US condemns deadly Shabaab attack on KDF in Somalia, reaffirms support for Kenya

What you need to know:

  • Kirby also offered the US's 'deepest condolences' to the families of KDF soldiers killed at a base in Al-Ade in Somalia's Gedo region.
  • Mr Kirby said the US remains 'fully committed' to assisting Amisom as well as the governments of Kenya and Somalia in combating terrorism and to enhance security within Kenya as well as in Somalia.
  • The US has directly supplied more than $500 million (Sh51 billion) worth of military training, equipment and intelligence resources to Amisom.

New York

The United States has condemned the attack by Al-Shabaab on Kenyan soldiers in Somalia last Friday morning which left several of them dead adding that it would continue supporting Kenya's operations inside Somalia.

State Department spokesman John Kirby also offered the US's 'deepest condolences' to the families of Kenya Defence Forces (KDF) soldiers killed at a base in Al-Ade in Somalia's Gedo region.

Mr Kirby did not indicate how many Kenyan troops died in the attack.

The US has directly supplied more than $500 million (Sh51 billion) worth of military training, equipment and intelligence resources to the African Union Mission in Somalia (Amisom), which comprises troops and police from Kenya, Ethiopia, Burundi, Uganda, Djibouti, Sierra Leone, Nigeria and Ghana.

Washington has provided a similar, additional amount of assistance to Amisom through the United Nations, bringing its contributions to the AU force in Somalia to over $1 billion during the past eight years.

SUPPORT FOR AMISOM

Briefing reporters at the State Department on Friday, Mr Kirby said the US remains 'fully committed' to assisting Amisom as well as the governments of Kenya and Somalia in combating terrorism and to enhance security within Kenya as well as in Somalia.

But according to a diplomatic cable published by WikiLeaks in 2011, the US initially opposed Kenyan military involvement in southern Somalia.

A December 2009 communication recounts that a high-ranking State Department official had told Kenya's then-Foreign Minister Moses Wetangula that Nairobi's 'Jubaland initiative' was 'a bad idea that would more likely add to Somalia's instability than to help stabilise the country.'

Kenya was planning at the time to recruit and train an ethnic Somali force to battle Shabaab in the Juba River region of Somalia bordering Kenya.

The US later expressed its support for the Kenyan troops’ presence in Somalia after the KDF contingent there was formally incorporated into Amisom.

Johnnie Carson, then the State Department's top Africa official, said at a news conference in Nairobi in 2012 that the US was 'very pleased' that Kenyan forces had begun operating in Somalia under Amisom's guidance.