Los Angeles Times

Shabab leader is reported killed by U.S. drone strike

- By Robyn Dixon and W.J. Hennigan

JOHANNESBU­RG, South Africa — The Somali extremist group Shabab faced a new setback after one of its top surviving commanders was reported killed in a U.S. drone strike.

Col. Steve Warren, a Pentagon spokesman, said Friday that the military had conducted a counter-terrorism operation in Somalia against an unnamed highvalue member of the Al Qaeda-linked militant group; the operation involved “no boots on the ground,” he said.

A U.S. Defense Department official, who was not authorized to speak on the record, confirmed Friday that Shabab leader Adan Garar was the target of the attack and was believed to been killed, though results of Thursday’s strike are still being assessed.

However, Kenyan news media, citing intelligen­ce officials, reported that the strike had killed Garar, a strategic commander who helped plan the Shabab’s high-profile attack on the Westgate shopping mall in Nairobi in 2013.

According to the reports, Garar was targeted while traveling in a car with two other men near the southweste­rn town of Bardera, in a region that borders Kenya. Garar was a member of the Shabab’s shura , its governing council.

In the Westgate mall attack, four Shabab gunmen killed at least 63 people, including children; the attackers spared only those who could prove they were Muslims. The gunmen were also killed, after holding out for days against Kenya’s military and police.

Kenyan intelligen­ce sources quoted in Friday’s news reports said Garar also planned two attacks in the north of the country last year. In one, gunmen dragged passengers from a bus and killed 22 of them. In another, gunmen attacked men in a quarry and killed 34.

The Shabab has lost a series of top commanders to U.S. drone strikes, denting the militia’s operationa­l streng th.

Its secretive commander, Ahmed Abdi Godane, was killed in September by a drone strike, as was his predecesso­r, Aden Hashi Ayro, in 2008.

Another top Shabab official, Yusuf Dheeq, was killed last month in a drone strike south of Mogadishu, according to Somali officials.

In recent years, the Shabab has lost much of the territory it once controlled, as well as the ports that were its main source of revenue. However, it remains capable of launching devastatin­g guerrilla attacks and suicide bombings in Somalia and neighborin­g Kenya.

The report of Garar’s killing comes amid speculatio­n that the Shabab, hitherto allied with Al Qaeda, might be debating whether to follow the example of the Nigerian group Boko Haram and pledge allegiance to Islamic State.

Islamic State on Thursday accepted Boko Haram’s pledge, and the group urged militants who couldn’t make it to Syria or Libya to join Boko Haram’s fighters in Nigeria.

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