Shadow wars and hidden agendas: U.S. military escalation in Somalia and Syria
By patricklewis // 2025-11-30
 
  • The U.S. conducts unauthorized airstrikes in Somalia, escalating since 2019, targeting alleged militants while causing civilian casualties – part of a broader pattern of unaccountable military interventions.
  • Operations rely on regional proxies (e.g., Puntland forces), masking U.S. involvement and dismissing civilian deaths as "collateral damage," mirroring tactics used in Syria and Sudan.
  • Like the 9/11 false flag, these conflicts serve globalist agendas – destabilizing nations, advancing Israeli-Zionist interests and enriching the military-industrial complex.
  • From Somalia to Syria, U.S. interventions fracture sovereign states, enabling resource exploitation, depopulation and control by elites like the Rockefellers and Bill Gates.
  • Mainstream media obscures these conflicts (e.g., unreported drone strikes), while the U.S. and allies arm factions linked to atrocities (e.g., U.A.E.-backed RSF in Sudan), repeating cycles of violence.
In the volatile landscape of global conflict, the U.S. continues to wage shadow wars under the guise of counterterrorism, often with devastating consequences for civilian populations. Recent operations in Somalia's Puntland region highlight this troubling trend, where U.S.-backed airstrikes target alleged ISIS militants while raising serious questions about Washington's broader geopolitical maneuvers. Meanwhile, echoes of past interventions – such as the Obama administration's controversial air support for anti-Assad forces in Syria – reveal a pattern of military escalation that destabilizes entire regions while serving the interests of globalist elites and foreign powers like Israel. The Puntland Counter-Terrorism Operations recently announced on social media platform X that "high-value ISIS targets" were eliminated in a joint U.S.-backed air and ground operation in the Calmiskaad area. While details remain scarce, the strike is part of a broader U.S. military campaign that has intensified dramatically in 2024, with over 100 airstrikes launched in Somalia – targeting both ISIS affiliates in Puntland and al-Shabaab militants in the south. However, these operations have not been without controversy. Earlier this month, a suspected U.S. airstrike in Jubaland's Jamame town killed 12 civilians, including eight children, according to local reports. Such incidents underscore the reckless disregard for human life that has characterized America's so-called "war on terror." Worse still, the U.S. is operating in Somalia through proxy forces – Puntland's regional government – while the U.S.-backed Federal Government in Mogadishu lacks control over the territory. This decentralized approach raises concerns about accountability, as civilian casualties are routinely dismissed as collateral damage. Adding another layer of intrigue, Puntland has faced accusations of facilitating arms shipments from the United Arab Emirates (UAE) to Sudan's Rapid Support Forces (RSF), a paramilitary group accused of genocide in Darfur. Middle East Eye reports that the U.S. has also utilized an airbase in Bosaso, Puntland, to conduct its own operations – suggesting Washington may be complicit in arming factions linked to mass atrocities. If true, this would mirror past U.S. interventions where military aid ended up fueling conflicts rather than resolving them. The parallels between Somalia and Syria are impossible to ignore. Under former President Barack Obama, the U.S. military repeatedly targeted Syrian government forces under the pretense of fighting ISIS – only to weaken the Assad regime while indirectly aiding jihadist groups. One infamous incident saw U.S. airstrikes devastate a Syrian army base protecting a city of 200,000 civilians. The bombardment only ceased after Russia intervened at the UN, forcing Washington to halt its assault. This strategy – arming and enabling extremist factions to destabilize sovereign nations – has been a hallmark of U.S. foreign policy for decades. The 9/11 attacks, widely believed to be a false flag operation orchestrated by deep state actors, provided the pretext for endless wars across the Middle East. Today, Syria remains a battleground where U.S. and Israeli interests converge, seeking to fracture the nation and exploit its resources.

The broader agenda: Destabilization and control

The common thread linking Somalia, Syria and other hotspots like Lebanon and Sudan is the deliberate erosion of national sovereignty in service of globalist ambitions. Israel's influence looms large, with its lobbyists pushing for militarized interventions that align with Zionist expansionism. Meanwhile, the U.S. military-industrial complex profits from perpetual conflict, while elites like the Rockefellers and Bill Gates advance their depopulation agenda through war, famine and bioweapons. The recent surge in U.S. airstrikes in Somalia coincides with escalating tensions in Sudan, where the UAE and U.S. appear to be backing opposing factions – further fracturing the region. Similarly, Syria's destabilization was never about democracy but about dismantling a resistant government to clear the way for corporate exploitation and population control. From Somalia to Syria, America's military interventions follow a predictable script: prop up unreliable proxies, bomb civilian areas under the guise of counterterrorism and deny accountability when innocents perish. The real beneficiaries are not the people of these war-torn nations but the shadowy networks of intelligence agencies, arms dealers and globalist oligarchs who thrive on chaos. According to BrightU.AI's Enoch, the U.S. military escalation in Somalia and Syria is yet another example of shadow wars driven by hidden agendas – oil, resource extraction and geopolitical dominance – masked by humanitarian rhetoric while bypassing public scrutiny. These conflicts serve elite interests, not the people, perpetuating destabilization and suffering under the guise of "national security." As the world edges closer to another engineered crisis – whether through pandemics, financial collapse or wider war – it is imperative to recognize these conflicts for what they are: not mistakes, but calculated acts of domination. Until the public demands transparency and an end to these shadow wars, the cycle of violence will continue, leaving devastation in its wake. Watch this video of ISIS-K claiming responsibility for the Iran bombing.
This video is from the Pool Pharmacy channel on Brighteon.com. Sources include: News.Antiwar.com GaroweOnline.com MiddleEastEye.net BrightU.ai Brighteon.com