Massive Escalation of US Airstrikes in Somalia with Zero Civilian Accountability

US airstrikes in Somalia escalated dramatically in 2025, with AFRICOM claiming zero civilian casualties despite independent monitors documenting dozens of civilian deaths. AFRICOM stopped publishing casualty data and has never paid compensation for civilian harm in the country.

The Trump administration dramatically escalated US airstrikes in Somalia beginning in 2025, with AFRICOM conducting at least 43 strikes by mid-year — more than double the prior year's total. Independent monitors at Airwars have documented between 33 and 167 civilian deaths from US strikes in Somalia, while AFRICOM has assessed zero civilian casualties. AFRICOM stopped publishing casualty estimates in April-May 2025 and has never paid compensation for any civilian death in Somalia.

Executive summary

What this record documents

  • AFRICOM conducted at least 43 airstrikes in Somalia in 2025, more than doubling the prior year's pace, with the administration citing both regional security and alleged threats to the US homeland.
  • AFRICOM has assessed zero civilian casualties from its 2025 strikes, while independent monitors at Airwars document between 33 and 167 total civilian deaths from US strikes in Somalia.
  • AFRICOM stopped publishing casualty estimates in April-May 2025, telling reporters they were 'temporarily refraining' while the new administration finalized policy.
  • Amnesty International has concluded that AFRICOM repeatedly misclassified Somali civilians killed in strikes as 'terrorists' and that actual strike numbers exceed official figures.
  • The US has never paid compensation for any civilian death caused by its strikes in Somalia, despite a congressionally mandated program for such payments.

Timeline

Sequence of events

  1. New administration inherits Somalia strike authority

    The Trump administration takes office and begins expanding the pace of airstrikes in Somalia, which had already been authorized under prior administrations.

  2. AFRICOM stops publishing casualty estimates

    AFRICOM ceases providing death toll assessments in response to media queries, stating it is 'temporarily refraining from publishing casualty estimates while the new administration finalizes its policy.'

  3. Al Jazeera reports strikes have doubled year-over-year

    Al Jazeera reports that under the Trump administration, US strikes on Somalia have more than doubled compared to the prior year, with AFRICOM increasingly citing homeland security rationales.

  4. AFRICOM strike reportedly kills village chief near Badhan

    AFRICOM conducts airstrikes near Badhan, Somalia that reportedly kill a village chief. AFRICOM states the strike targeted an al-Shabaab weapons dealer but does not confirm the individual's identity or death.

  5. Strike and ground operations near Jamaame kill at least 21

    At least 21 people, including multiple children and an elderly man, are reported killed in an airstrike and/or ground operations near Jamaame in southern Somalia.

Analysis

Reporting, legal context, and impact

What Happened

Beginning in January 2025, the Trump administration dramatically escalated the pace of US airstrikes in Somalia. According to the New America Foundation's tracking using AFRICOM data, AFRICOM conducted at least 43 air strikes in Somalia during 2025 — more than double the prior year's pace. By June 10, 2025, AFRICOM had already conducted 38 strikes, nearly four times the total from prior years over the same period.

More than half the strikes targeted IS-Somalia (the ISIL affiliate in northeast Puntland), while the remainder targeted al-Shabaab. The administration increasingly cited not just regional security but also alleged threats to the US homeland from Somalia as justification for the increased tempo.

Civilian Casualties and the Accountability Gap

AFRICOM has assessed that none of its 2025 strikes killed any civilians. This assessment is contradicted by independent monitoring:

  • Airwars, the nonprofit conflict watchdog, estimates between 33 and 167 total civilian deaths from US strikes in Somalia.
  • Amnesty International has concluded that AFRICOM has repeatedly misclassified Somali civilians killed in strikes as "terrorists" and that actual strike numbers exceed officially reported figures.

Specific incidents illustrate the gap. On September 13, 2025, an AFRICOM strike near Badhan reportedly killed a village chief. AFRICOM stated the strike targeted an al-Shabaab weapons dealer but neither identified the individual nor confirmed the kill. On November 16, 2025, at least 21 people — including multiple children and an elderly man — were reported killed in an airstrike and/or ground operations near Jamaame in southern Somalia.

Information Blackout

In April or May 2025, AFRICOM stopped providing death toll assessments in response to media queries, telling reporters it was "temporarily refraining from publishing casualty estimates while the new administration finalizes its policy." This information blackout coincided with the escalation in strike tempo, reducing public accountability.

Zero Compensation

The United States has never paid compensation for any civilian death caused by its strikes in Somalia, despite a congressionally mandated program that authorizes such payments. This stands in contrast to other theaters of operation where ex gratia payments have occasionally been made.

Legal Analysis

The escalation of strikes with zero civilian accountability raises serious concerns under international humanitarian law:

Precautionary obligations: Additional Protocol I Article 57 requires parties to an armed conflict to take "constant care" to spare civilians and take "all feasible precautions" in the choice of means and methods of attack. The persistent gap between AFRICOM's zero-civilian-casualty assessments and independent monitoring suggests a systemic failure in post-strike assessment.

Right to life: ICCPR Article 6 requires that deprivation of life not be arbitrary. When strikes kill civilians and no investigation or acknowledgment follows, the obligation to account for each death is unfulfilled.

Misclassification: Amnesty International's finding that AFRICOM repeatedly misclassified civilians as terrorists raises concerns about deliberate or reckless disregard for civilian protection.

Why This Is Classified Severe

  • Sustained escalation: The doubling of strike pace represents a deliberate policy escalation, not isolated incidents.
  • Credible civilian casualties: Independent monitors document dozens to over one hundred civilian deaths that AFRICOM denies.
  • Information blackout: AFRICOM stopped publishing casualty data during the escalation period.
  • Zero accountability: No investigation, acknowledgment, or compensation for any civilian death — ever — in the Somalia theater.
  • Misclassification of civilians: Documented pattern of labeling civilian casualties as enemy combatants.

International Law Violations

  1. ICCPR Article 6 (Right to Life): Arbitrary deprivation of life through strikes that kill civilians without subsequent investigation or accountability.
  2. Geneva Conventions Common Article 3: Protection of persons not taking active part in hostilities, including civilians in strike zones.
  3. Additional Protocol I Article 57: Failure to take all feasible precautions to verify targets and minimize civilian harm, as evidenced by the systematic gap between official and independent casualty counts.
  4. UN Principles on Extra-legal Executions: Obligation to conduct thorough, prompt, and impartial investigations into suspected unlawful killings by state agents.

Linked reporting

Reporting and secondary sources

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