US
forces target al-Shabaab leader in Somalia, seize Al-Qaeda leader in
Libya
US
forces carried out two major operations in Africa on Saturday,
targeting an al-Shabaab leader in Somalia in connection with the
recent Nairobi mall siege and nabbing an Al-Qaeda leader in Libya
wanted for the 1998 bombings of US embassies.
RT,
5
October, 2013
A
US Navy SEAL team approached a seaside house in the Somali town of
Baraawe before sunrise and fired on an unidentified target,
reportedly killing an al-Shabaab leader. The SEALs were forced to
withdraw before the killing could be confirmed, The New York Times
quoted a senior American official as saying.
The
raid was reportedly in response to the recent deadly attack on a
Nairobi shopping mall, which killed more than 60 people. Al-Shabaab -
a Somalia-based cell of the Al-Qaeda terror network - has claimed
responsibility for the siege.
“The
Baraawe raid was planned a week and a half ago,”
the American security official stated. “It
was prompted by the Westgate attack,”
the official added, referring to the Nairobi mall siege.
The
Pentagon has confirmed the operation. "I
can confirm that yesterday, October 4, US military personnel were
involved in a counterterrorism operation against a known Shabaab
terrorist,"
AFP quoted Pentagon spokesman George Little as saying.
The
Saturday firefight lasted over an hour and helicopters were called in
for support, according to witnesses.
The
Somali government was warned ahead of time about the attack, a senior
Somali official confirmed.
A
spokesman from al-Shabaab said that one of the group’s fighters had
been killed, but that the group had won back the assault. US
officials first reported that the leader of the group had been
seized, but later retracted the statement.
US
forces capture Al-Qaeda leader in Libya
Abu
Anas el-Liby.(Photo from wikipedia.org)
US
forces also captured senior Al-Qaeda leader Abu Anas el-Liby - wanted
for his alleged role in the 1998 US Embassy bombings in Kenya and
Tanzania - in the Libyan capital of Tripoli on Saturday, putting to
rest a 15-year manhunt.
El-Liby
was put on the US government’s most wanted list in 2000 after a New
York court indicted him for his role in planning the embassy attacks.
A $5 million reward was set by the FBI for information leading to his
capture.
He
was apprehended alive in a joint operation by the US military, the
CIA, and the FBI, and is currently in American custody, The New York
Times quoted an official as saying.
Senior
officials in Libya’s transitional government were reportedly
unaware of the planned operation. However, a US official
claimed that the Libyan government was also involved in it.
Four
attackers identified in Westgate mall siege
Also
on Saturday, Kenya's military spokesman named four attackers involved
in the four-day siege at Westgate Mall in the capital of Nairobi,
which left more than 60 people dead in September.
The
attackers are Abu Baara al-Sudani, Omar Nabhan, Khattab al-Kene and
Umayr, confirmed Major Emmanuel Chirchir. Al-Kene and Umayr are
members of al-Hijra - a Kenyan extremist group affiliated with
al-Shabaab – the former head of the UN Monitoring Group on Somalia,
Matt Bryden, told AP via email. He added that Nabhan may be a
relative of an infamous Al-Qaeda operative, Saleh Ali Saleh Nabhan,
who was killed in a US military strike in 2009.
It
was also revealed that a Sudanese man trained by Al-Qaeda was among
the leaders of the mall siege, Kenya's government said.
An
injured woman (C) is helped out of the Westgate Shopping Centre where
gunmen went on a shooting spree, in Nairobi September 21,
2013.(Reuters / Siegfried Modola)
Over
200 civilians were freed after the four-day bloody hostage crisis in
the Kenyan capital of Nairobi.
Masked
assailants armed with AK-47s and grenades launched their attack on
the Westgate mall on September 21, reportedly targeting non-Muslims.
Аmong
the victims of the attack were citizens from the US, Britain, France,
Canada, Australia, China, South Korea, India, South Africa, the
Netherlands, and Ghana. Five Americans were wounded.
The
attack was claimed by Somalia's militant al-Shabaab group, which has
links to Al-Qaeda. It said the hostage siege was a response to Kenyan
military operations in Somalia. The group had previously threatened
to strike the mall - a popular destination for the city’s
expatriate community.
The
FBI is currently investigating whether any of the attackers were US
citizens, after media reports alleged that some of the names of the
gunmen tweeted by al-Shabaab during the siege appeared to match up
with the Twitter handles of Somalian immigrants living in the US.
Kenya
Defence Forces soldiers comb the rooftop of the Westgate shopping
mall in Nairobi September 24, 2013.(Reuters / Noor Khamis)
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