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		<title>A Light Footprint, Heavy Challenges: The Limits of Somalia’s Security Transition</title>
		<link>https://en.kaabtv.com/a-light-footprint-heavy-challenges-the-limits-of-somalias-security-transition/</link>
		
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Abdi Guled]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Thu, 09 Oct 2025 10:45:01 +0000</pubDate>
				<category><![CDATA[Conflict & Security]]></category>
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		<category><![CDATA[Somalia’s Security Transition]]></category>
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					<description><![CDATA[<p>MOGADISHU, Somalia &#8212; Earlier this year, the parade ground at AU&#8217;s Halane military compound in Mogadishu took on a decidedly ceremonial air &#8212; Somali flags fluttering beneath the scorching coastal sun, AU officers standing to attention as brass bands played to mark what many described as a new chapter in Somalia&#8217;s protracted conflict. After nearly [&#8230;]</p>
<p>The post <a href="https://en.kaabtv.com/a-light-footprint-heavy-challenges-the-limits-of-somalias-security-transition/">A Light Footprint, Heavy Challenges: The Limits of Somalia’s Security Transition</a> appeared first on <a href="https://en.kaabtv.com">Kaab TV</a>.</p>
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<p id="ember61" class="ember-view reader-text-block__paragraph"><strong>MOGADISHU, Somalia </strong>— Earlier this year, the parade ground at AU&#8217;s Halane military compound in Mogadishu took on a decidedly ceremonial air — Somali flags fluttering beneath the scorching coastal sun, AU officers standing to attention as brass bands played to mark what many described as a new chapter in Somalia’s protracted conflict.</p>
<p id="ember62" class="ember-view reader-text-block__paragraph">After nearly two decades of African Union peacekeeping, the last contingents of the African Union Transition Mission in Somalia (ATMIS) lowered their flags and prepared to leave.</p>
<p id="ember63" class="ember-view reader-text-block__paragraph">In their place stood <a class="DjsrsjVHZJuBmYIlGeNPKHRUuogdgiHPtQE " tabindex="0" href="https://english.news.cn/africa/20250101/95e5ce78db214082b7e889daa5a309ee/c.html?utm" target="_self" data-test-app-aware-link=""><strong>a new banner</strong></a>: AUSSOM — the African Union Support and Stabilisation Mission in Somalia.</p>
<p id="ember64" class="ember-view reader-text-block__paragraph">On paper, it marked the beginning of Somalia’s long-promised self-reliance in security affairs. In practice, the transition has exposed the uneasy truth at the heart of Somalia’s recovery: the country’s ability to sustain peace may depend less on the number of troops and more on whether it has built a state worth defending.</p>
<h3 id="ember65" class="ember-view reader-text-block__paragraph"><strong>A Transition of Necessity, Not Triumph</strong></h3>
<p id="ember66" class="ember-view reader-text-block__paragraph">ATMIS — and its predecessor, AMISOM — had for years served as both shield and scaffolding.</p>
<p id="ember67" class="ember-view reader-text-block__paragraph">Its African troops, funded largely by the European Union and the United States, absorbed the shock of al-Shabab’s insurgency and helped keep Mogadishu’s fragile institutions upright. But donor fatigue and shifting global priorities — from Ukraine to the Sahel — forced an inevitable question: how long could foreign troops fight a Somali war?</p>
<p id="ember68" class="ember-view reader-text-block__paragraph">In 2024, that question found its answer. <strong><a class="DjsrsjVHZJuBmYIlGeNPKHRUuogdgiHPtQE " tabindex="0" href="https://au-ssom.org/aussom-mandate/?utm" target="_self" data-test-app-aware-link="">AUSSOM’s</a> </strong>creation, designed as a leaner and politically lighter successor to ATMIS, was less a choice than a necessity.</p>
