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Monday, January 31, 2011

The Last Resort?

We tried to squelch chaos in Somalia until the Black Hawk Down incident. Ethiopia tried a few years ago. Somalis themselves at best have managed to create small enclaves of relative but fragile stability. The sainted international community is not interested in doing anything more that trying to contain the chaos.

You'd think that the failure of the acceptable sources of authority to organize Somalia would make other options seem less unacceptable. But that is not the case:

[The] government of Somalia is being urged to hire Saracen International, “a controversial South African mercenary firm,’’ to protect Somali officials and help fight pirates and Islamic militants. Erik Prince, the former US Navy SEAL who created Blackwater Worldwide, another private military firm, has been involved in brokering the arrangement. The story was headlined “Blackwater Founder Said to Back Mercenaries,’’ and its disapproving tone was hard to miss.

That negative publicity may have undone the deal. The Times subsequently reported that Somali authorities “have cooled to the idea’’ of hiring private militiamen. “We need help,’’ a government official was quoted as saying, “but we don’t want mercenaries.’’

Better to tolerate chaos, starvation, and murder than have the wrong sorts of people stop that sort of mayhem, apparently.