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Issue 399

Front Page

News Headlines

BBC Correspondent Confirms Somaliland Times Report That Egypt Returned Pirates Because Of Fear Of Retaliation

US Says No Talks With Al-Shabaab, Kenya Signs Agreement With Al-Shabaab And UN Wants To Talk With Al-Shabaab

Loose Talk By Foreign Minister

Somaliland’s Ministry Of Education Announces Results Of The National Exams

Profound Concern At Indefinite Postponement Of Somaliland Presidential Poll, Say Election Observers

Borama’s Al-Aqsa And Buroa’s Ilays Students Commended For Their Accomplishments

Somaliland Electoral Crisis Must Be Resolved Urgently, Leading Authorities Say

Sillanyo Rules Out Meeting Face To Face With President Rayale

Local and Regional Affairs

Somaliland "Official" Says President Sharif Brought Al-Qa'idah To Somalia

U.N. Probes if Somali Contractors Are Diverting Aid, Funding Rebels

Somali Official: 6 More UN Vehicles Missing

African Union Base In Somalia Is Hit

U.S. Kills Top Qaeda Militant In Southern Somalia

Somalia MPs Oppose Djibouti Anti-Piracy Deal

Children In Somalia Face Unprecedented Danger As Food Shortages And Fierce Fighting Deliver Double Blow

AU Vows To Stay Put In Somalia

What Could Suicide Bombings Mean For Somalia?

International Literacy Day: ADRA Emphasizes Role Of Literacy In Poverty Reduction

Egypt Hands Over Suspected Pirates To Puntland

SAC Condemns Rayale For Killing Innocent People & Closing The Parliament

Appeal To The Somaliland President & Vice-President: Resign So The Nation Can Get Back To Its Democratic Journey

Puntland Leader Warns Somalia Govt, Urges Somaliland Peace

Somali Insurgents Vow Revenge For US Killing Of Leader

Dead Al-Qaida Suspect Tied To Somali Youths In U.S.

A Talk With Somalia’s President

Editorial

Somaliland’s Democracy Scores A Victory But Government And Police Must Be Held Accountable

Features & Commentary

Recognizing The Value Of Somaliland

Accepting Somaliland May Help Stabilize Africa's Horn

Who’s Who In Somaliland Politics

Somali 'Travelers': The Baldest, Holiest Gang, Part II

Analysis: Keeping A Lid On Somaliland

Somali Instability Still Poses Threat Even After Successful Strike On Nabhan

In Somalia, A Leader Is Raising Hopes For Stability

A Struggle For Education Amid Anarchy In Somalia

Death And Disappointment From The Sea

The Badlands Of Somalia: The New Front Line

Slippery Slope In U.S. Somali Relations

Arming Somalia

Fighting In Somalia Takes Big Toll On Children
Mothers Of Invention

International News

Obama Unveils New Approach To Missile Defense Program

Freed, Shoe-Hurling Iraqi Alleges Torture In Prison

Amid Large Protests, Iran Leader Calls Holocaust A Lie

Egypt’s Mufti Says Women Can Wear Trousers

Slovenia And Croatia Finally Overcome Border Deadlock

Opinion

The End Of Siyad Barre's Disciples In Somaliland

Loosing The Faith In The System

The Damaging Cost Of The Political Violence In Somaliland

Tragedy And Hope: Somaliland’s Political Crisis

Somaliland: Time To Reconcile The Nation

Military Strikes Won't Help Stabilize Somalia

Can The People Of Somaliland Learn Their Lesson Two?

'Black Hawks' Return To Somalia

By Tristan McConnell - GlobalPost

NAIROBI, Kenya, September 19, 2009 — A strike by six U.S. helicopter gunships on an Al Qaeda target in Somalia on Monday marks a dramatic shift in U.S. policy to a direct hands-on approach to the failed state in the Horn of Africa.

The American gunships attacked a convoy of vehicles carrying Al Qaeda militants and killed  Saleh Ali Saleh Nabhan, an Al Qaeda leader wanted for the bombings of two U.S. embassies in East Africa in 1998 and an Israeli-owned Kenyan hotel in 2002.

The raid shows U.S. President Barack Obama's administration does not intend to allow Somalia to remain a safe haven for Al Qaeda and it is determined to thwart the drive by Islamic militant group Al Shabaab to control Somalia. Al Shabaab has direct links to Al Qaeda and uses foreign troops in its battles to control Somalia.

Monday’s successful strike also begins to exorcize the demons of "Black Hawk Down," the infamous 1993 incident in which 18 U.S. troops died in a failed attempt by U.S. forces to seize a warlord in the Somali capital Mogadishu. But the action also brings some risk. Already Al Shabaab is threatening retaliation. 

