(Article courtesy of Tactical Life)
The two-story beach house was just 220 yards from the Indian Ocean in southern Somalia. It was known as a gathering place for the radical Jihadist group al-Shabaab, who were engaged in a civil war in their native country, had been associated with a number of terrorist attacks elsewhere, and had strong links to Al Qaeda.
Intelligence further suggested that the house contained a particularly tempting target: Abdikadar Mohamed Abdikadar, a commander of the group, believed to be a key liaison between al-Shabaab and Al Qaeda, and perhaps one of the architects of the 2013 terrorist attack on the Westgate Mall in Nairobi, Kenya, which left 67 dead.
The plan, according to multiple sources, was to take him alive, in hopes of gaining valuable intelligence from him. As J. Peter Pham, the director of the Atlantic Council’s Africa Center, told USA Today, Abdikadar “would have valuable information about extremist groups, and more current information than al-Libi,” who was snatched by Delta Forces in Libya on the same day as the operation in Somalia.
Some 20 members of Navy SEAL Team Six made a daring nighttime amphibious assault in the wee hours of Oct. 5, 2013, swiftly exiting their boats and covering the short distance to the beach house, where they took up positions inside the compound.
Then, according to a report from NBC, “A lone al-Shabaab fighter walked out into plain view, smoked a cigarette, and went back inside, one source familiar with the details of the raid said. The fighter played it cool, and gave no indication that he had spotted the SEALs. But he came back out shooting, firing rounds from an AK-47 assault rifle.”
Continue reading on Tactical Life
Photo courtesy of Tactical Life