"We have confirmed that Ahmed Godane, the co-founder of al
Shabaab, has been killed," Rear Admiral John Kirby, the Pentagon's
press secretary, said in a statement.
Since taking charge of al Shabaab in 2008, Godane had restyled the
group as a global player in the al Qaeda network, carrying out
bombings and suicide attacks in Somalia and elsewhere in the region,
including the Sept. 21, 2013, attack on the Westgate shopping mall
in Nairobi, Kenya, that killed 67 people.
Godane publicly claimed responsibility for the Westgate attack,
saying it was revenge for Kenyan and Western involvement in Somalia
and noting its proximity to the anniversary of the Sept. 11, 2001,
attacks on the United States.
His death leaves a gap in al Shabaab's leadership and was seen as
posing the biggest challenge to the group's unity since it emerged
as a fighting force eight years ago.
Abdi Ayante, director of the Heritage Institute for Policy Studies
in the Somali capital of Mogadishu, said Godane's death would be "a
game changer in many ways for al Shabaab."
"What is likely to happen is a struggle for power," he said a day
before the Pentagon confirmed Godane's death. Ayante said
fragmentation was also possible in the absence of a leader with
Godane's experience and ruthless approach to dissent.
"He was a strong leader of al Shabaab .. and had basically taken
care of rivals pretty effectively," said Matthew Olsen, director of
the U.S. government's National Counterterrorism Center.
Al Shabaab is a "very fractious" group, and "there are a number of
potential candidates" to succeed Godane, Olsen told reporters.
U.S. forces struck Godane's encampment in south-central Somalia with
Hellfire missiles and laser-guided munitions on Monday, but the
Pentagon did not confirm his death until Friday, saying it was still
assessing the results of the airstrike.
U.S. President Barack Obama, attending a NATO summit in Wales,
mentioned the confirmation to reporters, saying: "We released today
the fact that we have killed the leader of al Shabaab in Somalia."
He also noted the United States has worked persistently to degrade
the group's operations.
AMNESTY
Somali President Hassan Sheikh Mohamud confirmed Godane's killing,
saying U.S. forces conducted the airstrike with the full knowledge
and agreement of Somalia's government.
In a statement, Mohamud said that while an extreme hard core may
fight over the leadership of al Shabaab, his government was willing
to offer a 45-day amnesty to al Shabaab members who renounce their
links to the Islamist group and to al Qaeda.
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"Those who choose to remain know their fate. Al Shabaab is
collapsing," the Somali president said, adding: "I say to the
members of al Shabaab: Godane is dead and now is the chance for
members of al Shabaab to embrace peace."
Somalia's government, with support from African peacekeepers and
Western intelligence, has battled to curb al Shabaab's influence and
drive the group from areas it has continued to control since it was
expelled from Mogadishu in 2011.
In the Pentagon's statement, Kirby said that "removing Godane from
the battlefield is a major symbolic and operational loss to al
Shabaab."
A separate statement from White House Press Secretary Josh Earnest
said the operation that killed Godane was the result of "years of
painstaking work by our intelligence, military and law enforcement
professionals."
The Obama administration would continue to use financial,
diplomatic, intelligence and military tools to address the threat
posed by al Shabaab, Earnest said.
But Theo Dolan of the Washington-based, government-funded U.S.
Institute of Peace said Godane's killing could bring more violence.
"For Kenya, this means the very real threat of reprisal attacks by
local al Shabaab offshoot groups and the potential for more
coordinated violence in the longer term," Dolan said. Unlike the
Westgate mall attacks, which targeted foreigners and wealthy
Kenyans, recent violence has hit everyday Kenyans, Dolan said. The
U.S. State Department declared al Shabaab a foreign terrorist
organization in 2008.
The Pentagon did not say from where it launched the attack on
Godane, but United States and France have stationed some military
operations at a base in Djibouti, to the northwest of Somalia.
Foreign military personnel from the base were targeted by two al
Shabaab suicide bombers earlier this year. The attack killed a
Turkish national and wounded several Western military personnel. No
U.S. troops were hurt.
(Additional reporting by Phil Stewart and Warren Strobel in
Washington, Abdi Sheikh in Mogadishu, Edmund Blair and Drazen Jorgic
in Nairobi; Editing by Doina Chiacu, G Crosse, Susan Heavey and
James Macharia)
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