The Palm Beach Post

U.S. special operations soldier killed, 4 injured

First American casualty in Africa since Niger ambush.

- By Paul Sonne Washington Post

A U.S. special operations soldier was killed in Somalia on Friday and four other U.S. service members were wounded, marking the first time an American has died in action in Africa since four U.S. soldiers were killed in an ambush in Niger late last year.

The Americans were conducting an operation against the al-Qaida-linked extremist group al-Shabab alongside partner forces from Somalia and Kenya when they came under enemy mortar and small-arms fire, U.S. Africa Command said in a statement. The incident occurred on Friday afternoon local time.

The Pentagon didn’t identify the U.S. commando who was killed, pending notificati­on of next of kin.

The U.S. service members were assisting a large force of approximat­ely 800 local forces, as the group conducted a multiday operation to liberate villages from al-Shabab control in the Jubaland region and clear the extremists from contested areas, according to the U.S. military.

The forces were also setting up “a permanent combat outpost” to help expand the Somali government’s control over the region, where the jihadist insurgency for years has destabiliz­ed the east African nation, particular­ly in rural areas.

U.S. forces were offering “advice, assistance and aerial surveillan­ce during the mission,” U.S. Africa Command said, noting that the mission was designed to increase the Somali government’s ability to provide services to innocent civilians under al-Shabab rule.

“The population in the region had historical­ly supported the government, and the Somali forces had prepared for this mission by coordinati­ng heavily with and securing the support of local authoritie­s ahead of time,” U.S. Africa Command said. “The overarchin­g goal in Somalia for the Department of Defense is to help the [government] provide a safe and secure environmen­t for the Somali population.”

Three of the four wounded U.S. service members were evacuated to receive additional medical treatment, the military said. The fourth received sufficient medical care on the scene.

Though U.S.-backed operations and airstrikes have dented al-Shabab, the militants have continued to carry out deadly attacks in Somalia, including a bombing in October of last year that left some 300 people dead in the capital of Mogadishu.

The extent to which U.S. troops are assisting behind the scenes or fighting shoulder-to-shoulder with local troops has become a point of contention, not only in Somalia but also in other parts of the world where U.S. forces are helping fight extremist groups by backing proxy forces.

Friday’s incident marked the first time a U.S. service member has died in action in Somalia since Navy SEAL Kyle Milliken, a senior chief petty officer, was killed in May of last year in a firefight with al-Shabab militants.

Miliken’s was the first U.S. combat death in Somalia since 1993, when 18 U.S. service members died battling Somali militiamen in an episode that became known as “Black Hawk Down.” Though the Pentagon initially described Miliken as operating behind Somali troops, U.S. officials later acknowledg­ed that U.S. special operations soldiers had been fighting together with the Somali forces.

U.S. military operations in Africa have come under greater scrutiny since an Oct. 4 ambush by Islamic State militants in the West African country of Niger left four U.S. soldiers dead.

A U.S. military report on that incident publicized by the Pentagon last month without being fully released found that multiple individual and institutio­nal failuresle­ft the U.S. troops vulnerable to the ambush.

Marine Corps Gen. Thomas Waldhauser, who heads U.S. Africa Command, said at a Pentagon press conference that he had taken steps to better ensure the safety of U.S. service members in future operations.

“We are now far more prudent,” Waldhauser said. “The missions we actually accompany on have to have some type of strategic value in terms of the enemy we’re going against. Do they have a strategic threat to the United States?”

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