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US Launches Military Strike
in Somalia Against al Qaeda Target
Monday 14 Sep 2009Shaaficiyah

A U.S. commando attack in Somalia has killed
an al Qaeda operative who is on the FBI's list of most wanted
terrorists, sources tell ABC News.
Somali residents said a helicopter raid on
Monday by suspected foreign commandos looked to have killed
one of the region's most wanted militants. (nctc.gov)
The dead terrorist, Saleh Ali Nabhan, is believed to have
taken part in the 1998 attacks on U.S. embassies in Kenya
and Tanzania. He is also believed to have orchestrated the
2002 bombing of a resort hotel in Mombasa, Kenya, and a failed
missile attack on an Israeli airliner leaving Mombasa airport.
Several sources tell ABC News at least one
U.S. helicopter fired on a convoy carrying suspected al Qaeda
targets in southern Somalia.
An American official says a U.S. Navy ship
was also nearby to monitor the situation and provide assistance
if needed.
Ali Nabhan's death has not yet been officially
confirmed, but sources tell ABC News that his body is now
in U.S. custody.
Ali Nabhan, a 28-year-old Kenyan, is on the
FBI's most wanted list for terrorist activities such as the
resort and missile attacks as well as participation in the
1998 attack on the U.S. embassies in Kenya and Tanzania.
An internal U.S. government report described
to ABC News details Ali Nabhan's efforts in Somalia as a top
al Qaeda officer in East Africa. The report claims that Ali
Nabhan ran training camps in Somalia for foreign fighters,
including some Americans of Somali descent. Some of the graduates
of these terror camps have been tied to attacks and threats
around the globe, the report states.
According to one source, U.S. military helicopters
attacked suspected al Qaeda elements traveling south of Mogadishu
and killed all the occupants of the convoy. Initial reports
say the U.S. choppers landed on the scene and took the bodies
with them. Ali Nabhan's body was among the causalities, the
source said.
A U.S. official confirms that Ali Nabhan's
body was recovered by the attacking U.S. forces.
In recent years, the U.S. military has been
involved in operations targeting terrorists who use Somalia
as a base of refuge.
It is believed that Ali Nabhan was the target
of an earlier U.S. military strike in March 2008 that involved
the U.S. Navy's launch of two Tomahawk cruise missiles.
In January 2007, the U.S. conducted two airstrikes
by C-130 gunships to target al Qaeda operatives involved in
the 1998 embassy attacks in Kenya and Tanzania. Those raids
were conducted with the cooperation of Ethiopia. It is believed
that a U.S. military team entered Somali territory after the
strikes to assess the strike and to confirm the identities
of the targets.
Somalia Is Refuge for Islamist Terrorists
In June 2007, a U.S. Navy ship fired its guns at Islamist
fighters and foreign jihadists believed hiding in the Puntland
region of Somalia.
The war-torn nation hasn't had a functioning
government since 1991. The current Transitional Federal Government
is battling al-Qaeda backed Islamist militant groups, the
largest being Al Shabaab. U.S. officials have expressed concern
over the country becoming a haven for terrorists, and have
also admitted shipping weapons to the TFG to help the government
survive.
During her African-tour last month Secretary
of State Hillary Clinton reaffirmed U.S. support of the TFG
"Certainly if Al Shabaab were to obtain a haven in Somalia
which could then attract al Qaeda and other terrorists actors,
it would be a threat to the United States."
Source: abcnews
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