US airstrike in Somalia killed local militia, not Al-Shabab

US airstrike in Somalia killed local militia, not Al-Shabab
A US security officer looks at the body of an assailant after he was shot and killed by Kenyan police outside the US embassy in the capital Nairobi, in this October 27, 2016 photo, after stabbing an officer with a knife. (AFP)
Updated 10 November 2016
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US airstrike in Somalia killed local militia, not Al-Shabab

US airstrike in Somalia killed local militia, not Al-Shabab

WASHINGTON: A September US airstrike in Somalia killed local militia forces and not Al-Shabab militants as the Pentagon had initially believed, the US military acknowledged in a draft statement obtained by Reuters on Thursday.
The Sept. 28 strike in Somalia’s Galkayo area killed 10 fighters and wounded three, the statement said. No civilian casualties were caused by the strike, it said.
Somalia’s government had asked the United States to explain the strike, which it said had been conducted against forces of the semi-autonomous, northern region of Galmudug.
The errant strike illustrated the perils of Washington’s efforts to battle Al-Shabab, an Al-Qaeda-aligned group, by working with armed Somali factions that are often feuding.
Shabab has been responsible for numerous attacks, including the September 2013 siege of Kenya’s Westgate shopping mall that left at least 67 dead.
The day after the Sept. 28 US strike in Somalia, officials in Galmudug accused a rival region, Puntland, of duping the United States into believing members of its security forces were in fact rebels.
An Al-Shabab spokesman told Reuters at the time it did not have any fighters in the area of the strike.
The draft statement by the US military’s Africa Command said the air strike was carried out at the request of Puntland Security Forces “and our own assessment of the situation.”
A PSF-led patrol had come under attack by a group of armed fighters and in response, “the US conducted a self-defense strike to neutralize the threat, killing 10 armed fighters and wounding three others,” the statement said.
A review of the strike, which began Oct. 4, determined that “The armed fighters were initially believed to be Al-Shabab but with further review it was determined they were local militia forces,” it said.

“Operating under legal authorities, US forces lawfully utilized self-defense to support the PSF in response to hostile actions conducted by the armed group against a partnered force,” the review concluded. “No US forces were killed or injured as a result of this incident.”