1 u.s soldier killed, 4 wounded in somalia.

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WASHINGTON — An American Special Operations forces soldier was killed and four others were wounded on Friday in a southwestern Somalia gun battle against fighters for the Islamic extremist group the Shabab, three Defense Department officials said. The attack marked the first combat casualties that have been publicized in Africa since an ambush in Niger in October.

The American forces were alongside Somali troops at a small outpost near the town of Jamaame when they came under small arms and mortar fire, Defense Department officials said on Friday.

The American team was backed up by armed surveillance aircraft overhead, the officials said. The Shabab, an affiliate of Al Qaeda, claimed credit for the attack; it has been fighting American forces in East Africa for more than a decade.

In a post picked up by the SITE Intelligence Group, which monitors online extremist message boards, the Shabab said that its fighters had struck a joint American-Somali base on the outskirts of Kismayo, mounting what it called a “fierce attack.”

The roughly 500 American troops in Somalia are mostly composed of a number of Special Operations units, including Army Green Berets, Marine Raiders and Navy SEALs spread across the country.

Friday’s fight, the extremist group said, came a day after the Shabab overran a Somali National Army base near Baidoa and ambushed other Somali soldiers in Mogadishu’s Huriwa district.

The attacks come as the American military looks to draw down counterterror forces in Africa as part of a larger Pentagon plan to pivot its focus on combating Russia, China and other great powers.

It was the second American combat death in Somalia in the past 13 months. Last May, a member of the Navy SEALs was killed and two other American service members wounded in a raid that the Pentagon initially described as an “advise, assist and accompany” mission.


Defense Department officials said at first that Somali government troops had led that operation, and the Shabab militants had attacked American forces that were hanging back. But American military leaders later acknowledged that the Navy SEALs were operating alongside the Somali military when they launched the raid.


Friday’s attack also follows the Oct. 4 ambush in Niger that killed four American soldiers, their interpreter, and four Nigerien troops. That ambush has opened a debate in Washington over the American military mission in Africa. The Pentagon has carefully monitored the spread of radical Islamic jihad across Africa but insisted that American troops are there to train and partner with local forces, not necessarily to fight.

Over the past year, American military officials have expressed new concerns about the Shabab, which was responsible for one of the deadliest terrorist attacks on African soil when it struck a popular mall in Nairobi in 2013. Officials worry the extremist group is in the midst of a resurgence after losing much of the territory it once held in Somalia and many of its fighters in the last several years.

In September 2014, American officials said they believed a drone strike crippled the group by killing its leader, Ahmed Abdi Godane, who at the time was one of the most wanted men in Africa. That strike was followed by another one in March 2015, when Adan Garar, a senior member of the Shabab, was killed in his vehicle.


But the Shabab no longer appears to be crippled by the killings of Mr. Godane and Mr. Garar. In the past two months, Shabab militants have claimed responsibility for attacks that have killed more than 150 people, including Kenyan soldiers stationed at a remote desert outpost and beachcombers in Mogadishu, the capital.

Two months ago, the group carried out multiple coordinated attacks against African Union peacekeeping forces, killing dozens of Ugandan soldiers.

On Monday, The New York Times reportedthat a sweeping Pentagon review of elite United States commando missions is likely to result in a sharp cut — by as much as half over the next three years — in Special Operations forces in Africa.

Defense Secretary Jim Mattis and Gen. Joseph F. Dunford Jr., the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, have ordered the military’s Special Operations and Africa commands to present a range of options by mid-June to balance rising security challenges — which also include North Korea and Iran — with vital counterterrorism operations.

More than 7,300 Special Operations troops are working around the world, many of them conducting shadow wars against terrorists in Yemen, Libya, Somalia and other hot spots.


https://nytimes.com/2018/06/08/world/africa/american-soldier-killed-somalia-.html
 

Sheikh

Jaalle Ugas ''Comrade Ugas''
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Damn what’s going on in Kismayo @Sheikh @nine

Exactly bro I think it's a heist going on.

I've been hearing stuff about Marehan in Kismayo caught some fugitives that were Al Kabob members.

So that's been going on in Jubaland.

One of the fugitives even threaten to kill Jubaland wasiirs for no reason.

So yeah these killers are getting locked up.
 

BankaTuyo

حيران
Donald Trump thinks this happened in an unknown country. :ftw9nwa::ftw9nwa::ftw9nwa::ftw9nwa::ftw9nwa::ftw9nwa:
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