Postby Voltage » Thu Mar 31, 2011 7:51 am
No, he wouldn't have. You know in hindsight, it was a very disastrous expedition but what I want to know is just what kind of cloud 9 were the Somalis in? From everything I have pieced together just by reading these articles, it was clear the world was united in preventing any attempts to set a precedence of Africans fighting over colonial borders. It would be a headache for the whole continent and the Ogaden War held very great ramifications for Africa.
I am more than sure the Americans did not help because privately they supported Somalia being stopped from succeeding. I can imagine Brzezinski telling Carter quietly "boy am glad the Soviets are putting a stop to this". If you also look, it was the Soviets who stopped the Ethiopians from following us into Somalia after the defeat.
I think both east and west were united in realizing allowing African borders to be successfully fought over would be disastrous and powder keg for the whole continent.
In fact one of the articles it said an American policymaker hinting that for sure the Soviets would put a stop to Ethiopian "adventurism" after Somalia would be defeated and sure enough they did. Menguste had nothing to do with it. In the grand scheme, fortunately for him and unfortunately for us, the issue was greater than Somali-Ethiopian rivalry but put the whole post-colonial African continent's construct in jeopardy.
Why didn't the Somalis realized this from the beginning instead of letting the hype about militaristic irredentism developing and transforming to armed conflict in 1964 and '77?