<p id="ember69" class="ember-view reader-text-block__paragraph">The new mission’s mandate is advisory, not combat-driven, its footprint far smaller, and its emphasis on stabilisation rather than direct confrontation.</p>
<p id="ember70" class="ember-view reader-text-block__paragraph">“It’s a handover with a stopwatch,” said a senior international security advisor in Nairobi, requesting anonymity to speak candidly.</p>
<p id="ember71" class="ember-view reader-text-block__paragraph">“AUSSOM was created to exit gracefully, not to fight indefinitely.”</p>
<h3 id="ember72" class="ember-view reader-text-block__paragraph"><strong>An Army in Search of a State</strong></h3>
<p id="ember73" class="ember-view reader-text-block__paragraph">For Somalia’s government, the shift from ATMIS to AUSSOM is both an <a class="DjsrsjVHZJuBmYIlGeNPKHRUuogdgiHPtQE " tabindex="0" href="https://www.ipinst.org/wp-content/uploads/2024/10/IPI-E-RPT-ATMIS-Transition-final.pdf?utm" target="_self" data-test-app-aware-link=""><strong>opportunity and a risk</strong></a>.</p>
<p id="ember74" class="ember-view reader-text-block__paragraph">Officials in Mogadishu portray it as a milestone of sovereignty — proof that the country can now lead its own security. Yet across much of rural Somalia, reality tells a harsher story.</p>
<p id="ember75" class="ember-view reader-text-block__paragraph">The Somali National Army (SNA) has improved markedly since the chaotic 2010s, when clan loyalties and payroll corruption hollowed out its ranks.</p>
<p id="ember76" class="ember-view reader-text-block__paragraph">Training programs led by Turkey and the United States have produced elite units like the Gorgor and Danab commandos, while Washington has reinstated drone strikes and special operations support, and regional partners have strengthened the country’s logistical backbone.</p>
<p id="ember77" class="ember-view reader-text-block__paragraph">Still, the army remains fragmented, under-equipped, and politically entangled.</p>
<p id="ember78" class="ember-view reader-text-block__paragraph">Salaries often arrive late. Local militias — nominally under federal command — answer to regional presidents or clan elders. Officers in federal states complain privately that orders from Mogadishu are often ignored or filtered through patronage networks.</p>
<p id="ember79" class="ember-view reader-text-block__paragraph">“The SNA fights bravely,” said a retired Somali colonel in Mogadishu.</p>
<p id="ember80" class="ember-view reader-text-block__paragraph">“But bravery doesn’t win long wars — structure does. And that’s what we still lack.”</p>
<h3 id="ember81" class="ember-view reader-text-block__paragraph"><strong>The Vacuum Problem</strong></h3>
<p id="ember82" class="ember-view reader-text-block__paragraph">AUSSOM’s creation coincided with a series of territorial reversals that exposed the fragility of Somalia’s gains.</p>
<p id="ember83" class="ember-view reader-text-block__paragraph">In the months leading up to the transition, al-Shabab retook <a class="DjsrsjVHZJuBmYIlGeNPKHRUuogdgiHPtQE " tabindex="0" href="https://acleddata.com/update/al-shabaab-regains-lost-territories-amid-run-state-elections-somalia-march-2024?utm" target="_self" data-test-app-aware-link=""><strong>pockets of territory</strong></a> in Galmudug and Hirshabelle. Analysts attribute these losses to a premature drawdown of ATMIS troops, leaving untested Somali forces overstretched and poorly supplied.</p>
<p id="ember84" class="ember-view reader-text-block__paragraph">The new mission’s “light footprint” approach — focused on mentoring and political support — was meant to empower Somali institutions. Instead, it has revealed their <a class="DjsrsjVHZJuBmYIlGeNPKHRUuogdgiHPtQE " tabindex="0" href="https://eurafrica.info/2025/06/02/somalia-at-a-crossroads-resurgent-insurgents-fragmented-politics-and-the-uncertain-future-of-aussom/?utm" target="_self" data-test-app-aware-link=""><strong>limits</strong></a>.</p>
