US special forces have aborted a mission to capture an al Shabaab leader in Somalia after coming under heavy attack.
Their target was Mukhtar Abu Zubeyr, also known as Ahmed Godane, who
claimed responsibility for last month's Nairobi shopping mall massacre
that killed at least 67 people, according to a Somali intelligence
official.
A Navy Seal team staged a pre-dawn raid on a house in the southern town
of Barawa after swimming ashore before the al Qaeda-linked militants
rose for morning prayers.
Reinforcements arrived at the house and Seal Team Six, the same unit
that killed Osama bin Laden in Pakistan in 2011, encountered fiercer
resistance than expected, a senior US military source told The
Associated Press.
After a 15 to 20-minute firefight, the unit leader decided to abort the mission and they swam away, the source said.
Al Shabaab later posted pictures on the internet of what it said was US
military gear left behind in the raid, including bullets, a GPS device
and a stun grenade.
US Secretary of State John Kerry, in Bali for an economic summit, spoke
about the failed US operation, and said terrorists "can run but they
can't hide".
A Pentagon spokesman confirmed that US military personnel had been
involved in a counter-terrorism operation against a known al Shabaab
terrorist in Somalia, but did not provide details.
He said there were no US casualties in the raid.
Within hours of the attack, the US Army's Delta Force carried out a raid in Libya, and captured an al Qaeda leader wanted for the 1998 bombings of the US Embassies in Kenya and Tanzania that killed more than 220 people.
The aborted Somalia operation came 20 years after the famous "Black
Hawk Down" battle in Mogadishu, in which a mission to capture Somali
warlords went wrong when militia forces shot down two US helicopters and
killed 18 American soldiers.
Residents in Barawa, a seaside town some 150 miles south of Mogadishu, said they woke up to the sound of heavy gunfire.
The SEAL team killed a guard and battled their way inside a two-storey
beachside house, where al Shabaab fighters reportedly lived, before
being driven back.
A US official said the mission was aimed at capturing a "high-value target" while trying to avoid civilian casualties.
A Barawa resident called Mohamed Bile said militants closed down the
town in the hours after the raid, and were carrying out house-to-house
searches to find evidence that a spy had tipped off the US.
"We woke up to find al Shabaab fighters had sealed off the area and
their hospital is also inaccessible," he told The Associated Press by
phone. "The town is in a tense mood."
Speaking after the US raid, Somalia's Prime Minister Abdi Farah Shirdon
said his government was "collaborating with the world and neighbouring
countries" in its battle against al Shabaab.
Last month, addressing the UN Human Rights Council in Geneva, he
denounced the group's "cowardly attack" in Kenya, but said a military
solution to their insurgency was not enough.
He praised the 17,000-strong African peacekeeping force in Somalia for
improving security and fighting al Shabaab, who he said were now
weakened. But he said Somalia needed economic stability to cut youth
unemployment.
"This provided al Shabaab a building ground to recruit and spread their
destructive ideology. It is therefore essential to create educational
and economic opportunities for youth," he warned.
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