‘Does al Shabab Pose a Threat on American Soil?’ So read a headline in
the New York Times’ blog, Room for Debate. Despite its name, Room for
Debate rarely shows any true differences of opinion on whatever issue of
the day is considered significant to the Times’ editors. None of the
supposed debaters on this topic actually addressed the central issue of
al-Shabaab’s existence and what it says about the United States behavior
around the world. A better question would be why the United States
turned Somalia into a ruin and why does it keep killing people there.
Sometimes we get the opportunity to see violence up close as in the
recent al-Shabaab attack on the Westgate shopping mall in Nairobi,
Kenya. But in the absence of good reporting, scenes of carnage tell us
nothing. Thanks to liar presidents and their partners in the corporate
media, Americans know nothing about Kenya or its role as American
partner in keeping Somalia in a constant state of war.
Americans don’t know that their government instigated an Ethiopian
invasion of Somalia in 2006 which destroyed that nation and prevented it
from emerging from turmoil and humanitarian disaster. They don’t know
that Kenya was enlisted in this occupation in 2011 and also gained the
enmity of the al-Shabaab resistance. They don’t know that the United
States government prevented food from reaching starving people. They
don’t know that the so-called pirates [8] in Somalia are fighting in
vain to keep European nations from stealing even the fish they need to
survive.
Al-Shabaab is dedicated to resisting American aggression and to
punishing anyone who assists in that process. There is nothing
mysterious about this group’s motives. They are fighting their
oppressors be they in the United States or Kenya.
Of course we are shown pictures of murder victims at the Westgate mall
in Kenya and hear the word al-Shabaab linked to their deaths. It is
justifiable to show that suffering but the media never show the victims
of American violence. They remain unseen and therefore unknown.
Various forms of media are now accessible to every person at any time of
day or night, but we must hunt to see images of Iraqi, Afghan, Somali,
Yemeni, Libyan, Palestinian, Haitian, and Syrian victims of American and
American sponsored violence. Because they have been disappeared the
American public are kept in a bubble of ignorance without knowing the
role that their government plays in creating bloodshed.
When we do see the victims lying bloody in a Nairobi shopping mall we
obviously feel sadness about their fates and perhaps anger at the
perpetrators. Seeing people killed who were merely engaged in the
mundane activities of life is terribly tragic. It would be enlightening
and no less tragic to see the images and hear the stories of people who
were going about their daily business when suddenly death struck them
because of the American empire.
The consequence of propaganda and omissions in reporting mean that
al-Shabaab are labeled as fanatical Muslims and evil terrorists and not
people who have reason to be angry with Kenya for joining in the
evisceration of their country. Their legitimate grievances aren’t
addressed by killing weekend shoppers but unless all these facts are
acknowledged the cycle of violence can only continue.
Al-Shabaab exists because of the terror the United States brought to
Somalia. In 2011 more than 250,000 people died in that nation because of
a drought, and an American policy of starving civilians in order to
starve al-Shabaab fighters.
“Al-Shabaab are labeled as fanatical Muslims and evil terrorists and not
people who have reason to be angry with Kenya for joining in the
evisceration of their country.”
So the question isn’t whether al-Shabaab threatens America. The question
is how Americans think they can be held harmless when their government
goes on killing sprees and creates hatred and a desire for revenge.
When we need hard facts we get propaganda instead. Hollywood is using
Somalia again as its backdrop for grotesque stories of exceptionalism
and supremacy. A new film, Captain Phillips, tells the story of one
brave American who with the help of overwhelming fire power and Navy
SEALS overcame three Somalians in a life boat. It is doubtful that the
Somalian side of the story will be told. One unlucky Somalian young man,
Abduwali Abdukhadir Muse, received a 33 year prison sentence when he
chose to surrender instead of fighting the world’s only super power.
The truth is that our government bears responsibility for the loss of
life at the Kenyan mall and for attacks on American vessels. Americans
may live in ignorance but the rest of the world knows better. The United
States first brought death to Somalia and is responsible for creating
even more of it.
By Margaret Kimberley from here
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