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Time Horn of Africa Russians, Go Home!
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HORN OF AFRICA: Russians, Go Home!Monday, Nov. 28, 1977
The Somalis cut loose from Moscow
It was hardly a dignified leavetaking. A gaggle of Russians, the first of many
such groups to run the same gauntlet last week, gathered in the hot, squalid
main hall of Mogadishu airport to await an Aeroflot flight to Aden. Somali
customs officials, who normally give departing passengers a bored wave-
through, set upon the sweating travelers with malicious grins, demanding that
they open every suitcase for an item-by-item inspection. At the airport bar,
quarrels broke out as the bartender doubled the price of Cokes. A Western TV
cameraman recording the pandemonium took an elbow in the ribs from an
incensed Russian.
Thus planeload by sweltering planeload did the remaining 1,500 Soviet
personnel and some 45 Cuban comrades depart Somalia, one of the Kremlin's
oldest foreign-aid footholds in black Africa. As one group was preparing to
leave, an American Air Force 707 landed, bearing a U.S. congressional
delegation on its way to lunch with Somali President Mohamed Siad Barre. The
delegation's long-scheduled arrival was sheer coincidence, to be sure, but the
symbolism was unmistakable.
As had been predicted, the Somalis were throwing the Russians out. They
denounced their three-year-old friendship treaty with the Soviet Union, and
they asked the Russians to vacate the Soviet-built naval base at the Somali port
of Berbera on the Gulf of Aden. Soviet military and civilian advisers were
ordered to get out of the country on a week's notice, leaving just seven U.S.S.R.
embassy employees in Mogadishu—the exact size of the Somali embassy staff
in Moscow. Simultaneously, the Somalis broke off diplomatic relations with
Cuba.
The break was all but inevitable in view of the massive support that Moscow
and Havana have been sending to Ethiopia, the Somalis' enemy. The Somalis
had known for at least three years that the Kremlin, for all its protestations of
good intentions toward Somalia, was forging new ties with Addis Ababa. Then
war broke out in Ethiopia's Ogaden desert last July between Ethiopian forces
and the ethnic Somalis who live there; the insurgents are backed and armed by
Mogadishu. After that, the Somalis quickly realized that, as one official puts it,
"our brothers were being killed by bullets supplied by the people who said they
were our friends."
The Soviets had been aiding Somalia ever since the early 1960s, helping to
make it one of the best-armed nations in Africa, with a 22,000-man army, three
MiG-equipped fighter squadrons and six tank battalions. Until the mid-1970s
Ethiopia, under the late Emperor Haile Selassie, received substantial aid and
arms from the U.S. But after the Emperor's overthrow in 1974 by a leftist junta,
Addis Ababa's relations with the U.S. cooled. Despite their ties to Somalia, the
Russians saw a chance to establish a presence in Ethiopia, which is almost ten
times as populous as Somalia and whose ancient feudal society might prove
more receptive to Soviet socialism over the long run than Muslim Somalia had
been. Many observers think Moscow diplomats genuinely believed they could
continue to have it two ways: maintaining close ties with both Mogadishu and
Addis Ababa while tilting toward Ethiopia in the current war.
If so, they underestimated the fiercely independent Somalis. In late August,
Barre made his final trip to Moscow, where he was snubbed by Soviet
President Leonid Brezhnev and was refused the heavy weapons he sought.
Barre then visited Saudi Arabia, whose leaders had been trying to woo him
away from Moscow for at least three years as part of their anti-Communist
strategy to reinforce moderate regimes along the Red Sea and on the Horn of
Africa. Barre came away from Jeddah with a reported promise of $300 million;
in return, he presumably promised the Saudis that he would get rid of the
Russians in his own good time.
The result so far is something of a geo-political standoff. The Soviets have lost
their primary Indian Ocean naval facility, but can probably find some kind of
alternative—possibly on Ethiopia's Red Sea coastline. They have exchanged the
friendship of Somalia for that of a far bigger country. But Ethiopia is an
extremely fragile ally that is fighting wars in its northern province of Eritrea as
well as the Ogaden, and is led by an unstable junta. Only last week the junta
executed its second in command, Lieut. Colonel Atnafu Abate.
The West, for its part, expects to form closer but hardly client-style ties to
Somalia. The U.S. is ready to resume economic assistance, after a hiatus of six
years, at the level of about $10 million a year. West Germany, grateful for
Somalia's help in its Mogadishu skyjacking rescue operation last month, will
provide $17 million over the next 14 months. But neither the U.S. nor any other
Western country is anxious to lavish much military aid on Somalia while it is
still at odds with Ethiopia.
For the moment, the Ogaden war remains a stalemate, with Somali forces
holding most of the disputed territory and maintaining pressure on the
strategic Ethiopian-held towns of Harar and Dire Dawa. Most diplomatic
sources in Mogadishu believe, however, that when new shipments of heavy
Soviet military equipment already in Ethiopia begin to show up in the field, the
tide of battle could well turn against the Somalis.
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