The Islamic State's Central Africa Province, known locally as the Allied Democratic Forces, or ADF, mounted its second attack in western Uganda since last Friday. The mobile unit currently operating inside Uganda represents the first sustained guerrilla presence in the country since 2007.
The U.S. government designated Abdiweli Mohamed Yusuf, the financial emir of the Islamic State's Somali Province. This move, however, has much wider implications than just the Islamic State's Somali operations.
The story of the Pan-Ugandan Liberation Initiative, a short-lived splinter faction of the more infamous Islamic State-loyal ADF that was destroyed earlier this year, provides important details and context in the ADF's overall ideological trajectory and history.