Battle of Baidoa | |||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Part of the Somalia War (2006–2009) | |||||||
Map of the military advances during the battle | |||||||
| |||||||
Belligerents | |||||||
Transitional Federal Government Ethiopia[1][2] | Islamic Courts Union | ||||||
Strength | |||||||
3,000+ TFG militia, 5,000+ Ethiopian soldiers | 5,000+ Islamist militia | ||||||
Casualties and losses | |||||||
400 killed (Islamists claim)[3] |
1,000 Islamists dead (according to ethiopian sources)[4] 800+ wounded[5] | ||||||
The Battle of Baidoa began on 20 December 2006 when the Somali transitional federal government forces (TFG) allied with Ethiopian forces stationed there attacked advancing Islamic Courts Union (ICU) forces along with 500 alleged Eritrean troops and mujahideen arrayed against them.
The battle began with most reports depicting the government forces defecting and its position on the verge of collapse. The TFG, along with its allies in the Juba Valley Alliance (JVA), had certainly been on the retreat since the June offensives of the ICU. By the opening of the battle in December, Baidoa was invested with attacks coming in at least three directions.
Strong Ethiopian reinforcements rapidly changed the battle from one in which the TFG was on the defensive, through a strong series of counterattacks, to a decisive Ethiopian/TFG victory. Ethiopian armored, artillery, and air forces proved instrumental against the ICU's militia. The battle began the Ethiopian intervention against the ICU, in the 2006–2009 War in Somalia.