US intervention in Somalia
Since the mid-2000s, the United States has provided military support to the Ethiopian National Defence Force, African Union troops, the Somali Transitional Federal Government and its successor, the Federal Government of Somalia, in their conflicts with Somali Islamist actors.
U.S. military involvement in Somalia dates back to the 1990s with the UNITAF and UNOSOM II operations. With the global war on terror in the early 2000s, renewed U.S. military action was framed as counterterrorism. Successive administrations under George W. Bush, Barack Obama, Donald Trump and Joe Biden have conducted airstrikes, special forces missions, intelligence operations and training programs against Islamist groups in the country.
In the early 2000s, the Islamic Courts Union emerged as a major political and military force, becoming the de facto government over much of southern Somalia by mid-2006 after defeating a CIA-backed coalition of warlords. The U.S. backed the Ethiopian invasion of Somalia aimed at regime change against the ICU and installing the weak Ethiopian backed Transitional Federal Government its place. U.S. aircraft, special forces and intelligence assets were covertly deployed in support of Ethiopian troops advancing on Mogadishu in 2006. Following the overthrow of the ICU government, an Islamist insurgency emerged in 2007 and brought the Ethiopian military occupation to an end in early 2009, during which the al-Shabaab evolved into a powerful insurgent actor.
U.S. support for the Ethiopian invasion resulted in the growth of an intense anti-American sentiment. The war had significantly increased popular hostility to both the United States and Ethiopia, while strengthening the Islamic movements most radical elements. By the US military's own assessment, the war had been poorly prosecuted. American forces have been engaged in counterinsurgency operations against the al-Shabaab throughout the present post-Ethiopian occupation phase of the Somali Civil War (2009–present).
In late 2020, President Donald Trump announced the withdrawal of most US troops from Somalia. In May 2022, President Joe Biden redeployed US soldiers. The Somali government has asked for U.S. involvement support on numerous occasions in recent years. The United States Army stationed in Puntland's Bari region are currently supporting the ongoing anti-ISIS campaign. During 2025 the Trump administration drastically escalated the number of airstrikes.
Amnesty International concluded that the actual number of U.S. airstrikes conducted in Somalia exceeded officially reported figures, and that AFRICOM has repeatedly misclassified Somali civilians killed in these strikes as “terrorists".
Background
Since 2007, the United States Africa Command has targeted Islamist groups, mainly al-Shabaab, within Somalia using airstrikes and special forces operations. These have included targeted drone strikes and United States Navy missile strikes. Special forces teams have conducted raids and acted as advisors.Ethiopian invasion of Somalia (2006)
The rise of the Islamic Courts Union during the early 2000s, along with the growing insurgency in the Ogaden waged by the Ogaden National Liberation Front, raised Ethiopian concerns of an eventual renewed drive for Somali unification. A strong Somali state not dependent on Addis Ababa was perceived as a security threat, and consequently the Ethiopian government heavily backed the formation of the Transitional Federal Government in 2004 on the grounds that it would give up Somalia's long standing claim to the Ogaden.During the early years of the war on terror, the U.S. government perceived the rise of an Islamic movement in Somalia as a potential terror risk. From 2003 onwards, the Central Intelligence Agency initiated covert operations against the Islamic Courts Union, aiming to depose them from power.
Channel 4 acquired a leaked document detailing a confidential meeting between senior American and Ethiopian officials in Addis Ababa six months prior to the full scale December 2006 invasion. Participants deliberated on various scenarios, with the 'worst-case scenario' being the potential takeover of Somalia by the Islamic Courts Union. The documents revealed that the US found the prospect unacceptable and would back Ethiopia in the event of an ICU takeover. Journalist Jon Snow reported that during the meeting ‘the blueprint for a very American supported Ethiopian invasion of Somalia was hatched’. No Somali officials were involved in the discussions.
Before the invasion, United States Assistant Secretary of State issued a statement openly accusing the ICU leadership of being members of Al-Qaeda. Herman Cohen, the US United States [Assistant Secretary of State for African Affairs|Assistant Secretary of State for African Affairs], noted the US decision making had been influenced by false Ethiopian intelligence. According to Ted Dagne, an Africa specialist for the US Congressional Research Service, the Islamic Courts had committed no act or provocation to initiate the Ethiopian invasion. American historian William R. Polk observes that the invasion had been unprovoked.File:Afrimil-ethiopiansoldier.jpg|left|thumb|Ethiopian National Defense Force soldier training with the U.S. troops in Hurso, Somali Region of Ethiopia Approximately 50,000 to 60,000 Ethiopian National Defence Force troops backed by tanks, helicopter gunships and jets had been involved in the offensive against the Islamic Courts Union during December 2006. During the invasion phase of the war, US Special Forces, CIA paramilitary units, and Marine Corps|Marine] units, supported by American AC-130s and helicopter gunships, directly intervened in support of the ENDF. The US Bush administration doubted Ethiopia's ability to effectively use new equipment it had provided for the invasion. As a result, it decided to involve US Special Forces and CIA agents in the campaign. Pentagon officials and intelligence analysts reported that the invasion had been planned during the summer of 2006 and that US special forces were on the ground before the Ethiopians had intervened.
