FEMALE SUICIDE BOMBERS SHOWS AL-SHABAAB’S DESPERATION
Somalia has recently
witnessed a dramatic uptick of female suicide bombers. In the past four weeks
alone, al-Shabaab conducted two suicide attacks and both perpetrators were
female. One attack targeted a seemingly impregnable municipal building which
housed the mayor of Mogadishu, claiming the lives of eight people, including
Mayor Abdirahman Osman, while the other attack was a failed attempt at a Somali
army camp post. As the militant group gloated from the ensuing public reactions
of shock, fear, and surprise, the paradigm shift of seeking female suicide
bombers to fill their ranks foretells the group’s increasing desperation.
AL-SHABAAB’S TEST-RUN
WITH FEMALE SUICIDE BOMBERS
From al-Shabaab’s
emergence in late 2006, the group has deployed female suicide bombers only
three times in 208 suicide attacks. Al-Shabaab’s first use of female suicide
bombers was an assassination attempt against the Somali interior minister,
Abdishakur Hassan, in 2011. Since then, the group has carried out two more
suicide attacks using women in 2012 and 2015, killing 36 people. Al-Shabab then
placed a moratorium on its use of women until a month ago. Unlike its African
counterpart — Boko Haram — whose suicide operations are primarily executed by
women, al-Shabaab’s use of women to conduct suicide bombings has thus far
proven to be an anomaly. The group operates on the strict gender binary wherein
men are modeled as fighters and women play domestic roles.
DESPERATE TIMES
REQUIRE DESPERATE MEASURES
Studies of women
suicide bombers in other terrorist movements reveal that the use of female
suicide bombers shows a long-term organisational decline. The deployment of
women bombers by groups is frequently regarded as a last act of desperation,
with groups using this tactic an average of 13 years into a campaign. By this
stage, terrorist groups often face vastly depleted male resources, and women
represent a last resort in terms of recruitment. In Somalia, al-Shabab has been
waging a full-fledged insurgency for close to 13 years.
Two central reasons
suggest why al-Shabaab has opted to use female suicide bombers as part of its
arsenal of violence. One is the group’s growing frustration with its inability
to get male suicide bombers past crucial checkpoints on their way to their
intended targets. A female suicide bomber can enable al-Shabaab to penetrate
deep within hardened security structures, which men could not pass through
undetected and unsearched. Given cultural and religious constraints, men are
forbidden from searching women, leaving a gap in security measures that
al-Shabaab can exploit. This was the case in the July 24, 2019 attack when a
female suicide bomber and her accomplice entered the heavily guarded
Mogadishu’s municipal building without being searched or scanned.
The second reason for
introducing female suicide bombers came in response to logistical demands.
Militant groups increasingly turn to the use of women as attackers as a result
of operational counter-terrorism measures, drone strikes, and ground
operations. This trend has been observed in other groups. For instance, after
the start of the Anbar Awakening in Iraq, al-Qaeda, in an act of desperation,
dramatically increased their use of female suicide bombers. Similarly, ISIS
adopted female suicide bombers as a tactical response to territorial collapse
and a mounting military onslaught that they were facing.
Since 2017, al-Shabaab
has pivoted away from making any strides in advancing its strategy of
attrition. My al-Shabaab’s dataset, that chronicles the group’s suicide attacks
from 2006 to 2018, reveal a steady decline in the group’s suicide bombing
effort as a result of territorial losses, high ranking commanders being killed,
high-profile defections and expanded drone strikes. A 2017 truck bomb attack
that claimed the lives of more than 500 civilians profoundly inflamed local
public opinion.
RIPENESS FOR TALKS
Although al-Shabab is
ostensibly on the ropes, it remains a potent threat precisely because of its
use of desperate tactics. Thus, whereas deferment of female suicide bombers as
a tactic was easier in early 2017 when al-Shabab was in a much better strategic
position, today they look more appealing as the group becomes increasingly threatened.
Indeed, this significant tactical shift in a desperate struggle for survival
highlights a situation that William Zartman refers to as a “mutually hurting
stalemate” — in which both sides are suffering, but neither side has enough of
an advantage to escalate toward military victory. It implicitly reveals a
potential readiness for negotiations.
A RAND study has found
that 43% of terrorist campaigns ended through some kind of negotiation. Indeed,
many groups who responded to negotiations were weakened by military campaigns
against them and shifting momentum. The Somali government can capitalise on
this stalemate by consulting with traditional Somali elders – who enjoy
legitimacy in the eyes of different stakeholders – to kick-start the
pre-negotiation process that can eventually lead to a successful negotiated
settlement. However, if the Somali government and its allies reactively respond
to this shift in tactics with increased military pressure, al-Shabaab – in a
quest for survival and resurgence – will continue adapting and shifting
measures to replenish its growing losses and defections. Today it is women
suicide bombers, but tomorrow it could be children.
Source: International
Policy Digest – 14 August 2019
By: Mohammed Ibrahim Shire
https://bit.ly/2P7ZYZY
By: Mohammed Ibrahim Shire
https://bit.ly/2P7ZYZY
"TOGETHER AGAINST EXTREMISM!"
FOLLOW US 👇
https://facebook.com/alhaqcentremalaysia
https://twitter.com/alhaqcentre
https://instagram.com/alhaqcentre
Comments
Post a Comment