In recent years the U.S. has limited its actions in Somalia to attacks by long range missiles and drones. But this action was direct and put American troops, however briefly, on Somali soil. By successfully targeting Nabhan, the U.S. shows that it has precise strategic information. A futher intelligence boon for the U.S. should come from the seizure of Nabhan's body, the two injured men traveling with him and whatever equipment or computers they might have.

In Monday's raid, six U.S. helicopters swooped on a convoy of vehicles and strafed them with heavy gunfire. A Land Cruiser carrying Nabhan and at least four other senior militants was badly hit as were a number of "technicals," improvised battle wagons made from pick-up trucks loaded with heavy machine guns, according to eyewitnesses quoted by wire services.

Then two U.S. helicopters landed and there was a brief firefight. Nabhan and other militants were killed. The U.S. troops jumped from the helicopters, went up to the vehicles and seized Nabhan’s body and two other injured militants. They quickly flew off by helicopter to a U.S. navy warship waiting nearby.

The attack took place close to the coastal town of Barawe, about 150 miles south of Mogadishu, deep inside territory controlled by Al Shabaab, an Islamist insurgent group.

Local elder Abdinasir Mohamed Adan said, “There was a military operation carried out by four foreign choppers in Erile village. A car was destroyed, we are also hearing that some of the vehicle’s passengers were taken on the choppers.”

“There was only a burning vehicle and two dead bodies lying beside it,” described Mohamed Ali Aden, a bus driver who passed the burnt out car soon after the attack.

U.S. officials in Washington have confirmed that special forces were involved in the attack.

The surgical attack, said analysts, is a departure for U.S. military intervention in Somalia. “This marks an evolution in U.S. operational and intelligence capabilities,” said Peter Pham of Virginia’s James Madison University.

In the past air strikes on suspected terrorist targets in Somalia — including an attempt to kill Nabhan with Tomahawk missiles in March last year — have missed, killing civilians instead.

Monday’s attack was both more successful in achieving its aim and in avoiding the kind of civilian casualties that have dogged the fight against Islamist insurgents in Afghanistan and Pakistan, as well as Somalia. It shows the U.S. intends to attack Al Qaeda wherever it finds operatives from Somalia to Afghanistan to Pakistan.

Nabhan’s killing will be welcomed in Washington. He was regarded as one of the most high profile Al Qaeda terrorists operating in Somalia and was considered to be a crucial link between Al Qaeda and Al Shabaab.

“This is a setback for Al Shabaab and Al Qaeda in East Africa because Nabhan was the communication link with the wider Al Qaeda network in Arabia,” Pham said.

The Kenyan-born 30-year-old was wanted by the FBI for questioning in connection with the 2002 bombing of an Israeli-owned hotel in Mombasa and the near-simultaneous attempt to shoot down an Israeli airplane leaving from the airport there.

Three Israelis and 10 Kenyans were killed when suicide bombers blew themselves up at the Paradise Hotel in November 2002 shortly after terrorists narrowly missed hitting a Tel Aviv-bound plane with their surface-to-air missiles. Nabhan was blamed for both attacks.

Nabhan was also wanted by Kenyan police for alleged involvement in the August 1998 bombings of U.S. embassies in Nairobi and in Dar es Salaam that killed 229 and wounded thousands.

Al Qaeda has claimed responsibility for all of these deadly attacks.

Since fleeing to Somalia, Nabhan has not played a leadership role in Al Shabaab but has managed terrorist training camps, analysts said.

Al Shabaab commanders threatened reprisals. "They will taste the bitterness of our response," an Al Shabaab commander told Associated Press.

"Al Shabaab will continue targeting Western countries, especially America ... we are killing them and they are hunting us," said spokesman sheikh Bare Mahamed Farah Khoje, to Reuters. 

U.S. troops and other Western forces in East Africa are bracing for retaliation.

“A backlash in Somalia is bound to happen, but what is more worrying is what kind of retaliation we might see against Western targets in the Horn of Africa region,” said Rashid Abdi, a Somalia analyst at the International Crisis Group.

Despite the presence of about 5,000 African Union peacekeepers, Al Shabaab and allied Islamist militias have besieged the government of President Sheikh Sharif Ahmed raising fears among Western governments that Somalia may became an Afghanistan-like safe haven for Al Qaeda terrorists.

In response the U.S. and other Western governments have bolstered their support to Ahmed’s shaky government which controls only small pockets of the capital. In June the U.S. confirmed it sent 40 tons of arms and ammunition to Ahmed’s forces.

"Certainly if Al Shabaab were to obtain a haven in Somalia which could then attract Al Qaeda and other terrorist actors, it would be a threat to the United States," said U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton after meeting with Somalia's beleaguered leader Sheikh Sharif Ahmed during her visit to Africa in August.

Source: Global Post, Sept 17, 2009


 


 


 













 

 


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