U.S. Confirms Shebab Chief Killed in Bombing Raid in Somalia

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The United States said Friday it had killed the chief of al-Qaida-linked Shebab militants in a bombing raid in Somalia which President Barack Obama said could prove a model for an assault on Islamic State jihadists.

The Pentagon confirmed that Ahmed Abdi Godane perished in the raid on Monday in which U.S. drones and manned aircraft rained Hellfire missiles and laser-guided bombs on a gathering of Shebab commanders.

Godane had boasted that Shebab was behind the siege at the Westgate shopping mall in Nairobi last year, which killed at least 67 shoppers, staff and security personnel.

Obama, speaking in Wales after the NATO summit, seized on the results of a Pentagon probe into Monday's raid to give definition to his separate effort to combat another radical Muslim extremist group, Islamic State (IS), following days of criticism over his anti-terror strategy.

"We are going to degrade and ultimately defeat (IS), the same way that we have gone after al-Qaida, the same way we have gone after the al-Qaida affiliate in Somalia," Obama said.

"We released today the fact that we have killed the leader of al-Shebab in Somalia and have consistently worked to degrade their operations."

Obama has been under fire for admitting last week he did not yet have a strategy to combat IS in Syria and in imprecise language since had vowed to eliminate or manage the group -- before finally settling Friday on the phrase "degrade and destroy."

The killing of Godane allowed the president to fold the fight against Islamic State into what the White House says is a successful and wider strategy to combat radical Islamic extremism, which has included efforts to take out leaders of radical groups.

The Pentagon had previously announced the raid in Somalia but had been unable to confirm that Godane had been killed before Friday.

Somalia's President Hassan Sheikh Mohamud thanked the United States, and called on Shebab fighters to lay down their weapons.

  

White House spokesman Josh Earnest said Godane's demise represented "a major symbolic and operational loss to the largest al-Qaida affiliate in Africa and reflects years of painstaking work by our intelligence, military and law enforcement professionals." 

U.S. officials did not specify how Godane's death was confirmed, but in similar cases in the past, U.S. intelligence agencies have tested DNA samples and also used information gleaned from eavesdropping. 

The State Department had listed Godane as one of the world's eight top terror fugitives and analysts say his death marks a crippling setback for Shebab forces.

Godane, 37, who reportedly trained in Afghanistan with the Taliban, took over the leadership of the group in 2008 after then chief Adan Hashi Ayro was killed by a U.S. missile strike.

Godane had overseen the group's transformation from local insurgency to major regional guerrilla threat, after eliminating his rivals inside the organization.

Under pressure in Somalia from African Union forces and having lost control of key towns in the past three years, Godane had shifted the group's focus from a previous mainly nationalist agenda to one espousing global jihad.

  

U.S. officials vowed to keep up the pressure on Shebab fighters, who under Godane had forged an alliance with al-Qaida.

The United States "will continue to use the tools at our disposal -- financial, diplomatic, intelligence and military -- to address the threat that al-Shebab and other terrorist groups pose to the United States and the American people," Earnest said.

"We will also continue to support our international partners, particularly the African Union Mission in Somalia, that are working to support the Federal Government of Somalia build a secure and stable future for the Somali people," it said.

Shebab militants are fighting to overthrow the Somali government, regularly launching attacks against state targets and in neighboring countries that contribute to the African Union force there.

Monday's U.S. air strike came days after AU troops and government forces launched "Operation Indian Ocean", a major offensive aimed at seizing key ports from the Islamist rebels.

Last October, U.S. special operations forces launched an attack on a house in Barawe against another top Shebab commander but were forced to withdraw without killing their target.

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