By ABDI GULED
MOGADISHU, Somalia — A U.S. missile strike that killed a
high-ranking intelligence officer for al-Shabab has illustrated the stepped-up
pressure on the al-Qaida-linked militants, both from American attacks and from
African Union ground troops.
An al-Shabab commander said one of two men killed in
Sunday's attack on a moving vehicle was Sahal Iskudhuq, who helped choose
bombing targets and used to be in charge of kidnapping foreigners.
Commander Abu Mohamed told The Associated Press on Monday
that al-Shabab will "retaliate with a bigger blow and pain against the
enemy."
It was al-Shabab gunmen who attacked Nairobi's upscale
Westgate Mall with guns and grenades last September, killing at least 67
people. But there was no immediate indication Iskudhuq had been involved in
planning that assault.
Somali officials said they believe the missile was fired
from a drone.
The U.S. has carried out several airstrikes in Somalia
recent years, though not nearly as many as in Pakistan, which has seen hundreds
of attacks, or in Yemen, which has seen scores.
A Pentagon spokesman, Army Col. Steven Warren, said Monday
he could confirm a U.S. military operation against a senior al-Qaida and
al-Shabaab leader in a remote area near Barawe. He would say nothing else about
it, including the outcome of the operation or the name of the target.
But Mohamed identified the probable target as Iskudhuq, who
he said was with al-Shabab's intelligence unit, helping plan attacks.
Previously, Iskudhuq had been in charge of kidnappings of
foreigners and organizing ransom deals, he said. He also was a trusted friend
of al-Shabab's spiritual leader, Ahmed Abdi Godane, under whose direction the
extremists forged an alliance with al-Qaida.
Iskudhuq's driver was also believed killed in the strike,
the commander said.
Under cover of darkness Sunday night, masked fighters
collected what remained of the militants — bits of flesh from the charred hulk
of the car in which they had been traveling, Mohamed said.
Mohamed, who visited the scene, said the fighters chanted,
"God is great" as they put the body parts in sacks. They then sped
away in pickup trucks to bury the men, whose bodies were charred beyond
recognition, he said by telephone.
Somalia's president said the killing is "another
blow" to the Islamic rebels who have been pushed back by African Union
troops. President Hassan Sheikh Mohamud said on Twitter that Somalia's
government is working with its partners to eliminate al-Shabab from Somalia.
Last week, more than 4,000 troops from neighboring Ethiopia
officially joined a peacekeeping force under the African Union banner.
Al-Shabab has been in decline since being ousted from the
Somali capital, Mogadishu, by African Union forces in 2011, and now the group's
leaders also are being targeted by missiles fired by U.S. drones.
Sunday's strike underscores the increasing importance with
which Western powers view counterterrorism operations in the Horn of Africa.
Last October, a U.S. military strike in Somalia hit a
vehicle carrying senior members of al-Shabab, killing its top explosives
expert.
Earlier that month, U.S. Navy SEALs raided a coastal Somali
town to take down a Kenyan al-Shabab member. The SEALs withdrew before
capturing or killing their target.
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