Baku-APA. U.N.-backed African Union peacekeepers in Somalia, bolstered by more than 4,000 new soldiers, may return to the attack against al Qaeda-linked militants, a senior AU commander said on Monday, APA reports quoting Reuters.
The AU force known as AMISOM will have more than 22,000 troops when the reinforcements agreed last week arrive.
Brigadier Dick Olum, a Ugandan commander in charge of one of the four AMISOM sectors covering Somalia, said the extra 4,000 soldiers could tilt the military balance against al Shabaab.
"I'm very confident that with 4,000 new troops, AMISON will definitely consider a new offensive," he told Reuters. "We shall not be referred to as sitting ducks any more."
AMISOM has driven al Shabaab rebels from the capital Mogadishu and several coastal towns since 2011, but became overstretched and the offensive stalled earlier this year.
With rebels still controlling many parts of Somalia, President Hassan Sheikh Mohamud's Western-backed government has struggled to exert full control and end more than two decades of fighting that has plagued the Horn of Africa state.
The insecurity is obstructing plans to create a federal state in Somalia and curb the power of Islamic militancy, viewed as a threat by Western powers and their African allies.