<p id="ember85" class="ember-view reader-text-block__paragraph">AUSSOM lacks <a class="DjsrsjVHZJuBmYIlGeNPKHRUuogdgiHPtQE " tabindex="0" href="https://issafrica.org/iss-today/funding-for-somalia-s-new-au-peace-mission-hangs-in-the-balance?utm" target="_self" data-test-app-aware-link=""><strong>funds</strong></a>, the robust logistical chains, airlift capacity, and unified command that once defined ATMIS.</p>
<p id="ember86" class="ember-view reader-text-block__paragraph">Coordination between AUSSOM and Somali units remains ad-hoc, dependent on donor-funded contractors and bilateral relationships rather than a cohesive national plan.</p>
<p id="ember87" class="ember-view reader-text-block__paragraph">“The symbolism of transition outpaced the substance,” said a Horn of Africa analyst based in Nairobi.</p>
<p id="ember88" class="ember-view reader-text-block__paragraph">“Somalia got sovereignty on paper before it got capacity on the ground.”</p>
<h3 id="ember89" class="ember-view reader-text-block__paragraph"><strong>Politics Behind the Frontlines</strong></h3>
<p id="ember90" class="ember-view reader-text-block__paragraph">Every battle in Somalia is also a political negotiation.</p>
<p id="ember91" class="ember-view reader-text-block__paragraph">The country’s federal system — a patchwork of autonomous regions — means no military success is purely national.</p>
<p id="ember92" class="ember-view reader-text-block__paragraph">In Jubaland, local forces maintain their own command chain. In Puntland, tensions with Mogadishu over resource control have repeatedly stalled joint operations.</p>
<p id="ember93" class="ember-view reader-text-block__paragraph">That <strong><a class="DjsrsjVHZJuBmYIlGeNPKHRUuogdgiHPtQE " tabindex="0" href="https://gga.org/federal-feud-escalating-tensions-between-somalias-federal-government-and-jubaland/?utm" target="_self" data-test-app-aware-link="">fragmentation</a> </strong>weakens not just the fight against al-Shabab but the very legitimacy of the federal state. AUSSOM’s mandate, though military in form, is deeply political in function — to broker cooperation where mistrust <a class="DjsrsjVHZJuBmYIlGeNPKHRUuogdgiHPtQE " tabindex="0" href="https://www.hiiraan.com/op4/2025/Aug/202546/somalia_s_broken_federalism_why_decentralisation_became_fragmentation.aspx?utm" target="_self" data-test-app-aware-link=""><strong>runs deep.</strong></a></p>
<p id="ember94" class="ember-view reader-text-block__paragraph">“It’s a security mission trapped in a political puzzle,” said a senior AU official involved in the transition.</p>
<p id="ember95" class="ember-view reader-text-block__paragraph">“You can train soldiers all you want, but if the politics doesn’t hold, they’re fighting for nothing.”</p>
<h3 id="ember96" class="ember-view reader-text-block__paragraph"><strong>The Al-Shabab Factor</strong></h3>
<p id="ember97" class="ember-view reader-text-block__paragraph">Despite sustained airstrikes and local offensives, the al-Qaeda linked extremist group, al-Shabab remains far more organized in much of rural Somalia than the state. It operates courts, collects taxes, and provides a crude form of governance in areas where the state is absent.</p>
<p id="ember98" class="ember-view reader-text-block__paragraph">Intelligence reports indicate that the group has diversified its tactics — expanding into <a class="DjsrsjVHZJuBmYIlGeNPKHRUuogdgiHPtQE " tabindex="0" href="https://home.treasury.gov/news/press-releases/jy1499?utm" target="_self" data-test-app-aware-link=""><strong>financial crime</strong></a>, cyber operations, and cross-border <a class="DjsrsjVHZJuBmYIlGeNPKHRUuogdgiHPtQE " tabindex="0" href="https://www.hiiraan.com/news4/2025/Oct/203144/report_al_shabaab_earns_200_million_yearly_funds_somalia_insurgency.aspx?utm" target="_self" data-test-app-aware-link=""><strong>smuggling</strong></a>. Its resilience underscores a grim paradox: as foreign missions scale down, al-Shabab’s staying power grows not by strength of arms, but by the weakness of governance.</p>
