Somalia's Shebab Vow More Attacks after Mogadishu Carnage

W300

Somalia's Shebab rebels vowed more attacks after a deadly car bomb killed more than 70 people in Mogadishu, spokesman Ali Mohamud Rage said in speech broadcast Wednesday by the group's radio.

"We are promising that attacks against the enemy will be routine, more in number and will increase day by day," Rage said over radio al-Andalus.

A suicide bomber on Tuesday detonated an explosives-laden truck at a government compound in Mogadishu, unleashing a powerful blast that mowed down dozens and wounded more than 100 others.

Witnesses said the devastation was the worst they had ever seen since Somalia plunged into a civil war two decades ago.

The bombing was the deadliest single attack in Somalia by the Shebab, who launched a bloody uprising in 2007 against the Western-backed transitional government.

It was also the first since the insurgents pulled out of Mogadishu in August in a move they said was a change of military tactics.

"The attack was a hit to the mercenaries serving the interests of non-believers who thought that they have captured Mogadishu as well as for those who assume the Shebab had left the capital," Rage said.

"The attack proved that we are still in Mogadishu and very much at K4," said Rage, referring to the area of Mogadishu hit by the suicide bomber.

Rage identified the attacker as Mogadishu-born Bashar Abdulahi Nur.

"The enemies killed by Nur will go to hell," he said.

Several world leaders condemned the attack, with the U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton slamming the al-Qaida-affiliated Shebab's "complete disregard for human life and Somalia's future."

United Nations chief Ban Ki-moon also expressed shock at the deadly bombing.

"It is incomprehensible that innocents are being senselessly targeted," Ban was quoted as saying by spokesman Martin Nesirky.

Analysts on Wednesday said the bombing proved the insurgents' military capability even after abandoning their bases in Mogadishu where they waged relentless attacks against the government and African Union troops backing it.

"Shebab’s tactical withdrawal from most of Mogadishu was in part designed to allow it to fight on its terms, using terrorist attacks and asymmetrical urban guerilla war tactics," said Ken Menkhaus, associate professor of Political Science at Davidson College.

The Shebab retreated to southern and central Somalia regions they already control.

J. Peter Pham of the Atlantic Council think-tank said the attack was a "wake-up call for both Somalis and the international community."

"While al-Shebab has clearly been weakened in recent months by dwindling financial resources, internal discord, and a loss of political legitimacy -- to say nothing of the elimination of key leaders -- its demise is by no means inevitable," added Pham.