Las Vegas Review-Journal

U.S. says airstrike killed Somalia al-shabab leader

- By Abdi Guled The Associated Press

MOGADISHU, Somalia — The

U.S. military on Friday confirmed it killed a high-level commander of the al-shabab extremist group with an airstrike in Somalia over the weekend, targeting a man blamed for planning deadly attacks in the capital of the Horn of Africa nation.

President Donald Trump earlier this year approved expanded military operations against the al-qaidalinke­d al-shabab, including more aggressive airstrikes and considerin­g parts of southern Somalia areas of active hostilitie­s. Al-shabab is the deadliest Islamic extremist group in Africa.

A U.S. Africa Command statement said the strike on July 30 killed Ali Mohamed Hussein, also known as Ali Jabal. He is the highest-level alshabab commander killed this year.

The statement said he “was responsibl­e for leading al-shabab forces operating in the Mogadishu and Banadiir regions in planning and executing attacks against the capital of Mogadishu.”

Ali also had served as the extremist group’s shadow governor for Mogadishu and had been one of alshabab’s most outspoken officials. In his last public speech earlier this year, he boasted that the extremist group had the upper hand in guerrilla warfare against Somalia’s government in the capital.

The U.S. statement said the airstrike occurred near Tortoroow, an al-shabab stronghold in Lower Shabelle region in southern Somalia “as a direct response to al-shabab actions, including recent attacks on Somali forces.” It said no civilians were killed in the strike.

The U.S. Africa Command has told The Associated Press it was a drone strike.

Al-shabab often carries out deadly attacks on high-profile targets in Mogadishu, including Somali military and African Union checkpoint­s and facilities, hotels and the area around the presidenti­al palace.

The killing of Ali “disrupts alshabab’s ability to plan and conduct attacks in Mogadishu and coordinate efforts between Al-shabab regional commanders,” the U.S. statement said.

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