Three Somali Special Forces Killed, U.S. Officer Wounded In Car Bomb: Somali Official
Three Somali Special Forces Killed, U.S. Officer Wounded In Car Bomb: Somali Official
Three Somali special forces soldiers were killed and a U.S. officer was seriously wounded in a car bomb on Monday outside the force's base in the country's south, a regional Somali government official said.

GAROWE, Somalia: Three Somali special forces soldiers were killed and a U.S. officer was seriously wounded in a car bomb on Monday outside the force’s base in the country’s south, a regional Somali government official said.

Al Qaeda-linked al Shabaab said they were behind the attack and put the number of dead at 20.

A Somali soldier was also wounded in the attack in Jana Cabdalle village, some 60 km (37 miles) from the port city of Kismayu, which is also Jubbaland region’s capital.

“Two soldiers of Danab (special) forces died and two others were wounded. A U.S. officer was seriously wounded,” Mohamed Ahmed Sabriye, director of communications of Jubbaland state palace told Reuters by phone.

He later said one of the wounded Danab force soldiers had subsequently died.

He said the suicide car bomb had exploded outside the special forces base.

U.S. Africa Command spokesman Air Force Colonel Christopher Karns said one U.S. soldier had suffered non-life threatening injuries and was in stable condition.

In a statement, Karns said the U.S. military had assessed that at least one al Shabaab fighter was killed during the attack, which also involved mortar fire.

Al Shabaab said it had killed U.S. personnel.

“We attacked U.S. and Somali forces called Danab in Jana Cabdalle village with a suicide car bomb. We killed four U.S. officers, and 16 Somali forces which they trained,” Abdiasis Abu Musab, its military operation spokesman, said in a statement.

“We also wounded 12 Somali soldiers. We also destroyed 3 U.S. armoured vehicles.

The government and al Shabaab often give different numbers of casualties.

Al Shabaab has been fighting to topple Somalia’s central government since 2008 to establish its own rule based on its own harsh interpretation of Islam’s sharia law.

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

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