeeping forces (known as AMISOM) in Mogadishu. Yes, the Kenya Army could flow into Kismayo, destroy al-Shabaab, leaving local militias behind and flow out unimpeded and un-ambushed from the newly liberated port of Kismayo. But Kenya doesn't want to give up hard won territory. It is too valuable as a source of intelligence, stability and perhaps economic gain.

A more realistic scenario for an occupying army is going to be a lull while insurgents regroup, followed by a period of sporadic ambushes, IED attacks, assassination of hired government officials, and a general state of siege. This would be the opposite of freedom of movement since in order to maintain security someone has to be left behind. This job may fall to AMISOM using Ugandan, Djiboutian or Burundian hires. Or it may fall to local untrained militias seconded to the TFG. Or it may be handed over to the Ogadeni militia members recruited from camps and Somali officers trained by Kenya ostensibly to do this job.

Then there is the embarrassing discussion of who is going to pay for all this. Kenya's 2011 $1.2 trillion shilling budget promised to focus on "infrastructure and poverty reduction, recognizing the impact of rising food and fuel prices." Even in June they did not foresee the rapid decline in tourism income (63% of GDP), fall of the shilling (the shillings 25 per cent slide makes it one of the worst performing emerging currencies in 2011), or invasion of Somalia. The military's $600 million budget was for a fairly static peacetime army. AMISOM estimates it will need 20,000 troops to stabilize Somalia. Kenya may want in on the peacekeeping gravy train of renting troops that Uganda, Burundi, Djibouti and Sierra Leone. Between little has been presented on how Kenya intends to manage the gap between their free ranging confidence today and grim siege phase that is to come.

Granted Kenya's two-brigade expedition is but a small part of that deficit or military budget, but the impact of now being a country at war will have far reaching negative impacts - impacts that Kenya should be wise to consider sooner rather than later.

-The Somali Report
 
Askari Kanzu, hope you read the comments of whatever it is you copy pasted up there./. Ive stopped reading Aljazeera and this Somali press and blogs, simply Alshabaab sympathisers. we will wipe out Alshabaab for good.
 
Askari Kanzu, hope you read the comments of whatever it is you copy pasted up there./. Ive stopped reading Aljazeera and this Somali press and blogs, simply Alshabaab sympathisers. we will wipe out Alshabaab for good.
On the other hand, I think it is always good to read what your opponent says to better understand his mind!
 
On the other hand, I think it is always good to read what your opponent says to better understand his mind!

That is the reason why the CIA is more and more recruiting people who have a good command of (Ki)swahili???, Kurdish, Pashto, Arabic etc, etc....you not only need to walk like them, eat like them, speak like them you also need to try to think like them (sounds like inception isnt?)....

Foreign Language Instructors
Work Schedule: Full Time
Salary: $56,857 – $97,333
Location: Washington, DC metropolitan area


The Central Intelligence Agency is hiring qualified and experienced Language Instructors of Arabic, Chinese/Mandarin, Dari, French, German, Greek, Indonesian, Italian, Japanese, Pashto, Persian (Farsi), Russian, Serbo-Croatian, and Turkish to work in the Washington, DC metropolitan area.


The CIA provides first-class training for energetic, creative and committed intelligence professionals. CIA Language Instructors deliver programs that provide students with the foreign language communications skills and cross-cultural awareness they need to live and work abroad effectively, or to perform other language-related duties. Foreign Language Instructors apply the latest instructional methodologies to meet highly customized student needs and conduct language proficiency testing in reading, speaking and understanding for skills evaluation. In addition, they may be asked to provide a variety of language support services worldwide.


Minimum requirements include a Bachelor's in foreign language, linguistics or a related field; native fluency in the language; 2-5 years of teaching experience; demonstrated knowledge of the respective area's history, culture, politics and economy; and the ability to use the latest technology and teaching techniques. Also desired are experience in teaching language skills to a wide range of adult students, from beginners to those at a more advanced proficiency level, and experience in program and/or education management. As part of the screening and interview process, applicants will be required to take language proficiency tests in their native language. Advanced English proficiency is also required.


Salaries are based on the individual applicant's qualifications. In addition to base salary of 56,857 – $97,333. Language Instructors earn annual "bonus" pay ranging from $4,875 to $9,750, with the amount based on the language and their language proficiency. Language Instructors who speak multiple foreign languages may also qualify for additional bonuses in varying amounts. Furthermore, new employees can qualify for a lump-sum hiring bonus for languages, up to a maximum amount of $35,000.


All applicants must successfully complete a thorough medical and psychological exam, a polygraph interview and an extensive background investigation. U.S. citizenship is required.


To be considered suitable for Agency employment, applicants must generally not have used illegal drugs within the last twelve months. The issue of illegal drug use prior to twelve months ago is carefully evaluated during the medical and security processing.


Important Notice: Friends, family, individuals, or organizations may be interested to learn that you are an applicant for or an employee of the CIA. Their interest, however, may not be benign or in your best interest. You cannot control whom they would tell. We therefore ask you to exercise discretion and good judgment in disclosing your interest in a position with the Agency. You will receive further guidance on this topic as you proceed through your CIA employment processing.


To Apply:


Make a note of the position(s) that interest you, as you can apply for up to four positions in one application. DO NOT submit multiple applications; this will only slow the review of your application, and delay processing. Please read the Application Instructions carefully before you begin the online application process.

Follow the link below:
https://www.cia.gov/careers/opportunities/support-professional/foreign-language-instructors.html

Haya A.K kazi kwako..naona mambo haya unayapenda sana unakaribishwa kujiunga!
 
[h=1]Uneasiness grows over Kenyan offensive in Somalia [/h]
 
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