The US has now carried out 35 airstrikes this year against Al-Shabab NAIROBI: The US military on Thursday announced the latest of several deadly airstrikes this week against Al-Shabab extremists in Somalia as it targets a region well north of where the Al-Qaeda-linked terrorists control large parts of the country. The US Africa Command statement said two new strikes killed six fighters and destroyed a weapons cache on Wednesday near Harardere. That Al-Shabab-controlled community last month was targeted by the deadliest US airstrike in almost a year, with dozens of extremists killed. The US has now carried out 35 airstrikes this year against Al-Shabab, Africa’s deadliest extremist group, which continues to stage deadly attacks in the capital, Mogadishu, and other cities. Somali intelligence officials said the latest airstrikes targeted locations in the rural villages of Jimo-Luqunyar and Adaley, 75 km northeast of Harardere. They said at least four missiles hit a base for over 30 extremists assigned to collect livestock taxes from nomadic communities in the area. The officials requested anonymity because they were not authorized to speak to the media. Two US airstrikes on Monday killed 37 extremists and one on Tuesday killed seven. This week’s airstrikes have been carried out in Mudug region, well north of Mogadishu and the south and central areas. Al-Shabab recently relocated to Harardere as a key training and planning base after the US and allies increased pressure and surveillance further south. Somali intelligence officials last month told The Associated Press that last month’s US airstrike near Harardere largely destroyed a training camp where recruits were preparing to graduate. The officials said more than 75 people were killed, while the US said about 60 extremists were killed. The Mudug region, however, is a more difficult hideout for Al-Shabab as its fighters prefer the shrubbier ground further south. The US military has said the airstrikes are aimed at reducing Al-Shabab’s ability to plan attacks, disrupting its leadership networks and limiting its freedom of movement in the Horn of Africa nation.
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