Under Trump, US strikes on Somalia have doubled since last year. Why?

Under Trump, US strikes on Somalia have doubled since last year. Why?

In Donald Trump’s 2024 election campaign, he and many of his supporters spoke out against American resources and lives being wasted in conflicts around the world. Ending the United States’ “forever wars” was a major slogan.

But on February 1, a mere 10 days after being inaugurated for a second time, President Trump announced that the US had carried out air strikes targeting senior leadership of ISIL (ISIS) in Somalia. His post on X read, “These killers, who we found hiding in caves, threatened the United States.” This marked Trump’s first military action overseas, but it wouldn’t be his last.

Israel has been armed and supported by the US since then, and it has launched attacks on Yemen and even attacked Iran’s nuclear facilities. At the same time, in the Horn of Africa, US strikes have more than “doubled” since last year, according to US Africa Command (AFRICOM).

According to the think tank New America, which uses AFRICOM data to track strikes in Somalia, at least 43 air strikes were carried out in the continent in 2025. More than half of those, which are conducted in coordination with Somalia’s federal government, targeted IS-Somalia, the ISIL affiliate in northeast Puntland state, while the remainder targeted al-Shabab.

According to US officials, the rise in US air strikes against IS-Somalia is a result of growing concerns that the organization has become a hub for regional and global ISIL affiliates in terms of funding and attacks.

At the same time, experts also note the recent worrying gains being made by al-Shabab in Somalia.

But why is this a conflict that the “Make America Great Again” Trump administration is increasingly involved in, especially given how much controversy, disaster, and failure have plagued US policy in Somalia over the years?

A June 2010 file photo shows a US Predator unmanned drone armed with a missile that has been used against targets from Afghanistan to Somalia]File: Massoud Hossaini/AP Photo]

American intervention in Somalia: a complete failure?

“Ever since Black Hawk Down, Somalia was a no-go zone for the US”, said Abukar Arman, a Somali analyst and former special envoy to the US, referring to the failed 1993 US military intervention in Somalia during which 18 US troops and thousands of Somali civilians were killed.

“The situation changed after September 11 when Somalia emerged as one of the main locations for the so-called GWOT]global war on terror.” That political facade has three objectives: It justifies US sustained lethal drone attacks in the public psyche, it enables the US to guard its geopolitical interests in the Horn of Africa,]and] it enables American predatory capitalists to engage in economic exploitation”, Arman told Al Jazeera.

In its so-called “war on terror,” Somalia became the first country on the African continent to suffer an airstrike in the wake of September 11. In the decades that followed, US aerial bombardment of the country has not only persisted but intensified.

More than 50 US air strikes on Somalia were carried out during the combined 16 years of former presidents George W. Bush and Barack Obama, according to New America, while a staggering 219 were carried out in Trump’s first term. With dozens more strikes just five months into his second term, analysts say if it continues at this rate, Trump is sure to surpass the 51 strikes the Biden administration conducted during its entire four years in office.

According to Jethro Norman, a senior researcher at the Danish Institute for International Studies, Trump has created the ideal setting for a remotely projecting US power capabilities in Somalia because it combines high firepower, minimal oversight, and minimal domestic political risk.

“By loosening Obama-era restrictions, he enabled a surge in preemptive strikes with minimal vetting or accountability. The logic was theatrical, not just strategic; it was a tactic to show toughness against previous governments and make claims that counterterrorism “wins” without getting stale,” Norman told Al Jazeera.

“So, what you see now is a spike in drone activity, but without any corresponding investment in long-term peacebuilding or governance support”, he explained.

Norman also cited the ongoing infighting between the Trump White House and Somalia regarding US policy direction.

“There were also competing camps within his]Trump’s] administration. Some pressed for kinetic engagement in Yemen and Somalia, while others argued that great-power rivalry with China was a distraction from counterterrorism.

” That policy push and pull]between spectacle and strategy] helps explain why air strikes surged even as Trump talked about ending forever wars, “he said.

Somalia
In Bari, Puntland region of Somalia, in January 2025, a man sits beside the wreckages of burned military vehicles.

Al-Shabab gains

According to some analysts, al-Shabab’s unprecedented counteroffensive this year may be a contributing factor to the rise in US strikes. In it, the armed group reversed most of the Somali government’s territorial gains and seized&nbsp, dozens of towns and villages in the Middle Shabelle region of the semi-autonomous Hirshabelle state – the home base of President Hassan Sheikh Mohamud.

Further complicating matters is that al-Shabab was able to advance on the capital and establish checkpoints along Mogadishu’s main thoroughfares during this counteroffensive. This shows not only the deep structural weakness within the Somali security forces but also the resilience of the armed group as they inched closer to the seat of power in Mogadishu, experts say.

According to David Sterman, the deputy director of New America’s Future Security program, “These recent US strikes] seem to relate more to the conditions on the battlefield,” and particularly the perceived threat from an al-Shabab offensive, which has partially revers the gains of earlier Somali government offensives.