The participation of the US ground and air forces provided the ENDF with massive military superiority over the ICU. Ali Gedi, then prime minister of the TFG and a participant in planning for the invasion noted that, “The Ethiopians were not able to come in without the support of the US Government...American air forces were supporting us." In an interview with Al-Jazeera, head of the Islamic Courts Sharif Sheikh Ahmed later reported that after achieving a string of battlefield victories, ICU troops had come under unexpected bombardment from US aircraft. US operations during the invasion took place in a media vacuum, with no images or footage appearing of American forces.
Ethiopian military occupation (2007–2009)
During January 2007, American gunships, including helicopters and the AC-130, flew out of Dire Dawa and Diego Garcia to provide air support for Ethiopian troops. The USS Dwight D. Eisenhower carrier battlegroup was dispatched to the Somali coast to provide further air support and aerial surveillance. US Special forces and CIA paramilitary units also participated.As the Islamic Courts Union withdrew deep into southern Somalia US Lockheed AC-130 gunships covertly flying out of Ethiopia struck ICU convoys. Local residents in the Afmadow district of southern Somalia reported witnessing AC-130's pursuing and killing ICU troops. American forces reportedly killed hundreds of Somali fighters and civilians in a 'killing zone' between the Kenyan border, the Indian Ocean and advancing US backed Ethiopian troops. US airstrikes focused on decapitating the ICU leadership, in one instance killing Sheikh Abdullahi Nahar, a popular leader of the movement. Cruise missiles were fired at ICU positions on 8 January 2007. In one airstrike carried out by an AC-130 gunship operating from an airbase in eastern Ethiopia, US forces targeted the ICU governor of Jubbaland, Ahmed Madobe. Madobe survived the airstrike but was later captured by American and Ethiopian forces who landed by helicopter. American air power was used against villages in southern Somalia, resulting in significant civilian casualties and displacement. In one attack seventy-three nomadic herders and their livestock were killed in a US air strike and in another, US aircraft bombed a wedding ceremony.
The United States admitted to conducting a strike against targets that they claimed were suspected Al-Qaeda operatives. An admission to a second air attack was made later in January. The Pentagon's announcement of air attacks in Somalia during the Ethiopian offensive confirmed the belief of many analysts that the US was involved in the invasion. Initially, the US claimed that it had successfully targeted Al-Qaeda operatives responsible for the 1998 [United States embassy bombings|1998 embassy bombings], but later downgraded those who had been killed in the attacks as being 'associates with terrorists' instead. United Nations Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon publicly expressed concern that the American attacks would escalate the conflict. After American involvement in the invasion became public knowledge, the Ethiopian government halted US AC-130 attacks from its military bases. US airstrikes during the invasion failed at getting any Al-Qaeda operatives alleged to be present, instead killing civilians and Islamic fighters who had never been accused of any crime.
Rise of Al-Shabaab
In March 2007, a White House study found that 'despite the ouster' of the Islamic Court Union, Somalia was a growing regional security threat and 'safe haven for terrorists'. As a result of the US supported invasion, Al-Shabaab morphed from a fringe movement to a serious insurgent force. Many Islamic Courts Union affiliates had been killed during the invasion, leaving a vacuum for the small group of several hundred youth that served as the ICU's Shabaab militia to gain prominence. During the military occupation, Al-Shabaab garnered substantial support from the Somali population, cutting across clan lines. The Ethiopian invasion was the group's primary catalyst for mobilization among the population. Despite its strict ideology, the group was widely perceived as a genuine resistance force against Ethiopian occupation by many Somalis, and while not universally popular, it was widely acknowledged for its effective training and formidable capabilities in pushing out Ethiopian troops. Heavy handed tactics and blatant disregard for civilian life by Ethiopian troops rallied many Somalis to support the Al-Shabaab as it successfully branded itself as the most determined and uncompromising resistance faction.A sharp increase in radical recruitment in Somali diaspora in Europe and the United States since 2007 has been linked with the overthrow of the ICU and the Ethiopian military occupation. This later resulted in the first ever American suicide bomber carrying out an attack in Somalia during October 2008.
During June 2007, the USS Chafee fired a dozen rounds and possibly one cruise missile at the coast of Bargal, in northern Somalia. The strikes targeted 35 militants that had landed on the coast and had begun to fire on local forces. U.S. officials told The New York Times that U.S. operatives were on the ground, leading to the American warship firing in self-defense. Eight to twelve militants, including foreign fighters, were killed.
