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Obama Administration to Finally Release Data On Drone Strike

Casualties.
Mar 15, 2016 (Shabelle Media Network/All Africa Global Media via COMTEX) -- Pentagon
spokesman Captain Jeff Davis said the strike occurred Saturday, March 5, on a camp called
Raso, about 120 miles (195 kilometers) north of Mogadishu.
The Pentagon said that the air strikes killed fighters who were preparing to launch a large-scale
attack, likely against African Union or USA personnel. The planned attack on U.S. and African
Union troops inSomalia, U.S. officials say, may have been an attempt by al-Shabab to carry out
the same kind of high-impact act of terrorism as the one in Nairobi.The camp had about 200
fighters on site including Al-Shabaab trainers.
The military did not specify the location of where the U.S. thought an attack might happen, but it
is well known that the U.S. maintains a limited military presence at the airport in Mogadishu and
that small numbers of U.S. Special Operations forces have traveled to other locations in the
country.
Further U.S. airstrikes alone are unlikely to thwart al-Shabab's attacks around Mogadishu, said
Robert Besseling, an analyst with EXX Africa.
In a separate development Monday, the White House announced that it will disclose how many
people have been killed by American drones and other counterterrorism strikes since 2009, when
President Obama took office, the AP reported.
In 2015, almost 150 people were killed when al-Shabab militants launched an attack on
neighboring Kenya's Garissa University.
Davis, the Pentagon spokesman, said the attack involved both missiles and bombs that destroyed
the training camp.
Al Shabaab confirmed the attack but said the figure was inflated.
Somalia's battered Intelligence previously claimed; it helped U.S. conduct aerial raids on Al
Shabaab camps in central and southern Somalia.
As many as 100 members of the al-Shabab terrorist group were killed by USA airstrikes in
Somalia overnight Sunday, senior defense officials told NBC News.
Pentagon officials said they didn't believe there were any civilian casualties, but there was no
way to verify the claim.
Obama's move to shed more light on the drone wars comes as the United States struggles to
contain extremist groups and violent ideologies that are growing and spreading. The latest strike
has claimed more lives than all of the previous attacks in Somalia put together.

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