The Manila Times

US: Response to Jordan attack decisive

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WASHINGTON, D.C.: The White House vowed on Monday to respond decisively to an attack in Jordan it blames on Iranbacked militants, in which a drone slammed into a military base and killed three Americans while troops were in their beds.

The casualties — the first United States military deaths in an attack in the Middle East since the IsraelHama­s war began — raised fears of an escalating conflict, as fighting rages in Gaza and related violence plagues other parts of the region.

“We are not looking for a war with Iran,” US National Security Council spokesman John Kirby told reporters on Monday afternoon, but the strike “was escalatory, make no mistake about it, and it requires a response.”

His remarks came shortly after US President Joe Biden met with his national security team, including Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin and National Security Adviser Jake Sullivan.

Iran said it had nothing to do with the attack and denied US accusation­s it supported militant groups behind Sunday’s attack on Tower 22, a remote frontier base in Jordan’s northeast, near the borders with Iraq and Syria.

Kirby earlier told CNN that the US response would be “very consequent­ial,” but would not speculate on the options Biden was considerin­g, including whether targets inside Iran were on the table.

American and allied forces were targeted in the region again on Monday, this time by rockets in Syria, though no injuries were reported, a US defense official said.

US and coalition troops have been attacked at least 165 times since mid-October — 66 in Iraq, 98 in Syria and one in Jordan — with “a mix of one-way attack drones, rockets, mortars and close-range ballistic missiles,” the official added.

Deputy Pentagon Press Secretary Sabrina Singh said the attack in Jordan wounded more than 40 people, adding to about 80 injured in previous violence.

She said the drone struck an area where living quarters are located on the base early in the morning, “so people were actually in their beds when the drone impacted.”

US media reported on Monday, citing unnamed officials, that the failure to prevent the strike was possibly due to confusion over whether the drone was hostile or a US aircraft returning to base.

Singh did not confirm those reports, saying US Central Command was still investigat­ing how the drone was able to get through.

There has so far been no claim of responsibi­lity for Sunday’s attack, but Singh said it has “the footprints of Kataeb Hezbollah” — an Iran-backed Iraqi militant group the Pentagon has blamed for previous violence.

Saudi Arabia on Monday denounced the deadly strike “in the strongest terms,” while Jordan, Bahrain, Egypt and Iraq have also condemned the attack.

A spokesman for Hamas said on Sunday the Jordan attack was a message to Washington that the continuati­on of the war in Gaza “risks a regional explosion.”

The escalating Middle East conflict poses a challenge for Biden in an election year, and Republican politician­s were quick to take aim at him over the weekend.

The latest round of the IsraelHama­s conflict began when the Palestinia­n militant group attacked southern Israel on October 7, resulting in the deaths of about 1,140 people, mostly civilians, according to an Agence France-Presse (AFP) tally of official figures.

Israel retaliated with a relentless military offensive that has killed at least 26,637 people in Gaza, most of them women and children, according to the Hamas-run territory’s Health Ministry.

Anger over that campaign has grown across the region, stoking violence involving Iran-backed groups in Lebanon, Iraq and Syria, as well as Yemen.

 ?? AFP PHOTO ?? ‘WE’LL RESPOND’
United States National Security Council spokesman John Kirby speaks during the daily briefing in the Brady Briefing Room of the White House in Washington, D.C., on Monday, Jan. 29, 2024.
AFP PHOTO ‘WE’LL RESPOND’ United States National Security Council spokesman John Kirby speaks during the daily briefing in the Brady Briefing Room of the White House in Washington, D.C., on Monday, Jan. 29, 2024.

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