Daily Mail

In flames, car carrying militia chief blown up by a U.S. drone in Iraq

- By Andy Jehring

TENSIONS in the Middle East flared further last night after the US assassinat­ion of an Iran- backed militia commander in Iraq.

Dramatic pictures showed the burning wreck of the car that Wissam Mohammed ‘Abu Bakr’ alSaadi had been travelling in when it was hit by an American drone.

The commander of Kataib Hezbollah’s operations in Syria was killed alongside two other members of the group in the Iraqi capital, Baghdad.

Washington ordered the hit in retaliatio­n for attacks on US troops in the region, but Iraqi authoritie­s have condemned the ‘blatant assassinat­ion’ in a residentia­l neighbourh­ood.

Crowds were seen swarming the vehicle after the strike on Wednesday evening, as local officials warned the attacks could see an end to the US-led

‘Killing people with impunity’

coalition in the country. Yehia Rasool, a spokesman for Iraq’s prime minister, said: ‘ The internatio­nal coalition is completely oversteppi­ng the reasons and objectives for which it is present on our territory.’

He added ‘ This trajectory compels the Iraqi government more than ever to terminate the mission of this coalition, which has become a factor for instabilit­y and threatens to entangle Iraq in the cycle of conflict.’

Furious crowds chanted ‘ Death to America’, ‘ America is the biggest devil’, and ‘ America, get out of our land’ in Baghdad as they faced dozens of riot police.

‘America needs to be investigat­ed for breaching internatio­nal law,’ one protester told Sky News.

‘How are they able to attack another country and kill people with impunity?’

The US attack immediatel­y prompted angry demands for retaliatio­n by other pro-Iran fighting groups, which form the so-called Axis of Resistance in Iraq.

Paramilita­ry outfit Harakat Hezbollah al Nujaba warned: ‘This will not be the last [attack] if there is no strict and firm official response from the Iraqi government.’

The US has some 2,500 troops in Iraq and 900 in neighbouri­ng Syria in a mission to prevent a resurgence

of Islamic State. An American-led invasion of Iraq in 2003 to remove Saddam Hussein triggered a spiral of violence and disorder that continues today.

It came as Israeli troops bombed the southern Gazan city of Rafah yesterday ahead of a planned ground offensive. Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu vowed to move in troops after rejecting a peace deal offered by Hamas on Wednesday.

Israeli officials have said they cannot end the war before dismantlin­g Hamas’s infrastruc­ture for smuggling weapons over the border, with Rafah a key checkpoint.

Michael Milshtein, a former head of Palestinia­n affairs for Israeli military intelligen­ce, told The Wall Street Journal: ‘Leaving Rafah an open gate between the world and Gaza means that Hamas immediatel­y will start reconstruc­tion of its military capacities.’

However, Rafah is filled with more than a million refugees and the crossing is also a key route for aid, meaning any attack risks worsening the humanitari­an crisis.

Egypt has warned it will end a decades-long truce with Israel if Palestinia­ns attempt to flee across the border. But despite the turmoil there were positive signs

yesterday as peace negotiatio­ns were again under way in Cairo.

Hamas indicated it still hopes to discuss a ceasefire despite its initial offer being rejected as ‘bizarre’ by Mr Netanyahu.

LABOUR has refused to rule out unilateral­ly recognisin­g a Palestinia­n state as it continues to lose Muslim voters over its refusal to call for a ceasefire in Gaza. Foreign affairs spokesman David Lammy told the Financial Times the move is ‘not beyond contemplat­ion’. Former Conservati­ve Cabinet minister Theresa Villiers said it would ‘look like a reward for terrorism’.

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 ?? ?? Precision strike: Al-Saadi, and his charred vehicle surrounded by angry crowds yesterday
Precision strike: Al-Saadi, and his charred vehicle surrounded by angry crowds yesterday
 ?? ?? Inferno: Abu Bakr al-Saadi’s car in flames after being destroyed by an American drone
Inferno: Abu Bakr al-Saadi’s car in flames after being destroyed by an American drone

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