Ethiopian soldiers could exit Somalia 'in weeks'
Andrew England, Financial Times, January 3, 2007
Ethiopian troops could be pulled out of Somalia "within a few weeks", Meles
Zenawi, Ethiopia's prime minister, said yesterday, adding that the victors of
Somalia's two-week war were now "mopping up remnants" of the country's former
Islamist leaders.
Addis Ababa, which backs Somalia's weak transitional
government, launched an offensive on December 24 against the Islamist movement
which has controlled much of the country's south since June.
After Ethiopia
sent in thousands of troops, supported by tanks and fighter jets, the Islamists
retreated rapidly and on Monday fled Kismayo port, their last stronghold.
But
despite promises of a swift withdrawal, doubts remain about when Mr Meles would
be willing or able to pull back his troops.
Ethiopia is believed to have had
troops in Somalia for months before it announced its military presence in
December and Ali Mohamed Gedi, the Somali prime minister, yesterday said the
forces should stay for months until the country had been pacified.
Ethiopia
faces a painful dilemma: if it withdraws too quickly it could leave a security
vacuum in an often threatening neighbour that has endured 15 years of chaos and
violence.
However, the longer the troops stay, the more likely the Ethiopians
could be seen as an occupation force or become embroiled in a guerrilla war with
the remaining Islamist forces.
Some observers said that while Addis Ababa had
legitimate security concerns, it had broken international protocols by invading
Somalia. But Washington, which also accused the Islamist movement of including
al-Qaeda suspects, is believed to have given tacit support to Ethiopia to mount
its offensive.
The military operation will also be a drain on Ethiopia's
meagre resources. The country maintains one of Africa's largest armies,
estimated by an Ethiopian analyst to be about 150,000 troops, down from a figure
of up to 300,000 during its 1998-2000 border war with Eritrea.
But the
impoverished country of 77m people is dependent on donor funding and Mr Meles'
government has agreed to keep military spending at a flat cash rate of 3bn birr
($355m, €269m, £181m) a year in recent years.
Aid donors will be monitoring
to see if there has been any rise in defence spending. "We will be looking very
carefully to see if Somalia has had an impact," said one western diplomat in
Addis Ababa. "If it has, we will take a very serious view of
that."
Regardless of the aid advantages of a swift withdrawal from Somalia,
it is likely to take weeks before a peacekeeping mission could deploy and fill
any security vacuum.
Diplomats and the Somali government have called for an
African-led operation, but it is unclear who would finance or contribute troops
to the mission.
An official with the cash-strapped African Union, which is
already overstretched providing peacekeeping troops in Sudan's Darfur region,
told the Financial Times the organisation was still internally discussing
proposals.
Copyright The Financial Times Limited 2007