Operation Shujaa
Operation Shujaa | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Part of the Allied Democratic Forces insurgency and war against the Islamic State | |||||
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Belligerents | |||||
Uganda DR Congo MONUSCO[1] |
Islamic State FPIC CODECO | ||||
Commanders and leaders | |||||
Muhoozi Kainerugaba Kayanja Muhanga Dick Olum Richard Otto Bombele Lohola Camille Kayanja Muhanga |
Musa Baluku Bongela Chuma Meddie Nkalubo (allegedly killed)[2] Elias Segujja (allegedly killed)[3] Hassan Nyanzi "Muzaaya" Benjamin Kisokeranio (POW) | ||||
Units involved | |||||
Uganda People's Defence Force (UPDF)
Some Mai-Mai militias |
Islamic State's Central Africa Province
ADF-Mukulu / PULI (until Jan. 2023) | ||||
Strength | |||||
Thousands | Thousands (Ugandan claim) | ||||
Casualties and losses | |||||
Unknown | Heavy |
Operation Shujaa (loosely translated "operation of the brave")[4] is an ongoing military offensive conducted by the Democratic Republic of the Congo and Uganda against insurgent forces in Kivu and Ituri, mainly Islamic State (IS) affiliates and the Allied Democratic Forces (ADF). Launched in November 2021, it has resulted in significant losses for the targeted rebel forces and substantially reduced their activity. At times, the government forces engaged in Operation Shujaa have also fought non-ADF/IS rebel groups.
Background
The Allied Democratic Forces were founded in 1996 as a unification of various Ugandan rebel groups. From this point onwards, the ADF waged an insurgency against the Ugandan government mainly from bases in the eastern Congo whose governments provided it with support during the 1990s.[5] Even after the Congolese leadership terminated its support for the ADF, the latter maintained a large presence in the eastern Congo which was repeatedly ravaged by wars as well as rebellions, becoming a haven for many different insurgent groups.[5][6]
Over time, the ADF became aligned with a radical Islamism. The group also became more extreme in its methods, and increasingly targeted civilians. As a result of this ideological development, the ADF began to forge connections to international Jihadism; this trend culminated in 2019, when most of the ADF under Musa Baluku pledged loyalty to the Islamic State (IS).[5][7] After violent disagreements and purges in response to this move, a small faction of the ADF broke off under an individual called "Muzaaya", declaring its continued loyalty to former commander Jamil Mukulu.[5][3] This splinter subsequently adopted the name "Pan-Ugandan Liberation Initiative" (PULI).[3]
Baluku's ADF faction subsequently became the core of the Islamic State's Central Africa Province (IS-CAP). Profiting from aid by IS-Central, IS-CAP quickly grew in prominence and expanded its avtivities, launching several high-profile attacks in the DR Congo and Uganda.[5] IS-CAP thus rose to "poster child for the Islamic State's efforts to maintain a constant and lingering threat across the globe".[8] The growth of IS-CAP eventually made the group a "top counter-terrorism priority" for regional states.[9] In late 2021, the ADF/IS-CAP carried out a series of bombing attacks across Uganda, whereupon Ugandan President Yoweri Museveni declared that the responsible militants would be hunted down.[6][10] Museveni subsequently met with President of the Democratic Republic of the Congo Félix Tshisekedi, and the two agreed to organize a joint operation against ADF/IS-CAP.[10]
Opposing forces
Government forces
Operation Shujaa is carried out by the joint forces of Uganda's national military, the Uganda People's Defence Force (UPDF), and the Armed Forces of the Democratic Republic of the Congo (FARDC).[11] The Ugandan forces involved in the offensive number "hundreds"[12] or between 2,000 and 4,000 soldiers,[13] mainly belonging to the UPDF Mountain Division.[14][15] Smaller involved units include the French-trained Mountain Brigade,[16] the 3rd Mountain Battalion,[15] and the 83rd Battalion.[17] The Ugandan forces are under the chief command of Muhoozi Kainerugaba.[11] Under him, Kayanja Muhanga was the first Ugandan frontline commander for the operation, followed by Dick Olum in October 2022,[12] and Richard Otto in May 2024.[14]
FARDC Maj.-Gen. Bombele Lohola Camille acts as the Coordinator of the joint FARDC-UPDF military operations with Maj.-Gen. Kayanja Muhanga as his assistant.[18] The DR Congo committed at least one French-trained battalion to the operation.[16] Though Congolese officials praised the cooperation between FARDC and UPDF during the offensive, several FARDC officers were reportedly "uncomfortable" over the presence of Ugandan soldiers in their country due to previous conflicts between the two states.[19] In addition, the government forces are backed by some Mai-Mai militias.[3] The United Nations peacekeeping force in the DR Congo, MONUSCO, reportedly aided the operation as well.[1]
