Unclear if US strike killed Shebab leader

The Pentagon says an "operation" was carried out against the Shebab militia and that it is "assessing the results" for whether its leader was killed.

Pentagon press secretary Navy Rear Adm. John Kirby

US officials have said it is unclear if air strikes killed a top al-Shebab commander in Somalia. (AAP)

US forces have carried out air strikes against senior members of Somalia's al-Qaeda-linked Shebab rebels, with casualties reported but uncertainty over the fate of the group's leader.

The Pentagon confirmed on Tuesday that an "operation" was carried out the previous day against the hardline militia, and that it was "assessing the results".

"The Americans carried out a major air strike targeting a gathering by senior Al-Shebab officials, including their leader Abu-Zubayr," said Abdukadir Mohamed Nur, governor for southern Somalia's Lower Shabelle region.

Abu-Zubayr is the often-used name for Shebab supreme commander Ahmed Abdi Godane, listed by the US State Department as one of the world's eight top terror fugitives.

If confirmed, Godane's death would be a major blow for the Shebab - although Somali officials said late Tuesday they were still trying to establish who was killed.

"The Shebab suffered big casualties during the attack. We can't give further details until we get additional information on the exact number of casualties, but what I know is that the target was the leadership," government spokesman Ridwan Haji Abdiweli told reporters.

Washington has carried out a series of drone missile strikes in the past, including attacks reportedly targeting Godane.

"We are assessing the results of the operation," Pentagon Press Secretary Rear Admiral John Kirby said in a statement.

The Shebab refused to be drawn on speculation that Godane had been killed.

"Let the Americans say that they have killed Shebab's leader," a senior Shebab official said.

"So far the Americans just gave us rumours."

The air strike comes days after African Union (AU) troops and government forces launched "Operation Indian Ocean", a major offensive aimed at seizing key ports from the Islamist rebels and cutting off one of their key sources of revenue - multi-million dollar exports of charcoal.

"They were meeting to discuss the current offensive in the region," Nur said.

"There were casualties inflicted on the militants."

Nur said the strike hit a Shebab hideout used as a training camp for suicide bombers a in remote village of the Lower Shabelle region, south of the capital Mogadishu and seat of Somalia's internationally-backed but fragile government.

On Saturday, the AU mission in Somalia, AMISOM, said it had captured the town of Bulomarer, some 160 kilometres southwest of Mogadishu.

The town was the scene of an attempted raid by French commandos in January 2013 to free an intelligence agent being held hostage.

The bid failed and resulted in the death of two members of the French special forces as well as the hostage.

AMISOM and Somali government troops were also seen on roads towards Barawe, the last major port held by the hardline Islamists,.

As the offensive gathers pace, authorities in Mogadishu said they were willing to give "misled" Shebab members one last chance to surrender.

"They can surrender within 45 days, but anyone who stands against that offer will be recognised as a criminal and brought to justice," Somalia's minister for national security, Khalif Ahmed Ereg, told reporters.

Godane, 37, who reportedly trained in Afghanistan with the Taliban, took over the leadership of the Shebab in 2008 after then chief Adan Hashi Ayro was killed by a US missile strike.

Al-Qaeda chief Ayman al-Zawahiri has recognised Godane as the head of the "mujahedeen" in East Africa, although letters released after Osama bin Laden's death show the late Saudi Islamist leader had lower regard for the Somali's abilities.

He is included in a third category of men on whom information warrants a $US7 million ($A7.57 million) reward from the US, alongside Nigeria's Boko Haram leader, but under the Taliban's Mullah Omar, for whom a tip is worth up to $US10 million, and Zawahiri, who fetches $US25 million.


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