US Secretary of State John Kerry in Kenya

Huyo ni punguani achana nae, anashangilia kupangiwa na mabwana zao wa Kimarekani waendelee kuuliwa tu Somalia.

Wao hao mabwana zao walitolewa mbio huko, amesahau?
Kibano mnkiogopa sana nyie. Mwaka huu, Somalia inasafishwa na Mkikuyu, ndio mtajua nani ni akbar.

 
Last edited by a moderator:
Kibano mnkiogopa sana nyie. Mwaka huu, Somalia inasafishwa na Mkikuyu, ndio mtajua nani ni akbar.

Utawaota Wasomali, hapo mpaka dunia iishe, bila kuomba msamaha, mtawajuwa Wasomali kama mlikuwa hamuwajuwi.
 
Huyo ni punguani achana nae, anashangilia kupangiwa na mabwana zao wa Kimarekani waendelee kuuliwa tu Somalia.

Wao hao mabwana zao walitolewa mbio huko, amesahau?

Mkuu nakumbuka miaka hiyo Somali Community huko Manchester waliwahi kuniambia kwamba ukitaka kuwatisha Wamerikani we chukua bisu kubwa kubwa ukate nyama ya mwanajeshi wa Kimerikani aliye kufa, jifanye unakula nyama yake au funga maiti kwenye gari alafu iburuze barabarani, au ichome moto huku ukihakikisha wahandishi wa habari wa main stream media wanakuwepo - wakasema habari hizo zikitangazwa Merikani wakati wa Prime Time basi wanajeshi wao wataondolewa fasta! Wasomali bwana - sijui wakati huo ndio walikuwepo wakina Farrah Haideed na General Morgan kama nakumbuka vizuri - Wasomali wanachekesha sana.

Mimi nilimuhoji jamaa huyu maksudi maana nilijua John Kerry hawezi kuleta Wanajeshi wa Merikani Somalia, wanaogopa wapiga kura wao huko Merikani - hawataki kabisa kurudia makosa ya William Clinton.
 
Chuki yenu itabaki kuwepo mpaka manyang'au mtie akili.
Sisi hatuna chuki, nyie ndio mnakuja nchini kwetu na kuanza fuja baada ya kuwapokea kwa Ukarimu na tukawapa Eastleigh (Isilii). Nani anaweza kufanya hivyo? Asante ya Punda ndio mnatoa, inshallah, mtalipia hapa hapa duniani.
 
FaizaFoxy ni mama yao alshabab!....watasafishwa mwaka huu kubaki peupe........yetu macho!:tonguez:
 
Utawaota Wasomali, hapo mpaka dunia iishe, bila kuomba msamaha, mtawajuwa Wasomali kama mlikuwa hamuwajuwi.
By 2020,Somalia will be a stable, progressive democratic nation thanks to our initiative to restore political order in that troubled land.
Guess who will be having the last laugh? Our investments will broaden their spun into Somalia, the two countries will be trading with each other and Kenyan trained expats will find work there.

You think ours is an effort in futility? I pray we all be alive then (in 2020) and well and still be active JF users.
 
Mabwana zao wakiwaambia chochote wanakubali,
Msifunge kambi za wakimbizi, wamekubali pamoja na tambo za Vice wao.
Msiondoke Somalia, hawaondoki
Nendeni Somalia wakaenda
Kubalini ushoga wakakubali.
Hii nchi ya Kenya bana
 

Only if you get out of Somalia and not only that, you have to compensate them for all the blood you spilled in Somalia, otherwise, Somalis will never ever let their blood be spilled without revenge. Remember that.
 
Mabwana zao wakiamua wanafwata tu.
 
Jamaa mchecheto walipokuwa wanaondoka anga la Somalia, na bado Obama akija anakuja na masharti kibao
 
believe it or not !!! kenyans security still very lowest compare to tanzania.
 
