Tuesday, September 15, 2009 - 2:02 PM
Speaking today at the Center for American Progress in Washington, U.S. Assistant Secretary of State for African Affairs Johnnie Carson discussed yesterday's Special Forces operation in Somalia on alleged terrorist Saleh Ali Nabhan. "[T]he individual who was reportedly killed in Somalia yesterday was in fact one of the two top leaders of al Qaeda in East Africa. He was in fact the individual who was directly responsible for organizing the destruction of the Paradise hotel [in Kenya in 2002] and the attempted shoot-down of the Isreali aircraft [also in Kenya]."
"We think that his departure form the ranks of the al Qaeda leadership in East Africa will substantially reduce the capacity of that organization to plan and carry out future attacks," Carson said.
The discussion comes on the heels of Secretary of State Hillary Clinton's August trip to Africa, a subject that Carson brought up in greater detail. He re-emphasized that among the countries visited on that trip, Nigeria remains "the most important" for its size, population, oil supplies, and ongoing challenges (read: conflict, corruption, poverty). Similar concern was expressed about the dire humanitarian situation in the Democratic Republic of the Congo, where Clinton's visit took her to meet with victims of rape and abominable living conditions.
Most interesting of all were some of the meetings that Secretary Carson alluded to, both past and present including:
Photo: PEDRO UGARTE/AFP/Getty Images
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