2008
On 3 March 2008, the United States launched cruise missiles on the town of Dhobley where insurgent leader Hassan Turki was reported to have been present. According to AP, US officials claimed the town was held by Islamic extremists but gave few details to the press. The attack was reportedly carried out by US Navy submarine. Dhobley was the last town the ICU held a year prior and it had been bombed by US aircraft in that period. At 3:25 a.m, two or three BGM-109 Tomahawk cruise missiles were launched at Dhobley. The Department of Defense initially refused to identify the targets of the attack. The strikes killed four people and wounded 20. Residents said that civilian targets were hit by an AC-130 gunship. Dobley district commissioner Ali Hussein Nuir stated that Sheikh Hassan Abdullah Hersi al-Turki, a local militant cleric was meeting with leaders of a Mogadishu-based militant group nearby.On 18 March 2008, the United States designated Al-Shabaab a terrorist organization. The move proved to be damaging as it isolated moderate voices among the Islamist resistance movement and gave Al-Shabaab further reason to push against peace talks.
A month later on 1 May 2008, US Tomahawk missiles bombarded Dhusamareb resulting in the assassination of Al-Shabaab leader Aden Hashi Ayro - along with another senior commander and several civilians. Four cruise missiles launched by a U.S. Navy warship struck a compound in Dhusamareb, with some reports suggesting that an AC-130 was also involved in the operation. The attack purportedly caused al-Shabaab to ban the use of mobile phones by its fighters. The attack did nothing to slow down the group's participation in the insurgency. The assassination of Ayro during early 2008 resulted in a sharp radicalization of Al-Shabaab. The killing of Ayro led to foreign fighters integrating within the ranks of the organization, and resulted in the accession of Ahmed Godane as Emir. This change in leadership was facilitated by American intervention and had significant effect on Shabaab's future decision making regarding the usage of tactics such as suicide bombing.
After the killing of the group's leader Aden Hashi Ayro in 2008, Al-Shabaab began publicly courting Osama bin Laden in a bid to become part of Al-Qaeda, but was rebuffed by bin Laden. Several months after the ENDF withdrawal, Foreign Affairs noted that Al-Qaeda's foothold in Somalia post-occupation was in significant part the result of the invasion. Following the killing of Osama bin Laden in 2011, Al-Shabaab members pledged allegiance to Al-Qaeda in 2012.
Result and consequences
In January 2009, Ethiopia ended its occupation of Somalia and withdrew from the country. By the end of the occupation, the majority of the territory seized from the Islamic Courts Union during the December 2006 and January 2007 invasion had fallen under the control of various Islamist and nationalist resistance groups. The invasion failed to empower the Transitional Federal Government, which only controlled parts of Mogadishu and its original 2006 capital of Baidoa by the last weeks of the military occupation. The Ethiopian army withdrew from Somalia with significant casualties and little to show for their efforts. The insurgency had achieved its primary goal of removing the Ethiopian military presence from most of Somalia by November 2008 and was successful in achieving several of its most important demands.During 2007 and 2008, Somalia plunged into severe levels of armed conflict, marked by frequent assassinations, political meltdown, radicalization, and the growth of an intense anti-American sentiment. The situation in the country exceeded the worst-case scenarios envisioned by many regional analysts when they first considered the potential impact of an Ethiopian military occupation. A Royal Institute of International Affairs report observed that Ethiopian/American support for the TFG instead of the more popular Islamic Courts administration presented an obstacle, not contribution, to the reconstruction of Somalia. For the Americans the invasion had resulted in nearly the complete opposite of what had been expected, as it had failed to isolate the Islamic movement while solidifying Somali anger to both the United States and Ethiopia. The result of the invasion had been the defeat of Somali Islamists considered to be 'moderate' while strengthening the movements most radical elements. By the US military's own metrics, the war in Somalia was never effectively prosecuted. A 2007 study commissioned by United States Department of Defense warned that American participation in the war was, "...plagued by a failure to define the parameters of the conflict or its aims; an overemphasis on military measures without a clear definition of the optimal military strategy;"
Somali Civil War (2009–present)
2009
- September 14
2011
- April 3–6
- June 23
- July 6
- September 15
- September 25
- October 6
- October 13
- October 22
- October 23
2012
- January 21
- February 24
- August 23
2013
- October 28
2014
- September 1
- December 29
2015
- January 31
In a second strike, senior al-Shabaab leader Yusef Dheeq and an associate were killed while riding in a vehicle.
