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Africa Horn
SAS hunts fleeing Al-Qaeda Africans
2007-01-14
AN SAS team is hunting down Al-Qaeda terror suspects as they try to flee war-torn Somalia after the crushing defeat of the country’s Islamist forces last week. The suspects are trapped between invading Ethiopian troops — assisted by US special forces and American mercenaries — and the Kenyan army and SAS troops who are acting as “training advisers” but have been leading operations along the border, providing a “screen” to trap terrorists.

SomaliaÂ’s interim government yesterday claimed the last stronghold of the Islamic movement had been captured with the fall of Ras Kamboni, a coastal area less than two miles from the Kenyan border.

Eleven suspected Al-Qaeda terrorists were said to have been arrested last week but three key suspects, believed to be responsible for the bombing of US embassies in Kenya and Tanzania in 1998 and an attack on an Israeli-owned hotel in Mombasa, were still on the run yesterday.

The dramatic victory by Ethiopian troops was the culmination of months of preparation inside and outside Somalia by American and British special forces, and US-hired mercenaries. The “professional assistance” was recruited by officials based in the US embassy in Nairobi at the end of 2005 as part of a deniable operation, sources claimed. “The brief was to enter Somali territory with the objective of studying the terrain, mapping and analysing landing sites and regrouping areas, and reporting on suitable ‘entry and exit points’,” one source said.

According to a CIA source, American intelligence and military have been bankrolling the Ethiopians since the start of last year, as well as providing them with satellite surveillance, technical, military and logistical support. “They not only gave them money and technical support but even spare parts where needed,” the source said.

Although it was a goal of US policy to overthrow the Union of Islamic Courts which had taken power in most of Somalia, “all the investment in the Ethiopians was ultimately to get to the three suspects,” said the source. “No army in Africa was capable of doing this on its own, and it was unlikely that these Al-Qaeda bad guys were just going to go away, so the United States decided to do something about it. The goal was limited to liquidating these targets. It was certainly not to re-establish ourselves in Somalia, nor to open up a new front.”

Last week America showed its hand when it unleashed an airstrike from an AC-130 gunship on a Somali village where intelligence suggested the three key suspects, Fazul Abdullah Mohammed, 32, Saleh ali Saleh Nabhan, 38, and Abu Taha al-Sudani, were holed up. The airstrike missed the men but, according to a senior American official, the attack killed eight to 10 “significant Al-Qaeda affiliates”. A small team of US special operations troops has remained at the scene collecting evidence to identify the victims.
Posted by:Fred

#14  Military ops or are the SAS boys just hunting them for sport?
Posted by: SteveS   2007-01-14 22:24  

#13  American mercenaries, Bounty Hunters, Head Hunters..is a heart throb!! With modern sophisticated weapons and tactics, and painted stripped like a zebra; is what we needed all along, to 'shake up the natives'!!
Posted by: smn   2007-01-14 18:34  

#12  No probs, just want to be clear. The SAS is one of the world's finest.
Posted by: Steve White   2007-01-14 12:17  

#11  Steve, my intent was not to call the SAS mercenaries. The article does also mention mercenaries.
Posted by: Mike N.   2007-01-14 11:16  

#10  SAS hunts fleeing Al-Qaeda Africans

[have to assume that] any "Brit*" who was captured in Somilia was a commited Muslim Nazi and would not hesitate to use a bio weapon, nuke or chem in an attack on our cities.

add: [we have to assume] Muslim Nazis of some stripe are already here; al-Q, Hezz'allah, Abu Sayyaf, Hamass the Qudz Pudz....

*How many of the "Brits" spoke the Mother tongue of England as their 1st language?
Posted by: RD   2007-01-14 10:26  

#9  Pappy, I'd say more logistical rather than logical.
Posted by: Jackal   2007-01-14 08:50  

#8  One huge advantage we now have in this area of spares supply is that half of NATO is former Warsaw Pact. Makes supplying MiG, T-55, Hind, Sukhoi, and related equipment with spares very simple : just hand over some cash to one of the Eastern Bloc NATO countries for an unsupervised visit to one of their depots, and voila! Especially useful when you want to have CAS from Other Than Americans - as is the idea of handing over old Cobra gunships to Ethiopia. If a flight of 4 Cobras in desert camo hits a terrorist camp and shoots the hell out of it, only the one that swings in low for the BDA needs to be from Ethiopia. The other 3 can stay up and provide cover for the scouting one, and that means they can be anybody's. Funny thing is, the US Marine Corps still uses SuperCobras as attack helicopters - no good way to tell the difference visually between Cobra and SuperCobra.
Posted by: Shieldwolf   2007-01-14 02:18  

#7  Who Dares Wins
Posted by: Besoeker   2007-01-14 02:16  

#6  Umm, let's make clear the SAS aren't mercenaries, ours or anyone else's. The SAS are some of the finest soldiers in the world.
Posted by: Steve White   2007-01-14 01:24  

#5  Excuse me, but can I just mention how disposable cheap mercenaries are? They're the next best thing to proxies.

I wonder if any of them would like to visit Sadr city.
Posted by: Mike N.   2007-01-14 00:28  

#4  I very much doubt capture is in the vocabulary of the SAS teams.
Posted by: Sock Puppet of Doom   2007-01-14 00:20  

#3   American mercenaries. The Pentagon finally figured out that mercenaries are worth their weight in gold.
Posted by: Mike N.   2007-01-14 00:20  

#2  I hope they don't capture any of them....

ifyouknowwhatImean
Posted by: Barbara Skolaut   2007-01-14 00:14  

#1  Â“They not only gave them money and technical support but even spare parts where needed,”

A logical act, pointed out by a Rantburger some weeks back.
Posted by: Pappy   2007-01-14 00:10  

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