U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry said Tuesday that war-torn Somalia was facing a better future, as he made a landmark visit as the most senior U.S. official to visit since Washington's doomed military intervention more than two decades ago.
The top U.S. diplomat spent just a few hours in the capital, Mogadishu, and did not venture out of the heavily-fortified airport, where he met Somalia's internationally-backed President Hassan Sheikh Mohamud and Prime Minister Omar Abdirashid Ali Sharmake.
"More than 20 years ago, the United States was forced to pull back from your country," Kerry said, referring to the infamous 'Black Hawk Down' battle of 1993, when 18 American soldiers and hundreds of Somalis were killed during a military and humanitarian intervention that went wrong.
"I visited Somalia today because your country is turning around," Kerry said. "Now we are returning in collaboration with the international community and bearing high hopes - but also mixed with ongoing concerns."
Kerry's visit was aimed at giving a diplomatic push to Somalia's fragile government in their fight against al-Qaida's Somalia branch, the Shebab, who despite losing territory have continued to attack in the capital, across the country, and in neighboring states.
"The next time I come, we have to be able to just walk downtown," Kerry said as he met President Mohamud, whose presidential compound -- the Villa Somalia -- has been a regular target of Shebab suicide attackers.
"Downtown Mogadishu is very different now than it was two years ago," the Somali president replied, asserting that security was steadily improving and describing Kerry's flying visit as a "great moment" for the chronically unstable nation.
Kerry promised further U.S. support for Somalia, a country wracked by war and repeated humanitarian crises since the collapse of Siad Barre's hardline regime in 1991.
"We all have a stake in your success. The world cannot afford to have places on the map that are essentially ungoverned. That is why Somalia’s return to effective government is an historic opportunity," Kerry said in a video message to the people of Somalia.
"The United States is prepared to do whatever we can to help Somalia get the security, the prosperity, and the peace that you deserve."
- Drone strikes -
Kerry thanked Burundi, Djibouti, Ethiopia, Kenya and Uganda which contribute troops to the 22,000 African Union mission in Somalia (AMISOM) that defends the government in Mogadishu and fights the Shebab.
Since 2007 the U.S. has spent "more than half a billion dollars" funding AMISOM, U.S. officials said.
During the same period the U.S. has carried out more than a dozen air and drone strikes against militants, according to the London-based Bureau of Investigative Journalists which tracks U.S. covert operations. In September U.S. missiles killed Shebab leader Ahmed Abdi Godane.
Kerry also met with civil society leaders inside the airport compound, a giant seaside complex ringed by razor wire and blast walls, and which is also the military base of the AMISOM force.
Other senior foreign officials and leaders have visited Mogadishu in recent years, including U.N. chief Ban Ki-moon, Britain's former foreign minister William Hague and Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan -- but such visits are generally quick, secretive affairs to the risk of Shebab attacks.
The appointment of President Mohamud in 2012 was supposed to signal the beginning of the end of years of instability with elections due in September 2016.
However, the State Department official said that elections "as we know them" were not going to happen.
"This is not going to be a one man, one vote election as we would have hoped it to be," said the official.
Instead the U.S. is now eying "some form of election or selection that is different from what they've done before." Mohamud was elected by parliamentarians who were hand-picked by clan elders.
In February the U.S. appointed its first ambassador to Somalia in 25 years, although Kerry said there was "no fixed timeline for reopening the embassy" inside Mogadishu, with the ambassador based in Kenya.
International Troops Suit Up for Jordan War Games
Thousands of soldiers from 18 countries took part Tuesday in military drills in Jordan jointly overseen by the U.S. army, officials said.
Around 10,000 troops are participating in Jordan's fifth "Eager Lion" annual war games, which will last for two weeks.
The aerial, ground and naval exercises come as a U.S.-led coalition battles the Islamic State (IS) group in neighboring Iraq and Syria.
Several other Arab states have joined a Saudi-led coalition carrying out air strikes on rebels in Yemen.
Even so, "Eager Lion has nothing to do with what is currently happening in the region," U.S. major general Rick Mattson told reporters in Amman.
"The more we work together the stronger we are."
As well as troops from the U.S. and Jordan, military contingents from several nearby Arab states and troops from France, Italy and Pakistan will take part in drills in the Jordanian desert.
The exercises will focus on challenges such as "combating terrorism" and border security, said Jordanian Brigadier General Fhad al-Damin.
Jordan has intensified its air raids against IS since the jihadists burned alive one of its pilots who crashed in Syria earlier this year, but there are fears its participation in U.S.-led strikes could drag the kingdom into nearby conflicts.
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