CONFLICTS/SOMALIA CONFLICT
ACTIVEAfrica

SOMALIA CONFLICT

STARTED JUNE 1, 2006
DURATION: 19 YEARS, 10 MONTHS
4 PARTIES
SIDE A
🇸🇴
Somalia
Federal Government of Somalia (FGS)
SIDE B
Al-Shabaab
B
ATMIS / African Union Mission
B
🇺🇸
United States
United States (airstrikes + AFRICOM)
ESTIMATED CASUALTIES
500,000+ dead over conflict period; 3.8 million internally displaced
TERRITORIAL CONTROL
Al-Shabaab controls southern/central Somalia rural areas; government holds Mogadishu, Kismaayo, Garowe
LIVE UPDATES
Mar 16, 2026Al-Shabaab attacks on military convoy in central Somalia; government forces maintain pressure on militant strongholds
CLASSIFIED
INTELLIGENCE BRIEFINGSOMALIA CONFLICT
WARDATALAB.AI // 2026-04-15
INTEL // AFRICA // ACTIVE
REF: SOMALIA-CONFLICT
SITUATION OVERVIEW

Somalia's conflict represents one of the world's longest-running insurgencies, now in its third decade since al-Shabaab emerged from the Islamic Courts Union after its 2006 defeat by Ethiopian forces and the US-backed Transitional Federal Government. Al-Shabaab (The Youth) has evolved from a ragtag militia into one of Africa's most sophisticated jihadist organizations, generating an estimated $100-150 million annually through extortion, taxation of businesses and farms, cross-border trade tariffs, and Hawala money transfer network control.

The Federal Government of Somalia, despite years of international support including the African Union Mission (AMISOM, now ATMIS), has failed to extend effective governance beyond Mogadishu and a handful of cities. Al-Shabaab controls an estimated 20-30% of Somalia's territory outright and influences 60%+ of rural areas through shadow governance, tax collection, and dispute resolution — in many cases providing more reliable services than the government. The group's sophisticated information operations, including radio broadcasts, social media in Somali, and community dispute arbitration, have created genuine social legitimacy in areas where government presence means only security forces and extraction.

President Hassan Sheikh Mohamud, elected in 2022, launched an unprecedented all-Somali military offensive in August 2022 that initially achieved dramatic gains in central Somalia, liberating dozens of towns. However, momentum stalled by 2023 as al-Shabaab adapted with complex ambushes, IED campaigns, and asymmetric counterattacks including two of its deadliest bombings in Mogadishu.

KEY EVENTS & TIMELINE
ACTIVE PHASEstarted January 1, 2006
2006Ethiopian intervention; Islamic Courts Union defeated; Al-Shabaab emerges
2007-2011AMISOM deployment; Al-Shabaab controls much of southern Somalia
2011-2012Al-Shabaab withdraws from Mogadishu; famine kills 260,000
2013-2019Al-Shabaab loses territory but remains potent; major bombings in Mogadishu
2020-2022US airstrikes resume under Biden; government offensives with clan militias
2022-2023President Hassan Sheikh Mohamud launches major offensive against Al-Shabaab
2024AMISOM transitions to ATMIS; US continues targeted strikes on leadership
2025-2026Al-Shabaab retains rural strongholds; urban bombings continue; taxes businesses
Mar 2026Al-Shabaab attacks military convoys; government pressure on militant areas
STRATEGIC SIGNIFICANCE

Somalia's instability threatens maritime security across the Indian Ocean. Somali piracy — suppressed by international naval patrols 2011-2016 — is showing signs of resurgence since 2023 as coast guard capability collapses. The Gulf of Aden handles approximately 20,000 vessel transits annually connecting Asian manufacturing to European markets. Al-Shabaab's demonstrated ability to attack across East Africa — Kenya (Garissa, Westgate, Manda Bay), Uganda (2010 World Cup bombing), Ethiopia — makes it a genuine regional threat to the $10 billion annual East Africa tourism industry. The Puntland coast opposite Yemen creates potential for al-Shabaab and Houthi cooperation threatening Red Sea shipping. US airstrikes — over 300 since 2017 — demonstrate strategic priority despite absence of formal war authorization.

FORCES & CAPABILITIES

Al-Shabaab deploys an estimated 7,000-12,000 fighters plus 5,000-8,000 auxiliary forces, armed with small arms, mortars, IEDs, suicide vests, and advanced bomb-making capabilities. Al-Shabaab operates a sophisticated intelligence network (Amniyat) that has successfully infiltrated Somali government security services. The Federal Government of Somalia has 20,000-25,000 National Army troops of highly variable quality, supported by 7,000 ATMIS peacekeepers scheduled for complete withdrawal by end 2024, US airstrikes and special operations training, and approximately 4,000 Danab (Lightning) commandos — Somalia's most effective fighting force trained by US AFRICOM.

CURRENT STATUS

ACTIVE. Al-Shabaab continues insurgency with attacks on military convoys and urban bombings. Government forces, supported by African Union Transition Mission (ATMIS), maintain pressure on militant strongholds. US airstrikes continue targeting al-Shabaab leadership. The group controls rural areas in central and southern Somalia and collects taxes from businesses.

WARDATALAB INTELLIGENCE PLATFORM — ALL RIGHTS RESERVEDLAST UPDATED: 2026-04-15
MILITARY ANALYSIS

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