Rebels
The ADF, and by extension IS-CAP, is traditionally centered in North Kivu and Ituri.[7] Uganda has alleged that ADF/IS-CAP has thousands of members.[6] IS-CAP's most important commander is Musa Baluku,[5] though Bongela Chuma has also been identified as "alleged" leader of the IS branch.[9] Below these chief commanders served a number of important IS-CAP officers during the offensive: These included Meddie Nkalubo, reportedly second-in-command,[2] and Elias Segujja (alias Mulalo" / "Fezza"), head of the group's "political wing" and the "Southern Sector/Rwenzori-Mwalika".[3][20] IS-Central has supported IS-CAP with money and other aid.[9][7][3]
Compared to IS-CAP, the ADF-Mukulu faction or "PULI" was rather small; at its peak, it numbered 150-200 members. However, it attracted some prominent ADF members besides "Muzaaya", including Benjamin Kisokeranio and one of Mukulu's sons, Hassan Nyanzi. The three together commanded the splinter faction. PULI saw little combat, and spent much of its time hiding from IS-CAP and the UPDF.[3] At times, Operation Shujaa has also targeted rebel groups unrelated to IS and ADF, such as the Force Patriotique et Intégrationniste du Congo (FPIC) and CODECO.[16]
Operation
Operation Shujaa was launched on 30 November 2021 by the UPDF.[6][11] At first, the Ugandan Air Force bombed known ADF/IS-CAP camps, followed by Ugandan ground troops crossing the border and attacking rebel forces inside the DR Congo. From the start, the operation was supported by the FARDC. Fighting was reported around Beni and in the Virunga National Park.[6] According to researcher Jacob Zenn, it was the "most coordinated effort to target ISCAP cells in the DRC to date".[9] The initial aim of the operation was the destruction of the ADF/IS-CAP center at Kambi ya Yua in northern Beni.[3]
In January 2022, leading IS-CAP member Salim Mohammed and PULI commander Benjamin Kisokeranio were captured by security forces in the eastern DR Congo.[9] In the next month, the joint government forces started the operation's second phase by trying to clear and land route from Burasi to Boga. This was supposed to create an interconnected corridor covering Mbau, Ouicha, Eringeti, Kainama, Tchabi, Olamoyo, the Semuliki Bridge, and Mukakati. In this way, substantial rebel forces would be encircled in the zone dubbed "triangle of death" by the Congolese.[21] During the following month, government forces involved in Operation Shujaa clashed with the FPIC rebel group due to attempts by the latter to steal cattle from local civilians.[16] In March, the UPDF and FARDC reportedly killed ADF/IS-CAP commander Abu Aden (a Somali) during a battle at Malulu, north-west of Boga.[22] In contrast to the government's claims by good advances and heavy enemy losses, the Ebuteli Institute and Center on International Cooperation's Congo Research Group cautioned that the UPDF and FARDC claims were not substantiated by third parties, with ADF/IS-CAP seemingly succeeding in retreating in good order toward the Mambasa Territory.[13]
By April, the joint government forces were clearing the Beni-Kasindi road and attacking the insurgent strongholds in the Mwalika valley.[3] By May, UPDF and FARDC had concluded the operation's second phase, securing the Beni-Kamango highway and clearing the so-called "Death Triangle" of ADF/IS-CAP contingents. The rebels were reportedly retreating across the Ituri River into the Irumu Territory, and still had a significant presence in the Mwalika valley and the Rwenzori Mountains.[11] UPDF head Kainerugaba also claimed that the rebel presence at Semuliki Bridge, Kambi ya Yua, Belu I, II et III, Tondoli, Kainama, and Boga et Tshabi had been eliminated.[1] In June, Operation Shujaa was renewed for another year.[18] By fall, Operation Shujaa's scope was expanded, with three UPDF battalions deployed west of the Semliki River.[3] In November, Uganda announced that it would send an additional 1,000 troops into eastern Congo to help counter another rebel group, the March 23 Movement,[12] and also bombed a major IS-CAP camp under Segujja. The latter attack forced the rebels to relocate their camp southwards.[3] In December 2022, ADF rebels reportedly tried to infiltrate Uganda in Ntoroko District, but were repelled by the UPDF.[4]
