AF-SOOMAALI

So­ma­lia: Why Am­bas­sador Tina Kaidanow is in Mo­gadishu?


Pub­lic Diplo­macy and Daily Se­cu­rity Brief­ing for Re­gional Se­cu­rity News. Am­bas­sador Tina Kaidanow is an en­voy of U.S. team­work with other na­tions key to fight­ing ter­ror­ism. Fight­ing ter­ror­ism glob­ally re­quires part­ner­ships with other coun­tries, such as So­ma­lia, Dji­bouti and So­mali Di­as­pora, Tina Kaidanow, U.S. am­bas­sador-at-large and co­or­di­na­tor for counter-ter­ror­ism, said.
Am­bas­sador Tina Kaidanow said ter­ror­ist group Al-Qaeda’s power has di­min­ished in re­cent years through loss of lead­er­ship. How­ever, other groups are tak­ing up the same cause as Al-Qaeda, and some pose a sig­nif­i­cant threat, Kaidanow said. The Is­lamic State of Iraq and the Lev­ant (ISIL) has been “hugely de­struc­tive” in Iraq and Syria, Kaidanow said.

“The emergence of these more radical and violent groups is, in most cases, associated with a loss of effective government control, as in Yemen, Syria, Libya, Iraq and Somalia,” Kaidanow said. “Groups that have become active in these areas are mainly localized, but some pose a threat to Western interests in Europe and in the United States, and we take these security concerns very seriously.”

Am­bas­sador Tina Kaidanow said de­vel­op­ing more part­ner­ships to com­bat the ter­ror­ist groups is vi­tal in the coun­tert­er­ror­ism fight. She said more than 60 part­ners are con­tribut­ing in anti-ISIL ef­forts to stop the group’s mo­bi­liza­tion, in­ter­rupt its fi­nan­cial re­sources, “coun­ter­act ISIL’s mes­sag­ing and un­der­mine its ap­peal.”
Kaidanow said the U.S. can part­ner with oth­ers, both gov­ern­men­tal and non­govern­men­tal. Kaidanow added part­ner­ships are bro­ken down into five dif­fer­ent groups of coun­tries.

The United King­dom, France and Aus­tralia are coun­tries in the first group and have proven ca­pa­ble of re­spond­ing to ter­ror­ist threats. The sec­ond group is made up of re­gional coun­tries or in­sti­tu­tions, such as AMI­SOM from East Africa, which have the abil­ity to fill gaps that in­di­vid­ual coun­tries can’t.

The third group is made up of coun­tries such as Niger, Chad, Oman, Bangladesh, Tunisia and Mau­ri­ta­nia, which have “the po­lit­i­cal will to work with us,” but need more re­sources to com­bat threats.

The fourth group in­cludes coun­tries that may have dif­fer­ent de­f­i­n­i­tions of ter­ror­ism, or have even ex­ac­er­bated ter­ror­ist threats. Kaidanow said it is still vi­tal that the U.S. reach out and at­tempt to work with these coun­tries.

The fi­nal group in­cludes coun­tries such as Rus­sia and China, in which co­op­er­a­tion has­n’t been con­sis­tent over time. De­vel­op­ing a more sta­ble part­ner­ship with them is the ul­ti­mate goal.

“The foreign-terrorist-fighters issue reminds us that building partnerships is just the means to an end, not an end in itself,” Kaidanow said. “Moving toward a model where we have a broad range of capable governmental, nongovernmental and institutional partners will aid us in comprehensively degrading the threats and, perhaps even more critically, getting ahead of the curve on curbing the growth of violent extremism.”

Back­ground: Am­bas­sador Tina Kaidanow as­sumed her cur­rent po­si­tion as Am­bas­sador-at-Large and Co­or­di­na­tor for Coun­tert­er­ror­ism at the State De­part­ment on Feb­ru­ary 18, 2014. Pre­vi­ously, she served as Deputy Am­bas­sador at the U.S. Em­bassy in Kabul from Sep­tem­ber 2012 to Oc­to­ber 2013. Am­bas­sador Kaidanow be­came the Prin­ci­pal Deputy As­sis­tant Sec­re­tary in the Bu­reau of Eu­ro­pean and Eurasian Af­fairs in July 2011, hav­ing served ear­lier as the bu­reau’s Deputy As­sis­tant Sec­re­tary re­spon­si­ble for is­sues re­lated to Greece, Turkey, Cyprus and the Cau­ca­sus (Au­gust 2009 – June 2011).