Tanzanians never have a clue of whatever hoes on in EA hawako IGAD n hawajui chochote hao so makes no sense trying to convince a lesser man what is the truth waache wabonge inawauma no one absolutely no one needs there Chinese hardware military anywea near their interest hawana survive so wacha wabonge juu this is the only place they can air their views on EA..... They are not needed anywea else

Fyi
When Portuguese invaded kenyan coast in 1449 - 1694 somalis n omanis ndo walitusaidia kuregain our independence we are just returning the favour now
 
Root
Read hapo kwa US involvement hapo kwa hii CNN Q&A


Kenyan soldiers climb into a truck as they
prepare to advance near Liboi in Somalia, on
October 18, 2011, near Kenya's border town
with Somalia. Kenyan jets struck in Somalia on
October 18 in a bid to rid the border area of
Islamist rebels blamed for a spate of
abductions, including that of a French woman
who died in captivity, officials said. (Getty
Images)
Editor’s Note: Critical Questions is produced
by the Center for Strategic and International
Studies (CSIS). Richard Downie is a fellow and
deputy director of the Africa Program at the
Center for Strategic and International Studies
in Washington, D.C. The views expressed in
this piece are solely those of Richard Downie.
Kenya is in the third week of a major military
offensive inside neighboring Somalia. Called
“Operation Protect the Nation,” it is Kenya’s
largest military operation since independence
in 1963. Around 1,600 troops are sweeping
through areas of Southern Somalia controlled
by the extremist Islamist group, al Shabaab.
The Kenyan air force has also been in action,
launching bombing raids on insurgent bases.
Kenya’s military spokesman has even used his
twitter account to warn residents living near al
Shabaab camps in 10 towns to take shelter
against imminent attacks.
Q: Why did Kenya invade?
Richard Downie: Kenyans have gotten
increasingly alarmed about Somalia’s chronic
instability, which has spilled over its borders.
One manifestation of this instability is Dadaab
refugee camp in northeastern Kenya, which
receives Somalis fleeing the humanitarian
crisis in their own country. Numbers at this
camp have swelled to almost 450,000 because
of the famine conditions in parts of Southern
Somalia.
The Kenyan authorities were dismayed in
October when two Spanish aid workers were
kidnapped from the camp and taken into
Somalia, prompting relief operations to be
scaled back. But probably the final straw was
the series of raids on coastal resorts by
Somali criminals that preceded the attack in
Dadaab. First, a British man was shot dead
and his wife snatched from a beach resort
close to the Somali border. Second, a disabled
pensioner from France was seized near Lamu
and taken to Somalia, where she subsequently
died. Her kidnappers have demanded a
ransom for her body.
Read: Restart of U.S.-DPRK negotiations.
Tourism is critical to Kenya’s economy, and
the country is entering peak holiday season.
We don’t actually know if al Shabaab was
responsible for these kidnappings. Indeed, the
Kenyans claim they were planning a military
incursion long before they happened. But it’s
clear that they helped focus Kenyan minds on
the seriousness of the Somali problem and
underlined the need to take action.
What is the military objective?
In essence, Kenya wants to keep al Shabaab at
arms’ length from its border. It has already
experimented with the idea of carving out a
buffer zone inside Somalia. Earlier this year, it
backed the formation of an autonomous
region called Jubaland, or Azania, providing
money and supplies to a hastily cobbled-
together local governing authority under the
leadership of a former Somali defense
minister. This initiative never really got off the
ground so this time round Kenya is taking the
lead role rather than relying so heavily on
local partners.
What is the extent of U.S. involvement in this
operation?
Kenya’s status as a long-standing security
partner of the United States has given rise to
speculation that the United States is
participating in this operation. Certainly, both
countries have a shared interest in defeating
al Shabaab, which is a designated terrorist
group in the United States. But U.S. officials