By 2023, Operation Shujaa was already described as a success by Uganda and the DR Congo, though IS-CAP continued to operate and launch attacks. According to the United Nations, the group even sought to expand its activities in the region.[7] In January 2023, the UPDF attacked the PULI main camp near Lake Edward; the group survived, but was weakened and relocated its camp. However, this situation was exploited by a large IS-CAP contingent under Segujja which tracked the relocated PULI base and destroyed it. Aside of a few PULI members who fled and surrendered to government forces, the splinter group was eliminated by Segujja's raid; the survivors (including Nyanzi) yielded and joined IS-CAP.[3] In the next month, government aircraft reportedly bombed IS-CAP targets and killed Segujja during clashes in the Mwalika valley, though his death could not be confirmed.[3][20]
In June 2023, rebels carried out the Mpondwe school massacre in western Uganda. The attack was attributed to ADF militants linked to IS-CAP.[7] On 10 August, an IS-CAP party of 80 militants launched a raid from their bases in Mwalika valley, crossing the Bashu Chiefdom and raiding the city of Butembo. There, the insurgents freed 800 inmates from the Kakwangura prison, although 250 prisoners were reportedly recaptured soon after, including a prominent IS member known as "Kizito". The raiders subsequently retreated back through the Bashu Chiefdom in largely good order, while losing a few fighters to clashes with the FARDC, police, and village militias.[23] In August, the UPDF claimed that it had killed a mid-level ADF/IS-CAP officer named "Fazul" at Alungupa in North Kivu.[24] By September, President Museveni claimed that 560 ADF/IS-CAP members had been killed so far during Operation Shujaa, and urged the DR Congo to mobilize local militias to prevent the rebels from reentering secured areas. At this point, most ADF/IS-CAP insurgents had allegedly fallen back to the Mambasa Territory in Ituri.[25] In the same month, ADF/IS-CAP second-in-command Meddie Nkalubo was allegedly killed by an UPDF airstrike.[2] By the end of the year, the rebels had reportedly been dislodged from the Mwalika valley.[15]
By early 2024, the joint UPDF-FARDC forces had expelled IS-CAP from most of its strongholds.[8] In April 2024, the UPDF declared that its troops and FARDC soldiers had killed two ranking ADF/IS-CAP members: One, known as "Baghdad", was a commander and had been ambushed in Ambusire area, northwest of Tingwe in Ituri; the other, "Dr. Musa", had managed medical logistics and been killed at Mugulumugulu near Tokomeka.[15][17]
Reactions
No to arsonists/firefighters, the same errors will produce the same tragic effects. Stand up Congolese, Nation in danger!
In the DR Congo, reactions to the start of Operation Shujaa were negative or mixed. Many Congolese expressed opposition to the foreign intervention due to Uganda's destructive role in the Second Congo War, with Nobel Peace Prize winner Denis Mukwege and activist group Lutte pour le changement expressing criticism. In contrast, MONUSCO welcomed Operation Shujaa.[6] By June 2022, the local reception to the operation had grown more positive, with one civil society group, Mamove, expressing the view that the FARDC and UPDF should further expand their operations against ADF/IS-CAP.[26]
Analysis and impact
In 2022, the Ebuteli Institute and Center on International Cooperation's Congo Research Group reported that outside observers were critical of Operation Shujaa, with one diplomat likening it to "trying to kill a mosquito with a hammer" and an analyst describing it as merely "a lot of dust and noise". At this point, no substantial impact of the offensive on rebel strength could be identified.[13] Furthermore, the Ebuteli Institute and Congo Research Group argued that the location and scope of the operation possibly hinted at ulterior Ugandan motives connected to economic interests in the wider area.[27] By 2024, however, Operation Shujaa had a major impact on IS-CAP's propaganda output. For instance, the branch released 280 photos and four videos in 2021, but only 92 photos in 2023. Researchers Caleb Weiss and Ryan O'Farrell stated that IS-CAP's media had been reduced to a "shadow of its former self".[8]
References
- ^ a b c "RDC: l'UPDF et les FARDC "ont complètement évacué les ADF" de leurs bases (Officier ougandais Muhoozi)". RadioOkapi. 21 April 2022. Retrieved 2 June 2024.
- ^ a b c Busein Samilu; Andrew Bagala (25 September 2023). "ADF commanders killed since 2015". Daily Monitor. Retrieved 2 June 2024.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m Caleb Weiss; Ryan O'Farrell (23 July 2023). "PULI: Uganda's Other (Short-lived) Jihadi Group". Long War Journal. Retrieved 31 May 2024.
- ^ a b Halima Athumani (13 December 2022). "Ugandan Army Reports Killing 11 ADF Rebels Who Entered Country from Congo". VOA. Retrieved 31 May 2024.
