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Bilal al-Sudani: US forces kill Islamic State Somalia leader in cave complex

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According to the report, US forces have killed an Islamic State leader, Bilal al-Sudani, and 10 of his operatives in northern Somalia, American officials say. He was killed after US special forces raided a remote mountainous cave complex hoping to capture him. "Al-Sudani was responsible for fostering the growing presence of ISIS in Africa," Defence Secretary Lloyd Austin said. He also allegedly funded the group's activities globally, Mr Austin added.
Analysts say the fact that US troops were sent under orders of President Joe Biden to kill or capture Sudani, rather than using a less risky drone strike, indicates his significance.

The report said that details about the nature of the operation have not been released, however, the soldiers were drafted in via helicopter, according to the New York Times with Sudani killed after a gunfight broke out. The operation comes after President Biden redeployed hundreds of US troops to the country after his predecessor, Donald Trump, pulled them out. However, those forces are reportedly only there to train Somali soldiers, rather than conduct operations. In recent years, the Islamic State group has reportedly expanded its activities into several African countries, including Mozambique and the Democratic Republic of Congo. However, the Islamic State is a relatively small group in Somalia, with the al-Qaeda-linked group al-Shabab far more prominent - it controls many southern areas.

The report also stated that before joining the Islamic State, Sudani allegedly did operational work for al-Shabab, assisting with training fighters. However, he split from the group, along with others, to form an IS-affiliated group in the mid-2010s, according to security researcher Dino Mahtani.
He is accused of playing a "financial role with specialized skills which made him an important target for US counterterrorism action", an anonymous US official told the AFP news agency. Sudani became "an important figure in the attempt by this faction of Islamic State to build a trans-national network straddling Central Africa and East Africa and now with links down to Mozambique," Mr Mahtani told the BBC's Focus on Africa radio programme.
His group are "master weapon-smugglers into the northern part of Somalia" and also have connections in DR Congo, Mr Mahtani continued, so was therefore a "high priority" to capture or kill.

The report added that Somalia has welcomed the killing of Sudani, according to the Voice of America news site. "It's very positive and welcoming," said Somali government security adviser Hussein Sheikh Ali. He stressed that Islamic State was not as big a threat as al-Shabab in Somalia, but that Sudani was "dangerous". "The message is, that the leaders of all terror groups in Somalia are not safe," he continued.

In addition to the report, one UN report from last year estimated the number of Islamic State fighters in Somalia was around 200 to 280 and that the country is used as a significant base to finance IS activity in Iraq and the Levant, but this has not been independently verified by the BBC. Just last week IS published a rare propaganda video from its Somalia branch, which showed combat footage of clashes with Somali forces in a mountainous region in the north-eastern Bari region. The raid comes less than a week after the US said a drone strike had killed 30 al-Shabab militants. In recent months, pro-government forces in Somalia have been making progress against al-Shabab.

Report Source: BBC
 
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