Mogadishu, SOMALIA — Somali Defense Minister Ahmed Moalim Fiqi yesterday delivered inflammatory threats against political opposition figures, warning of military action if they defend themselves against government pressure while employing shocking antisemitic rhetoric, threatening military action that would make opposition members scream “are you Jews?”; language that strips away any remaining pretense of democratic governance from an administration that simultaneously claims to champion counter-terrorism while losing territory daily to Al-Shabab.
The defense minister’s remarks, delivered at a government rally in Mogadishu, represent a dangerous escalation in the Federal Government’s campaign against political opposition, transforming implicit intimidation into explicit threats of military violence while wrapping these threats in the language of religious and ethnic hatred. The invocation of antisemitic tropes by a senior official of a government heavily dependent on Western support, including significant assistance from the United States where antisemitism is particularly sensitive, reveals either profound strategic miscalculation or such confidence in impunity that international sensibilities no longer constrain federal behavior.
This rhetoric emerges as part of a pattern established by Prime Minister Hamza Abdi Barre’s previous expressions of support for Hamas as “righteous Mujahideen” and his employment of antisemitic stereotypes, statements that raised questions about the Federal Government’s commitment to the international counter-terrorism partnerships it claims to value. The escalation from prime ministerial rhetoric to defense ministry threats demonstrates how extremist language, once tolerated at the highest levels, metastasizes throughout government structures, corrupting institutions and alienating the very partners upon whom Somalia’s survival depends.
From Subtle Pressure to Explicit Threats
The military exists to defend the nation against external threats and internal extremism, not to suppress political opposition or enforce partisan compliance. By publicly threatening to deploy military force against political opponents, the defense minister transforms the Somali National Army from a national institution into a partisan militia serving executive power.
The timing of these threats, coming as the government faces mounting criticism over security failures and constitutional manipulation, suggests desperation rather than strength. Unable to defeat Al-Shabab on the battlefield or win political arguments through democratic means, the Federal Government resorts to naked intimidation wrapped in extremist rhetoric. This transformation—from attempting to govern through consent to ruling through fear—marks a critical phase in Somalia’s democratic deterioration.
The defense minister’s role in delivering these threats proves particularly significant given his portfolio’s focus on security matters. When the official responsible for protecting Somalia against extremist threats instead employs extremist rhetoric against political opponents, the corruption of institutional purpose becomes complete. The ministry that should be coordinating operations against Al-Shabab instead threatens violence against citizens exercising democratic rights, revealing priorities that serve personal power rather than national security.