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U.S. supported France's failed hostage rescue in Somalia
By CNN Staff
January 14, 2012 Markacadeey
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(CNN) -- U.S. troops lent "limited technical support" in France's bloody and
unsuccessful bid in Somalia to rescue an intelligence agent who'd been held
hostage for years, President Barack Obama said Sunday.
Obama detailed the U.S. military involvement in the Friday night mission in a
letter sent to the leaders of the nation's two legislative chambers. The letter
was released publicly as well.
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While U.S. forces "provided limited technical support," they "took no direct
part in the assault on the compound where it was believed the French citizen was
being held hostage," the president explained.
In addition, U.S. military aircraft were available but were not used.
"United States combat aircraft briefly entered Somali airspace to support the
rescue operation, if needed," the president wrote. "These aircraft did not
employ weapons during the operation."
French militant operations in Africa
Obama said he directed the U.S. troops' involvement in the operation "in
furtherance of U.S. national security interests, and pursuant to my
constitutional authority to conduct U.S. foreign relations and as commander in
chief and chief executive."
By 8 p.m., all U.S. forces were out of Somalia.
The moves came after French forces engaged in a fierce gunbattle with militants
in their attempt to rescue hostage Denis Allex, who was a member of the DGSE,
France's equivalent of the CIA and a part of its defense ministry.
The skirmish in Bulo Marer, about 75 miles northwest of the capital Mogadishu,
ended with a French soldier and 17 Islamist fighters dead, according to the
French Defense Ministry. Another French soldier is missing.
French bid to rescue hostage fails
French Defense Minister Jean-Yves Le Drian told reporters in Paris on Saturday
that "everything leads us to believe that Denis Allex was gunned down by his
captors." French President Francois Hollande, meanwhile, lamented the
"sacrifice" of the two French soldiers and "maybe the assassination" of the
hostage.
But the al-Shabaab militia, which is affiliated with al Qaeda, claimed Allex is
unharmed and being held in a new location. The group said in a statement that
they'll decide the hostage's fate in the next two days.
Allex was abducted on July 14, 2009, while on a mission in Mogadishu in support
of the transitional Somali government, the French Defense Ministry said. French
media reports suggest that Denis Allex is a pseudonym for the military
serviceman.
French officials said they launched the rescue attempt after the terror group
failed to negotiate for the hostage's release for years while holding him in
inhumane conditions.
The U.S. military has been involved in Somalia before, notably in the ill-fated
1993 Battle of Mogadishu that ended with 18 American soldiers killed.
U.S. forces were in Somalia to try to capture powerful Somali warlord Mohammed
Aidid from his stronghold in the war-torn capital and take him to a ship
anchored off the nearby coast. But by the end of the 16-hour battle in which
commandos tried to seize several of Aidid's top lieutenants, 18 elite Army
Rangers and hundreds of Somalis lay dead in the streets of Mogadishu.
The movie inspired the best-selling book "Black Hawk Down" by Mark Bowden and an
eponymous, Oscar Award-winning movie directed by Ridley Scott.
Fourteen years later, the U.S. military re-emerged in Somalia by conducting
airstrikes targeting al Qaeda-linked operatives in southern Somalia. Other
strikes followed, including one in 2008 that killed an al-Shabaab leader and
several other senior leaders of his group, according to local officials.
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