are adamant that the decision to take military
action was Kenya’s and Kenya’s alone. They
say they were not even briefed beforehand
about Nairobi’s intention to take action. They
have, however, expressed strong support for
the operation. Kenya has been coy about
naming the international partners who are
assisting with its military offensive. It is
unlikely to be coincidental that a U.S. air base
in Ethiopia recently became operational. The
base is used as a launch pad for unmanned
drones that conduct counterterrorism
surveillance across the Horn of Africa. The
Pentagon says the Reaper drones are
unarmed, but they are capable of being
deployed for offensive operations. Missiles
from U.S. drones have previously been used to
kill suspected al Qaeda leaders in Somalia.
What are the military risks for Kenya?
Kenya has swept into Somalia on a wave of
public support, and all the talk so far is of big
military gains. But Kenya should not be
fooled: this is a risky operation, and the risks
will get bigger the longer the operation lasts.
Kenya has not clearly defined its military
objectives; instead, it has issued vague
pronouncements to rid Somalia of extremists,
which raise fears of a long and messy
engagement. The history of outside military
intervention in Somalia should also give the
Kenyans pause for thought. Somalis do not
tend to agree on much, but one thing that is
guaranteed to unite them is opposition to
external interference. We saw this in 2006,
when Ethiopia invaded Somalia to oust the
Islamic Courts Union, a governing authority
that achieved considerable success in bringing
a semblance of order to Mogadishu but whose
anti-Ethiopian rhetoric caused alarm in Addis
Ababa.
Read: Analysis of the Lord’s Resistance Army.
The invasion turned into a brutal occupation,
triggering an insurgency that has lasted to
this day. The Ethiopians withdrew two years
later. Kenya is not viewed with quite the same
level of hostility as Ethiopia, which is
Somalia’s traditional adversary. But it will
have to tread carefully nonetheless. Civilian
casualties are likely to intensify Somali
hostility to Kenya. There have already been
reports from an international medical
organization that five civilians in a camp for
internally displaced people were killed in an
air strike on the town of Jibil. Mistakes like
this will inflame local opinion.
Kenya also has a domestic community of
approximately 2.4 million Kenyan Somalis to
consider, mainly in Nairobi and on the coast.
Concerns have been raised of a potential “fifth
column” inside Kenya. Al Shabaab has played
on those fears, promising terrorist attacks
inside Kenya. There have already been three
grenade attacks in the past 10 days. A man
arrested in connection with two of the attacks
admitted in court to being an al Shabaab
sympathizer.
Another problem for Kenya is that its proxies
in Southern Somalia are not reliable. Some of
them were fighting with al Shabaab until fairly
recently, before switching sides. There is also
a danger of antagonizing its ally and neighbor,
Ethiopia, which has been backing its own
proxies inside Southern Somalia. The ethnic
groups most likely to benefit from Kenya’s
operation in Southern Somalia are from the
Ogadeni clan, whose kin inside Ethiopia have
long resisted the government in Addis Ababa.
 
Last edited by a moderator:
believe it or not !!! kenyans security still very lowest compare to tanzania.

Sawa.....
Ma military zimeenda world war 2 na 1 zka participate
Cold war zika emerge victorious Zimeunda intelligence network zika examine military ya Kenya kila aspect zikatuweka #7 Africa zikaweka tz #18 zikatuweka #46 worldwide zikaweka tz #102 , zinasema tuko wanoma but noooo I should not listen to them let me listen to a Tanzanian about his military which was last deployed wen kenya was 19yrs old..... Budah kenya is now 52yrs old mnaspend >300mn$ kwa military yenu kenya this yr inapita 2.35bn$ lakini Mmmmh wacha tukupe tu chance juu hatuko shua how jtwz itapigana tym ya war inaeza acha a symmetric war ianze the unconventional guerilla tactics bt... Hahaha wacha tu nicheke boat moja ya Kenya navy iko na weapons znaeza level dar zote zikiwa deployed at a go
 
Cookies are required to use this site. You must accept them to continue using the site. Learn more…