<p id="ember99" class="ember-view reader-text-block__paragraph">The militants have learned to avoid <a class="DjsrsjVHZJuBmYIlGeNPKHRUuogdgiHPtQE " tabindex="0" href="https://www.gov.uk/government/publications/somalia-country-policy-and-information-notes/country-policy-and-information-note-mogadishu-al-shabab-and-the-security-situation-somalia-july-2025-accessible?utm" target="_self" data-test-app-aware-link=""><strong>costly confrontations</strong></a>, instead using targeted <a class="DjsrsjVHZJuBmYIlGeNPKHRUuogdgiHPtQE " tabindex="0" href="https://www.intechopen.com/chapters/1155027?utm" target="_self" data-test-app-aware-link=""><strong>assassinations</strong></a>, ambushes, and propaganda to exploit political divisions. In a recent statement, the group mocked the AUSSOM transition as “the changing of uniforms, not reality.”</p>
<h3 id="ember100" class="ember-view reader-text-block__paragraph"><strong>Metrics of Success — or Failure</strong></h3>
<p id="ember101" class="ember-view reader-text-block__paragraph">Diplomats in Mogadishu say the coming 18 months will be decisive. The benchmarks are clear but unforgiving:</p>
<p id="ember102" class="ember-view reader-text-block__paragraph">Can Somali forces independently secure key population centers for at least six consecutive months?</p>
<p id="ember103" class="ember-view reader-text-block__paragraph">Are defense salaries being paid transparently, without donor oversight?</p>
<p id="ember104" class="ember-view reader-text-block__paragraph">Can AUSSOM operate effectively without emergency funding from the EU or the U.S.?</p>
<p id="ember105" class="ember-view reader-text-block__paragraph">Most crucially, can local administrations deliver basic services faster than al-Shabab can re-infiltrate?</p>
<p id="ember106" class="ember-view reader-text-block__paragraph">If the answer to most of these remains “no,” the transition risks becoming a managed retreat rather than a step toward sovereignty.</p>
<h3 id="ember107" class="ember-view reader-text-block__paragraph"><strong>Regional and Strategic Ripples</strong></h3>
<p id="ember108" class="ember-view reader-text-block__paragraph">Somalia’s experiment with AUSSOM is being watched closely across the Horn.</p>
<p id="ember109" class="ember-view reader-text-block__paragraph">The withdrawal of large foreign forces also reorders power dynamics within Somalia’s elite. With fewer international boots on the ground, foreign policy leverage shifts — from military partners to financial ones.</p>
<p id="ember110" class="ember-view reader-text-block__paragraph">Turkey, the UAE, and Qatar are positioning themselves as primary security and infrastructure patrons, each with distinct agendas that blur the line between assistance and influence.</p>
<p id="ember111" class="ember-view reader-text-block__paragraph">As one diplomat put it: “AUSSOM is not just a military mission. It’s a geopolitical mirror reflecting who still believes in Somalia — and who is quietly giving up.”</p>
<hr class="reader-divider-block__horizontal-rule" />
<p id="ember112" class="ember-view reader-text-block__paragraph"><strong>Abdi Guled</strong><em> is a Horn of Africa analyst and journalist with a focus on political risk, armed groups, and geostrategic competition in fragile states.</em></p>
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<p>The post <a href="https://en.kaabtv.com/a-light-footprint-heavy-challenges-the-limits-of-somalias-security-transition/">A Light Footprint, Heavy Challenges: The Limits of Somalia’s Security Transition</a> appeared first on <a href="https://en.kaabtv.com">Kaab TV</a>.</p>
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