Exclusive: Deadly Developments in Somalia
Molly McCarroll
Author: Molly McCarroll
Source: The Family Security Foundation, Inc.
Date: June 30, 2006
After more than a decade of fighting in
Toxic governments don’t grow out of thin air. They need a friendly environment in which to thrive. They demand assorted preexisting qualities in order to take root. They find nothing so hostile as a healthy society and instead seek out weakness and instability to insinuate their deadly tentacles into the deepest reaches of power. Once they are in place, they have all the resources of a functioning state at their reach, albeit in the inevitably stifled form of an improperly aligned government. They are stabilized by the inertia that inevitably accompanies the status quo and any adversary that would seek to undermine their leaders and their ideology begins from a far weaker position than before that fateful moment when they seized power.
The totalitarian state, that demonic twentieth century innovation that perfected what the French Revolution had begun, was the world’s last and deadliest incarnation of a toxic government. Whether they grew amidst the social stratification and economic stagnation of tsarist
The twenty-first century proves the world has not yet learned its lesson. Tyranny is not dead, but it has a newfound cloak of cultural respectability. Pockets of anachronistic secularism dominate the globe from
In both cases, it is simple to imagine how much better things would have been had someone had the courage, the foresight, and the mandate to stop these growing nuisances before they developed themselves into real problems. It would not have necessarily meant war, but only an honest confrontation of those social ills that made revolution easy and appealing. Yet the West, including the
To be fair, even if any of the warning signs were heeded, there is no guarantee that the resulting tragedies could have been avoided. Mustering the political will to act would have been difficult, as all preemptive policies are. But it is not impossible at least to hope that we would learn from these failures and do better the next time.
Unfortunately, we don’t appear to have done so. Such a development is occurring right now in
This is not a reflection of popular Somali will, but the result of a protracted conflict between strong men, the result of which the Somalis will accept as a preferable alternative to more death and uncertainty. With a history of razed villages, dead children, and devastated economics, the stability of even a theocratic autocracy earns a certain sort of appeal. Averting this outcome would not necessarily have required more soldiers sent in retaliation for
Molly McCarroll is the Editorial Director of FamilySecurityMatters.org and a graduate of the Institute of World Politics in Washington, DC.
The opinions contained in this article are solely those of the writer, and in no way, form or shape represent the editorial opinions of “Hiiraan Online”