Pentagon says ‘self-defense strikes’ conducted in area north of Kismayo against Shebab militants who were threatening US, Somali forces. | |||||
Middle East Online | |||||
WASHINGTON
- A pair of drone strikes in southern Somalia this week killed about a
dozen Shebab militants who were threatening US and Somali forces, a US
official said Tuesday.
The "self-defense strikes" were
conducted Monday and Tuesday in an area north of Kismayo, Pentagon
spokesman Navy Captain Jeff Davis said.
"This was in
southern Somalia against al-Shebab targets that were posing an imminent
threat to US (and Somali) personnel," he said.
"We think about 12 militants were killed," he added.
Calls seeking additional details from the US military's Africa Command were not immediately returned.
The
Al-Qaeda-linked Shebab group was chased out of the capital Mogadishu in
2011 but remains a dangerous threat in both Somalia and neighboring
Kenya where it carries out frequent attacks.
Shebab
leaders have vowed to bring down the Somali government, which is
supported by the international community and defended by the African
Union's 22,000-strong AMISOM mission.
At least five people including two children were killed Monday in a car bomb blast outside government offices in Mogadishu.
The Pentagon last week confirmed that senior Shebab leader Hassan Ai Dhoore was killed in a drone strike.
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Thursday, 14 April 2016
12 militants killed in Two US drone strikes in Somalia
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