How Al-Shabaab picks its targets
People who had been hiding inside the mall during the gunfire flee the scene.
An armed official takes a shooting position inside the mall.
Bodies lie on the ground inside the mall.
Officials carry an injured man in the mall.
Soldiers move up stairs inside the Westgate Mall.
Crowds gather
outside the upscale shopping mall. The interior ministry urges Kenyans
to keep off the roads near the mall so police can ensure everyone inside
has been evacuated to safety.
Editor's note: Peter Bergen is a director at the New America Foundation and the author of "Manhunt: The Ten-Year Search for bin Laden -- From 9/11 to Abbottabad."
(CNN) -- Al-Shabaab, al-Qaeda's brutal Somali
affiliate, has claimed credit for the attack by multiple gunmen at an
upscale shopping mall in Nairobi, Kenya that has already killed at least
59 people.
This should not be a
surprise. For Al-Shabaab, the mall was an attractive target because
Westerners, including Americans, frequented it. The mall is also in the
capital of Kenya, a country that Al-Shabaab has good reason to dislike,
as the Kenyan military played a major role in handing their forces a
defeat last year when they liberated the key Somali port of Kismayo from their control.
Al-Shabaab ("the Youth")
tweeted Saturday that "all Muslims inside #Westgate" -- referring to the
mall that was attacked in Nairobi -- "were escorted out by the
Mujahideen before" the armed assault commenced.
Members of Al-Shabaab use
Twitter frequently to communicate their messages to the world. The
group has recruited around 40 young American men and also dozens from
Europe and has shown that it is comfortable with Internet technology,
despite the fact that Somalia is one of the poorest and most anarchic
countries on the planet. Dozens killed, scores wounded, hostages taken
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