MAPUTO, Mozambique
The Southern African Development Community (SADC) military mission in Mozambique (Samim), which was deployed on July 15, 2021 to fight the Islamic insurgents terrorising the Northern Cabo Delgado Province since 2017, is scheduled to end by June 2024.
Mozambican security forces
will then take full responsibility for security.
We asked military science and
defence expert Thomas Mandrup, who has published a paper on the
situation after a recent ground visit, to evaluate the mission.
The militia insurgency by the
group now calling itself Al Sunnah had been spreading rapidly in the
Cabo Delgado Province from late 2019.
SADC member states had been
putting pressure on the Mozambican government to allow a regional military
intervention to prevent the insurgency from spreading in the region. Their fear
was that Islamic State (Isis), to which the extremists are affiliated,
would get a bridgehead from which they could expand their operations.
More than 850,000
civilians had been forced to flee their homes after violent attacks by the
extremists.
The insurgency caused the
suspension of a $60 billion investment in a liquefied natural gas
project led by multinational energy
giants TotalEnergies, ENI and Exxon. The hope had been that
the development would drive local, national and regional economic growth.
The SADC decided
to deploy a combined force of 2,210 troops. The mission is dominated
by a South African contingent of 1,495 soldiers.
Other troops come from
Botswana, Tanzania, Lesotho, Namibia and Angola.
The thinking was that they
would eliminate the Al Sunnah presence in its area of operation.
The SADC military mission had
several main strategic objectives:
- neutralising the extremists
- assisting the Mozambique Defence
Armed Forces in planning and undertaking operations
- training and advising the Mozambique
forces.
The SADC member states also
planned to supplement the military efforts with humanitarian aid and even
development projects to sustain the progress made by the mission.
An internal assessment
report was presented at the July 2023 meeting of the then SADC leadership
troika (Zambia, Namibia and South Africa).
It concluded that the SADC
mission had achieved its objective of reducing the insurgents’ capacity and
assisting the Mozambican military. In addition, 570,000 internally displaced
people had returned to their homes by August 2023, as the security situation
had improved.
However, since the second half
of 2023, the number of attacks has increased, leading to a rise in the
number of displaced people.
Samim has found it difficult
to fulfil its mandate of training the Mozambican force because they couldn’t
identify their training needs.
The development and
humanitarian efforts have been limited at best.
The assessment report also
concluded that the mission had suffered because it was never given the
capabilities outlined in the initial SADC pre-mission report of April
2021.
Firstly, the force was smaller
than initially recommended. It never went beyond 2,200, a far cry from the
mandated 2,900. The mission lacked numbers and capabilities in terms of
air, naval and ground assets. Lack of funding was key to the mission’s limited
size and capabilities.
Secondly, coordination and
joint operations with the Rwandan forces, which had been deployed in July
2021, the SADC force and the Mozambican security forces have been problematic.
For example, they had different communication equipment and the soldiers spoke
different languages.
Thirdly, intelligence
gathering capabilities were weak. Insufficient information before operations
commenced increased the danger to troops and civilians.
Fourth, intelligence and
operational information was frequently leaked to the extremists.
An outside intervening force
must have the full backing of the host nation. And it must understand the area
and situation it’s being deployed into. The Mozambican government and military
have not always worked with the mission. Seemingly hidden agendas, or different
priorities, have hampered the mission.
The Mozambican government’s
delayed and timid response to the growth of the insurgency from its beginning
raises a number of questions:
- why was its response so slow and
insufficient?
- why did it oppose regional involvement for
so long?
- why has the SADC mission at times found it
difficult to strike at the core of the insurgents?
The difficult political
situation in the capital Maputo notably factional battles inside the
governing Frelimo and the fallout over the huge 2013-2014 Tuna
bonds corruption scandal, hampered the mission.
During my recent
fieldwork several interviewees even suggested that a faction of Frelimo
had at times supported the insurgents.
In addition, strong personal,
political and economic interests affected operational realities. Frelimo has
strong ties to the region going back to the war of independence against
Portugal, and later the civil war between Renamo and Frelimo. The cleavages
from the civil war have never been really solved and are still visible.
It was clear that the
Mozambican government didn’t have a clear plan to address the many causes of
conflict. For example, it did not understand why the insurgency had attracted
support from large sections of the local population.
Many people living in Cabo
Delgado view the Mozambican state as removed from their everyday
realities. Some even see the government as illegitimate and the cause of their
suffering. An effective stabilisation effort needs various interventions – military,
socioeconomic and political – to resolve the difficult conditions people are
living under.
The SADC mission was starved
of the capabilities and numbers needed to be an effective fighting force. The
local population considered it less effective than, for instance, the Rwandan
force, which was also better equipped and trained.
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