militant group was wounded or killed, a Somali official said Tuesday.
The Pentagon would only say it carried out an operation in Somalia, but didn't offer additional details.
The strike Monday took
place near the port city of Barawe, Al-Shabaab's biggest stronghold in
Somalia, said Abdikadir Mohamed Nur Sidii, governor of Somalia's Lower
Shabelle region.
"I never heard such a huge and deafening blast as the result of the airstrike," Sidii said. "It jolted the entire region."
Top Al-Shabaab commanders
had been meeting in the area on how to stave off a joint offensive by
Somali and African Union troops aimed at dislodging them from their
nearby strongholds, the governor said.
He said those commanders included leader Ahmed Abdi Godane and his deputy Abu Abdalla.
"We can't confirm how many leaders were killed in the attack," he said. "We will confirm later."
Going after Godane
The United States designated Al-Shabaab as a foreign terrorist organization in March 2008.
The group hopes to turn
Somalia into a fundamentalist Islamic state and has launched attacks in
other countries as well. It claimed responsibility for the siege of the
Westgate mall in Nairobi last September 21 that killed at least 67
people.
Al-Shabaab's leader,
Godane, has declared the group's affiliation to al Qaeda and has pressed
for the group to launch attacks beyond Somalia.
The Obama administration has targeted Al-Shabaab leaders in Somalia at least twice in the past year, including an airstrike in January. Afterward, the Pentagon was unable to confirm whether Godane was killed.
Group under pressure
In the latest incident,
Somali intelligence officials said at least four missiles were launched
in a strike that targeted a convoy of Al-Shabaab senior leaders.
Al-Shabaab is under
pressure from Somali forces and the African Union Mission in Somalia
(AMISOM), which launched an operation last week to cut off Al-Shabaab
supply lines along the Somali coast.
The militants started
withdrawing from the port city of Barawe in recent days as Somali troops
and African Union peacekeeping forces started advancing on the port
city.
On Monday, AMISOM
announced that military forces had liberated several important towns
from the terrorists' grip, in the Middle Shabelle and Hiiran regions.
Source:CNN
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