- March 10
- March 12
- July 15–18
- November 22
- November 29
- December 2
- December 22
2016
US forces conducted 15 airstrikes in Somalia during 2016- March 5
- March 8
- March 31
- April 1
- April 2
- April 6
- April 11
- May 9–10
- May 12
- May 27
- June 11
- June 21
- August 30
- September 5
- September 26
- September 28
2017
US forces conducted 35 airstrikes in Somalia during 2017- January 7
- May 5
- June 11
- July 2
- July 5
- July 29
- August 10
- August 16–17
- August 25
- August 31
- September 5
- September 7
- September 13
- November 3
- November 9
- November 10
- November 11
- November 14
- November 9–14
- November 21
- November 27
- December 12
- December 15
- December 24
- December 27
2018
US forces conducted 47 airstrikes in Somalia during 2018, killing between 326 and 338 people- January 2
- January 18
- February 19
- February 21
- February 26
- March 13
- March 19
- April 1
- April 5
- April 11
- May 23
- May 31
- June 2
- June 8
- August 2
- August 21
- August 27
- September 11
- September 21
- October 1
- October 6
- October 12
- October 14
- October 25
- November 3
- November 19
- November 20
- November 21
- November 27
- November 30
- December 4
- December 9
- December 15
- December 16
- December 19
2019
US forces have conducted a record of more than 60 airstrikes in Somalia during 2019, killing 913–1,011 al-Shabaab militants- January 2
- January 7
- January 8
- January 19
- January 23
- January 30
- February 1
- February 6
- February 7
- February 8
- February 11
- February 23
- February 24
- February 25
- February 28
- March 11
- March 12
- March 13
- April 14
- July 27
- August 20
- October 1
- October 6
- October 25
- November 19
- December 16
- December 30
2020
As of April 2020, US forces have conducted 32 airstrikes in Somalia.- January
- February
Another airstrike killed an employee of the telecoms Hormuud Telecom. It was aimed at al-Shabaab in Jilib, Middle Juba.
- March
- April
- August
- September
- December
President Donald Trump ordered the Department of Defense to remove the majority of the 700 U.S. military troops in Somalia from the country in December 2020.
2021
- January 17
- January 19
- July 20
- July 23
- August 1
- August 24
2022
- February 23 and 24
- May 17
- July 17
- August 9
- August 14
- September 18
- October 1
- October 26
2023
- January 25
- February 12
2024
- January 11
- January 21
- January 24
- January 25
- February 9
- February 15
- March 10
- May 31
- July 15
- December 24
- December 31
2025
U.S. Army continues operations in Puntland against ISIS
On 1 February 2025, U.S. President Donald Trump announced that the U.S. military carried out airstrikes against Islamic State positions in the caves of the north-east of Somalia. Puntland military spokersperson claimed that U.S. airstrikes against ISIS have killed forty-six fighters of in the Cal Miskaad mountains, a remote area in northeastern region Bari. According to government sources key ISIL figures were killed in those air strikes. It was later confirmed that the attack managed to kill an ISIS leader called Ahmed Maeleminine, a key recruiter and financier for the militant group.On 7 March 2025, The United States Army stationed in Puntland maintains its operations and will not pull out of the region in response to double ongoing operations in the fight against ISIS in Puntland's Bari Region.
On the weekend of May 24-25, 2025, U.S. linked forces, U.S. AFRICOM conducted a strike 40 miles northwest of Kismayo. The strikes were in deterrence to al-Shabaab forces who have "proven both its will and capability to attack U.S. forces" per a statement provided by AFRICOM.
Killing of Abdullahi Omar Abdi
On 12 September 2025, a United States airstrike, executed by U.S. Africa Command in Badhan district of Sanaag region of Puntland, resulted in the killing of Abdullahi Omar Abdi, a clan elder alleged to have been involved with Al-Shabaab as a weapons trafficker. The Pentagon stated that the operation was conducted in coordination with the Somali federal government. Following the airstrike, Puntland authorities commenced an investigation into the incident, which Abdi’s family claims was a deliberate attack targeting him. The airstrike has been causing a demonstration protest involving the implications of targeting local leaders in the ongoing conflict with Al-Shabaab in Somalia.Swedish involvement
In October 2025, it was revealed by Swedish media that the country's armed forces were assisting the US in Somalia, primarily in regards to identification of killed and captured terrorists as part of Operation Active Viper.Casualties
By August 2022, Airwars estimated that 78-153 civilians were killed by US airstrikes in Somalia since 2007, including 20-23 children, 12-13 women, and 79 named victims. The US has acknowledged only 5 civilian deaths in Somalia. American strikes also injured 34-49 civilians.Per the Bureau of Investigative Journalism, by October 2020, between 1185 and 1313 Al-Shabaab militants were killed in American airstrikes.
In June 2025, New America, a Washington, D.C.-based think tank, reports that U.S. airstrikes between January to June in Somalia targeting Al-Shabaab and Islamic State militants resulted in up to 174 fatalities, including an estimated six to 30 civilian casualties.