Arab News

Twin Somali attacks hit American special forces base, Italian convoy

Attack shows Al-Shabab maintains good intelligen­ce network, says former national security adviser

- Reuters Mogadishu

Somali insurgents mounted their most ambitious attack yet on Monday on a US special forces base used to train Somali commandos and launch drone strikes, while an Italian military convoy was hit in a separate blast in Mogadishu.

Twin vehicle-borne bombs were followed by small arms fire at the base in the town of Baledogle, where Ugandan peacekeepe­rs are also based, a security source and Somali police said. No immediate casualties from the attack were reported.

“Two suicide car bombs from the Middle Shabelle region tried to attack Baledogle airport but they detonated outside the airport gate,” said Major Abdullahi Nur, a police officer.

The Al-Qaeda-linked insurgent group Al-Shabab said it carried out the attack.

The Baledogle base is in the Lower Shabelle region, about 100 km west of Mogadishu. Insurgents attacked it in February using mortars, but caused no casualties.

The attack showed Al-Shabab maintains a good intelligen­ce network and the capability to mount complex operations, said Hussein Sheikh-Ali, a former national security adviser and founder of the Mogadishu-based security thinktank the Hiraal Institute.

The attack focused on a part of the base that houses the US special forces, who supervise Somali forces on operations, he said.

“It implies they have a high intelligen­ce and a degree of capability just to get close to that place,” he told Reuters. “They don’t look like people on the back foot.” Monday’s attacks also follow a dip in US airstrikes in Somalia. Africa Command has only carried out four airstrikes in the past two months, one of which only dement. stroyed a vehicle. For comparison, it carried out 28 airstrikes in Somalia in the first three months of 2019. Africa Command said it was monitoring the situation but declined to give details.

Convoy hit

In a statement claiming responsibi­lity for the attack, Al-Shabaab said its fighters had breached the base perimeter, though police said they had not got inside the fence. “In the early hours of Monday morning, an elite unit of soldiers from Harakat Al-Shabab Al-Mujahideen’s Martyrdom Brigade launched a daring raid on the US military base,” the group’s press release said.

“After breaching the perimeters of the heavily fortified base, the mujahideen (holy warriors) stormed the military complex, engaging the crusaders in an intense firefight.”

Al-Shabab is fighting to overthrow the weak, UN-backed Somali government and enforce its own strict version of Islamic law. Somalia has been riven by civil war since 1991, when warlords overthrew a dictator then turned on each other.

In a separate attack on Monday in Mogadishu, a roadside bomb targeted an Italian military convoy. A Reuters journalist saw a seriously damaged armoured vehicle bearing a small Italian flag sticker. The Italians are present as part of a European Union mission training Somali forces.

No injuries were reported, Italy’s defence ministry said in a stateThe attacks come on the heels of several other major AlShabab attacks.

On Sept. 22, insurgents attacked and looted a base in El-Salini, 60 km southwest of Mogadishu, using a suicide car bomb and gunmen.

A week earlier, Al-Shabab attacked Burundian peacekeepe­rs, claiming it killed 14 soldiers. The African Union said three Burundian soldiers were killed. Burundi did not respond to requests for comment.

 ?? Reuters ?? People inspect the damage caused at the scene of Monday’s attack on an Italian military convoy in Mogadishu, Somalia.
Reuters People inspect the damage caused at the scene of Monday’s attack on an Italian military convoy in Mogadishu, Somalia.
 ??  ?? Algerian army chief Gaid Salah faces sustained calls to step down from protesters.
Algerian army chief Gaid Salah faces sustained calls to step down from protesters.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Saudi Arabia