DAJJAL BUSH MASSACRES ENTIRE SOMALI VILLAGE

U.S. strikes at al Qaeda in Somalia, "many dead"
By Guled Mohamed
Reuters
Tue Jan 9, 2007
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MOGADISHU (Reuters) - A U.S. attack plane killed many people with
barrages of gunfire in a remote Somali village occupied by Islamists
thought to be hiding at least one al Qaeda suspect, a Somali
government source said on Tuesday.

In the first known direct U.S. military intervention in Somalia since
a failed peacekeeping mission that ended in 1994, an AC-130 plane
rained gunfire on the desolate southern village of Hayo near the
Kenyan border late on Monday.

"I understand there are so many dead bodies and animals in the
village," the senior source told Reuters.

The U.S. Navy also confirmed it had moved the aircraft carrier
Eisenhower to the Somali coast -- Africa's longest -- to beef up a
naval cordon it had already put there as the Islamists sought refuge
in the remote southern tip.

"They are, with other ships, making sure that terrorists are not able
to use the sea as a means of transport," said Charlie Brown, a
spokesman for the U.S. Fifth Fleet, which is based in the Gulf state
of Bahrain.

U.S. intelligence believes Abu Talha al-Sudani, identified in grand
jury testimony against Osama bin Laden as an explosives expert from
Sudan, is the leader of east Africa's al Qaeda cell and has been in
and out of Somalia for over a decade.

"The Americans are saying an al Qaeda member heading operations in
east Africa is among the Islamists there," the source said. He did not
know the man's name or whether he died.

U.S., Ethiopian and Kenyan intelligence officials say some Islamists
have provided shelter to a handful of al Qaeda members, including
suspects in the 1998 bombings of the U.S. embassies in Kenya and
Tanzania and a 2002 hotel bombing on the Kenyan coast.

Besides al-Sudani, Washington has named Comorian Fazul Abdullah
Mohammed and Kenyan Saleh Ali Saleh Nabhan among the al Qaeda members
in Somalia.

The Washington Post, quoting unnamed military sources, said al-Sudani
was one target of the raid.

'PUFF THE MAGIC DRAGON'

Ethiopian and Somali troops have chased al-Sudani since he was leading
Islamist fighters near Buur Hakaba, close to the government base
Baidoa, in the early days of a war which began around Christmas,
Somali government officials told Reuters.

Hayo is in the southern tip of Somalia between Afmadow and Doble,
areas where Ethiopian and Somali troops chased the Islamists' last
remnants after ending their six-month rule of Mogadishu and most of
southern Somalia in a two-week offensive.

Though many have suspected an American hand in the Somali conflict,
this attack is the first solid evidence of it and is in line with
previous U.S. attacks targeting al Qaeda members.

An unmanned Predator drone flown from the U.S. Horn of Africa
counter-terrorism base in Djibouti killed an al Qaeda suspect in Yemen
in 2002, and the AC-130 was almost certainly flown from there by the
elite Special Operations Command.

The AC-130 is a propeller-driven converted cargo plane derived from
the AC-47 gunships flown in Vietnam that were known as "Puff the Magic
Dragon". It has sophisticated sensors that allow it to pinpoint
targets with heavy automatic cannon fire.

The lumbering, 29 meter (95 foot) long plane can fire 1,800 rounds a
minute from a Gatling gun and has in its arsenal a 105mm howitzer --
ordinarily a crew-fired ground artillery cannon that has to be towed
by a truck.

The Islamists deny any al Qaeda links, saying the accusation has been
invented to justify intervention in Somalia.

DISASTROUS INTERVENTION

Born out of sharia courts, the Islamists took Mogadishu and much of
the south in June and threatened just weeks ago to overrun Baidoa,
then the only town the government controlled.

Ethiopian troops with armor and air power, along with government
forces, quickly pushed the Islamists from Baidoa, forced them out of
their stronghold, Mogadishu, and caused them to scatter to Somalia's
desolate southern edges.

Hundreds of Islamist fighters are now hiding in the bushland there,
while Kenya's military is trying to seal its lengthy border to prevent
them escaping.

Mindful of a disastrous intervention in the early 1990s -- related in
the book and film "Black Hawk Down" -- Washington had until Monday not
overtly involved its forces in the war.

But it did receive a setback when CIA was found in April to have paid
despised Mogadishu warlords to help fight the Islamists on
counter-terrorism grounds, only for them to lose the city to
disciplined Islamist fighters in June.

The presence of troops from traditionally Christian Ethiopia has
stirred both nationalist and religious fervor in mainly Muslim
Somalia, with a series of protests and small attacks on Ethiopian
troops in recent days.

Somali President Abdullahi Yusuf, who on Monday entered Mogadishu for
the first time since his appointment in 2004, insisted the Ethiopians
were not occupiers and would leave soon.

Ethiopia wants to withdraw his troops within a few weeks, but that may
depend on the speed with which an African peacekeeping force can be
mustered to replace them.

(Additional reporting by Eric Beech in Washington, Mohammed Abbas in
Bahrain, and Bryson Hull in Nairobi)

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