” There may also be other factors, including a greater interest in targeting senior al-Shabab leaders, “he added.

Some claim that the Trump administration’s bombing campaign will only give access to the same armed organizations it claims to be fighting.

” The current drone diplomacy would continue to help al-Shabab. These attacks also kill people and livestock in civilian attacks. Ensuing grievances are utilised by armed groups that take advantage of these sentiments, “said Arman, the Somali analyst, who also noted a” lack of a comprehensive US-Somalia policy that is based on a strategic partnership that keeps the interest of both countries at heart”.

He continued, citing drones and military might, “It is foolish to think that all problems could be resolved with a hammer.”

Civilian deaths, ‘ lack of accountability ‘

Rights organizations and media outlets reported numerous civilian casualties from US airstrikes in Somalia during Trump’s first term in office. This was further compounded when AFRICOM admitted that civilians died in strikes it carried out.

Amnesty International claimed that the US had “could commit” possible war crimes” in Somalia as a result of its drone war, which reached its pinnacle in 2019. None of the victims of US drone strikes were ever compensated despite calls for accountability by rights groups and US lawmakers.

The “consistent lack of accountability for civilian victims of US air strikes,” especially under the previous Trump administration, speaks volumes. It reveals a profound lack of transparency that is deeply concerning, “said Eva Buzo, the executive director of Victims Advocacy International, &nbsp, an organisation seeking accountability for victims of human rights abuses in conflict zones across the globe.

She said that the US acknowledges the harm to civilians and has allocated funds, but it continues to ignore these crucial payments. She added that a willingness to “genuinely communicate with impacted communities” is required to better understand the real effects of drone strikes on people’s lives and what can be done tangibly to acknowledge this impact.

Meanwhile, adding to the complexity in the battle space in Somalia is that groups like al-Shabab often live and operate among the civilian population. This conceals casualties, but it also means that those at war with armed groups can’t often distinguish between fighters and civilians when striking targets.

US strikes often rely on patchy human intelligence in the rural countryside where al-Shabab is most present and where clan rivalries, informal economies and shifting loyalties are all factors that tend to be overlooked by the US. According to experts, this makes it more difficult to target accurately and makes it more difficult to harm non-combatants.

While there isn’t an official death toll from US strikes, the years of attacks are believed to have killed anywhere from 33 to 167 civilians in Somalia, according to separate tallies by New America and the nonprofit conflict watchdog, Airwars.

According to Norman of the Danish Institute, these civilian deaths caused by US airstrikes undermine the US’s standing in the area and feed into the myth that armed groups like al-Shabab thrive on foreign hostilities and Somali betrayal.

” These incidents don’t just cause resentment, they offer propaganda gold. Al-Shabab exploits the aftermath when civilians are killed or even forced to flee. They move quickly to frame themselves as defenders of Somali lives and sovereignty against a foreign aggressor and a weak federal government, “he said.

Drone strikes without accountability can actually help the insurgencies that they are trying to eradicate prosper, he continued.

Somalia
A general view shows the scene of an explosion by a suspected member of al Qaeda-linked al-Shabab, at a shop selling tea near a security checkpoint on a road leading to the parliament and the president’s office, in Mogadishu, Somalia, in September 2023]File: Feisal Omar/Reuters]

Adding more fuel to the fire

After nearly two decades of US aerial bombardment, many analysts agree that air strikes alone cannot defeat an armed movement embedded in the fabric of Somali society, its social networks and those who thrive off consecutive foreign interventions. This presents challenges for taming these armed groups, let alone bringing them under control.

” There are interesting parallels to Afghanistan, local forces struggle to hold territory, US strikes fill the vacuum temporarily, but the long-term trajectory remains bleak. “Airpower can suppress, but it cannot transform,” Norman said.

” That gap between US rhetoric and Somali reality is precisely where al-Shabab thrives. The organization actively manipulates these situations, claiming to be the only actor who will fight for the lives of Somalis.

“In this sense, the loss of legitimacy is not abstract, it shapes local decisions, fuels recruitment, and weakens prospects for genuine partnership between Somali civilians and international actors”.

Analysts predict that the Trump administration’s continued aerial bombardment of Somalia will only serve as fuel for the conflict because it will grant support to the same foe it claims to be fighting. At the same time, they say, the cost of drones and missiles to fight a boogeyman halfway across the globe is a waste of US taxpayer money.

The chances of a military intervention in Somalia are slim, according to experts on US military and counterterrorism policies.

“It is unlikely that the US and its Somali partners can fully eliminate al-Shabab given its demonstration of resilience over time, and doing so would require a different approach than what these strikes appear to be. The New America deputy director, Sterman, said IS-Somalia does not possess quite the same level of resilience.

“There is, of course, the question of what defeat and destruction actually means for a non-state group”, he noted.

Despite that, US objectives are likely narrower than those of these groups’ defeat or destruction, with particular attention being placed on either containment or the eradication of particular capabilities or network connections.

Source: Aljazeera

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