- ^ a b c d e f Emmanuel Mutaizibwa (25 June 2023). "Inside the Lhubiriha, Kichwamba ADF attacks". Daily Monitor. Retrieved 31 May 2024.
- ^ a b c d e f g Patience Atuhaire (4 December 2021). "Why Ugandan troops entered DRC". BBC News. Retrieved 31 May 2024.
- ^ a b c d e "UN: ADF Backed By Islamic State". VOA. Agence France-Presse. 19 June 2023. Retrieved 31 May 2024.
- ^ a b c Weiss & O'Farrell 2024, p. 19.
- ^ a b c d e Zenn 2022.
- ^ a b Congo Research Group & Ebuteli Institute 2022, p. 4.
- ^ a b c d Bisong Etahoben (19 May 2022). "DR Congo, Ugandan Forces Preparing For 3rd Phase Of Operation Shujaa". Humangle Media. Retrieved 31 May 2024.
- ^ a b c Bisong Etahoben (22 November 2022). "Uganda To Send 1,000 Troops To Join EAC Force In DR Congo". Humangle Media. Retrieved 31 May 2024.
- ^ a b c Congo Research Group & Ebuteli Institute 2022, p. 5.
- ^ a b BillClinton Nuwahereza (13 May 2024). "Gen Otto replaces Gen Dick Olum as Operation Shujaa commander". Nile Post. Retrieved 31 May 2024.
- ^ a b c d Muhamadi Matovu (6 April 2024). "ADF commander 'Baghdad' killed in joint UPDF-FARDC operation". Nile Post. Retrieved 2 June 2024.
- ^ a b c d Congo Research Group & Ebuteli Institute 2022, p. 11.
- ^ a b Alex Ashaba (9 April 2024). "Another top ADF commander killed in DR Congo". Daily Monitor. Retrieved 2 June 2024.
- ^ a b Bisong Etahoben (2 June 2022). "DR Congo, Uganda Renew Military Cooperation For Another 2 Months". Humangle Media. Retrieved 31 May 2024.
- ^ Congo Research Group & Ebuteli Institute 2022, p. 7.
- ^ a b Kim Aine (12 March 2023). "Top ADF Commander, Mulalo Segujja Fezza, Killed in DRC". ChimpReports. Retrieved 2 June 2024.
- ^ Arafat Nzito (9 February 2022). "Operation Shujaa: UPDF Opens Third Offensive Approach Route against ADF". ChimpReports. Retrieved 2 June 2024.
- ^ Hattie Wright (16 March 2022). "Operation Shujaa: Somali ADF Commander Killed". ChimpReports. Retrieved 2 June 2024.
- ^ Caleb Weiss; Ryan O'Farrell (15 August 2023). "Islamic State conducts second major prison break in Congo". Long War Journal. Retrieved 31 May 2024.
- ^ "Operation Shujaa: ADF Commander, 3 Others Killed". ChimpReports. 16 August 2023. Retrieved 2 June 2024.
- ^ Halima Athumani (8 September 2023). "Uganda's President Says Hundreds of Militants Killed in DRC Operation". VOA. Retrieved 31 May 2024.
- ^ "Beni : la société civile satisfaite de la prolongation des opérations conjointes FARDC- UPDF". RadioOkapi. 5 June 2022. Retrieved 2 June 2024.
- ^ Congo Research Group & Ebuteli Institute 2022, p. 12.
Works cited
- Congo Research Group; Ebuteli Institute (June 2022). Uganda's Operation Shujaa in the Democratic Republic of Congo: Fighting the ADF or Securing Economic Interests? (PDF) (Report). Center on International Cooperation.
- Weiss, Caleb; O'Farrell, Ryan (2024). "Media Matters: How Operation Shujaa Degraded the Islamic State's Congolese Propaganda Output" (PDF). CTC Sentinel. 17 (3). West Point, New York: Combating Terrorism Center: 19–21. Archived (PDF) from the original on 25 March 2024. Retrieved 30 May 2024.
- Zenn, Jacob (February 2022). "Operation Shujaa Targets Islamic State's Leadership in Congo with Arrests of Salim Mohammed, Benjamin Kisokeranio, and Cheikh Banza". Militant Leadership Monitor. 13 (1). Jamestown Foundation.
- 2020s conflicts
- 2021 in the Democratic Republic of the Congo
- 2022 in the Democratic Republic of the Congo
- 2023 in the Democratic Republic of the Congo
- 2024 in the Democratic Republic of the Congo
- Kivu conflict
- Ituri conflict
- Allied Democratic Forces
- Military history of the Democratic Republic of the Congo
- Military operations involving Uganda
- Military operations involving the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant