Somalia: The Fall of a Society

By Ismail H. Warsame, MSc, PhD Candidate


Somalia today stands as a painful monument to collective failure. No one is better. No one is innocent. No one can honestly point a finger at another while keeping their own hands clean. From Villa Somalia to the federal member states, from political elites to self-proclaimed opposition figures, from clan elders to business interests, the nation has been abandoned to its fate.
The tragedy of Somalia is no longer merely a crisis of governance. It is a crisis of purpose. A nation without vision eventually loses direction. A nation without patriotism eventually loses cohesion. A nation without leaders willing to sacrifice for the common good eventually loses itself.
Today, no one truly speaks for Somalia.
The Federal Government speaks of authority while presiding over division. Federal Member States speak of federalism while often pursuing narrow political interests. Opposition groups speak of reform while waiting for their turn at power. Political actors denounce corruption while benefiting from the very systems they condemn. Every camp claims righteousness. None offers a national project capable of rescuing the country from its decline.
Meanwhile, the ordinary Somali citizen watches helplessly as the political class wages endless battles over power, positions, constitutional manipulation, clan arithmetic, and personal enrichment. Roads collapse. Public services deteriorate. Security remains fragile. Youth flee the country in search of dignity elsewhere. The educated abandon hope. The poor are left behind.
The greatest tragedy is not that Somalia is poor. Nations have recovered from poverty before.
The greatest tragedy is that Somalia has lost its sense of national purpose.
There was a time when Somalis, despite their differences, could rally around a shared vision. Today, every issue is viewed through the lens of clan, faction, region, or foreign sponsorship. The idea of Somalia itself is under assault. National interest has become subordinate to personal interest. Public office has become a route to private gain.
And where national weakness emerges, foreign interests inevitably follow.
History offers a cruel lesson: weak states invite intervention. Fragmented societies attract predators. Countries that cannot defend their own interests eventually become arenas where others pursue theirs.
There are powerful regional and international actors who would not mourn the further fragmentation of Somalia. Some would welcome a permanently divided Somalia as an opportunity to expand influence, secure strategic territory, exploit resources, control coastlines, or advance geopolitical ambitions. They need not even conspire openly. Somali politicians often perform the work of disintegration themselves.
No foreign power can destroy a country that remains united.
But a divided nation can destroy itself.
The painful reality is that Somalia’s enemies did not create this crisis. They merely exploit it. The roots of the problem lie within. It lies in the failure of leadership. It lies in the abandonment of statesmanship. It lies in the replacement of national vision with short-term political calculations.
When fools seize power, institutions become weak.
When opportunists seize power, public resources become private property.
When patriots disappear from public life, the nation becomes vulnerable.
And when an entire political class loses sight of the national interest, society itself begins to decay.
What we are witnessing today is not merely a political crisis. It is the slow erosion of the moral foundations upon which nations are built. Trust is disappearing. Legitimacy is disappearing. Hope is disappearing.
A society can survive poverty.
A society can survive conflict.
A society can survive political disputes.
But a society cannot survive indefinitely when its leaders cease to believe in the nation they claim to govern.
Somalia stands at such a crossroads.
The country does not suffer from a shortage of intelligence, resources, or talent. It suffers from a shortage of leadership. It suffers from a shortage of courage. It suffers from a shortage of men and women willing to place Somalia above clan, above faction, above personal ambition, and above foreign patronage.
The warning signs are everywhere.
A fractured political order.
Weak institutions.
Growing public cynicism.
Persistent insecurity.
Unresolved constitutional disputes.
Deepening regional divisions.
Foreign actors competing for influence.
These are not signs of national renewal. They are symptoms of national decline.
Yet decline is not destiny.
The first step toward recovery is honesty. Somalia’s leaders must stop pretending that someone else is responsible. Every level of government bears responsibility. Every political actor bears responsibility. Every institution that has placed narrow interests above national interests bears responsibility.
The nation does not need more slogans.
It needs statesmanship.
It does not need more political theatre.
It needs national vision.
It does not need more clan mobilization.
It needs civic patriotism.
Until that transformation occurs, Somalia will continue drifting toward uncertainty while its citizens pay the price.
History will ultimately record this era not by the speeches politicians delivered, but by whether they saved the nation when it mattered most.
The verdict, so far, is not encouraging.

——-
Support WDM — the home of fearless, independent journalism that speaks truth to power across Somalia and the region.
Tel/WhatsApp: +252 90 703 4081
Annual Subscription: US$40
Warsame Policy & Media Network (WAPMEN) — Commentary and Critical Analysis.

Leave a Reply