Kasmaal  Independent Somali news and analysis website .

    • Home
    • All News
    • more news
    • RECENT POSTS
    • Somali news
    • Merkel set for fourth term as chancellor as CDU leads parliamentary vote, exit polls say
    • Turkey says it will send back ISIS prisoners even if citizenships revoked
    • General Marchenko: ‘Mykolaiv was to be next city to fall, but Russia terribly failed’
    • Ukrainian Armed Forces repel enemy attacks in four regions
    • Somalia president hails lifting of arms embargo as government vows to wipe out al-Shabab militants
    • Captured Somali pirates arrive in India to face trial over ship hijacking
    • Martyred while serving nation: President Raisi dies in helicopter crash
    • Stay Connected
      • RSS for posts

    AFRICOM launches airstrike in Somalia shortly after troop pullout

    19 January, 2021 | Filed under: All News,more news,Opinion,RECENT POSTS,Somali news | Posted by: Abdillahi

    • A U.S. Marine Corps F-35B Lightning II, assigned to the15th Marine Expeditionary Unit, departs after in-flight refueling while supporting Operation Octave Quartz over Somalia, Jan. 5, 2021. The U.S. launched its first airstrike Jan. 18 on al-Qaida-aligned militants in Somalia since recently withdrawing its ground forces from the country.

    STUTTGART, Germany — U.S. Africa Command launched its first airstrike against al-Qaida-aligned militants in Somalia since announcing days ago that it had completed its withdrawal of ground troops from the country.

    AFRICOM said it bombed and destroyed an al-Shabab compound in southern Somalia on Monday, which came after attempts by the militants to target Somalia’s military leaders.

    “We will continue to support our partners and disrupt al-Shabab’s efforts,” Maj. Gen. Dagvin Anderson, head of U.S. Special Operations Command Africa and leader of the task force that oversaw the recent relocation of about 700 U.S. troops, said in a statement.

    AFRICOM said it fulfilled the Pentagon directive to reposition forces by Jan. 15 after several weeks of operations that included the USS Nimitz Carrier Strike Group, the 15th Marine Expeditionary Unit, and the naval sea bases USS Makin Island and USS Hershel “Woody” Williams.

    AFRICOM hasn’t detailed exactly where its forces formerly based in Somalia will be moved. But some are expected to go to Djibouti and Kenya, two neighboring countries with U.S. military outposts used for conducting cross-border operations.

    The repositioning was completed without serious incident and ahead of schedule, AFRICOM commander Gen. Stephen Townsend said.

    “The fact there were no serious injuries or significant loss of equipment, is a testament to the determination, professionalism and skill of our U.S. service members and Department of Defense civilians,” he said in a statement.

    Townsend was in Somalia over the weekend and met with the U.S. ambassador there, Don Yamamoto, as well as Somali military officials, to discuss efforts aimed at countering al-Shabab.

    AFRICOM regards the guerrilla group as the largest and most violent of al-Qaida’s franchises. It “remains a serious threat to the region and the U.S.,” Townsend said.

    Townsend also met with Marines and sailors aboard the Makin Island, which has been positioned off Somalia’s coast for much of the withdrawal operation.

    In recent years, the U.S. military presence had quietly grown in Somalia, where U.S. special operations troops worked alongside Somali forces in a long-running battle against militants.

    During the past two years, AFRICOM has carried out more than 200 airstrikes in the country, mostly directed at al-Shabab fighters.

    President Donald Trump ordered U.S. troops out of the country as part of a broader push to reduce the number of forces in conflict zones before President-elect Joe Biden takes office.

    In Afghanistan, U.S. troop levels are now at 2,500, the lowest number since the war’s earliest months and down from about 13,000 one year ago.

    The incoming Biden administration has not yet said whether it would consider returning forces to either country.

    vandiver.john@stripes.com
    Twitter: @john_vandiver

    Sourcestripes.com/news/

    All News

    • Israeli bomb storm on Gaza kills 23 as outcry over aid blockade grows
    • Putin stays silent on ceasefire and offers ‘direct talks’ with Ukraine in Istanbul
    • European leaders win Trump’s support to pressure Putin into unconditional ceasefire
    • Türkiye Discovers 20 Billion Barrels of Oil Off Somalia’s Coast
    • Pakistan shoots down 77 drones in crushing response to Indian aggression
    • Leading aid group shuts Gaza soup kitchens amid Israeli blockade
    • Türkiye’s first domestic flying auto ‘AirCar’ takes to sky
    • India strikes Pakistan in retaliation; tensions escalate with warplanes downed
    • The Horn Of Africa States: When A Corrupt Political Class Ruins A Country, The Somali Case – OpEd
    • Merz to Trump team: Stay out of German politics
    • Home
    • Merkel set for fourth term as chancellor as CDU leads parliamentary vote, exit polls say
    • Turkey says it will send back ISIS prisoners even if citizenships revoked
    • General Marchenko: ‘Mykolaiv was to be next city to fall, but Russia terribly failed’
    • Ukrainian Armed Forces repel enemy attacks in four regions
    • Somalia president hails lifting of arms embargo as government vows to wipe out al-Shabab militants
    • Captured Somali pirates arrive in India to face trial over ship hijacking
    • Martyred while serving nation: President Raisi dies in helicopter crash
    • RSS
    Contact@kasmaal.com
    Log in - Powered by Kasmaal -