The Independent

‘More than 20 killed’ after Biden orders strike in Syria

- BORZOU DARAGAHI

A strike on an Iraqi militia in Syria ordered by US president Joe Biden may have killed at least 22 people, according to a monitoring organisati­on.

Yesterday, the US launched half a dozen missiles on a Syrian site it described as depots used by Kataib Hezbollah and Kataib Sayid al-Shuhada, two Iranian-backed Iraq militias it claimed were behind a deadly 15 February attack on an American base in northern Iraq and another 22 February attack on its embassy in Baghdad.

While the Pentagon described the airstrikes as a “proportion­ate military response”, the high reported death toll, if confirmed, could have unintended consequenc­es both for Iraqi prime minister Mustafa al-Kadhimi’s fragile government and Washington-Baghdad relations.

None of those killed in the attack were Iranian, said the Syrian Observator­y for Human Rights (SOHR), a generally credible monitoring group based in London. So many deaths could prompt cries of revenge by the

Iraqi militiamen’s comrades or extended families or tribes, possibly imperiling the moderate, pro-western Kadhimi government in Baghdad.

According to SOHR, the airstrikes unfolded early morning local time, targeting a weapons shipment crossing from Syria into Iraq near the border crossing that separates near the Iraqi town of al-Qaim. US officials told reporters the military dropped seven 500-pound bombs on a cluster of buildings along the Syrian-Iraqi border.

“The airstrikes have left great human and material losses,” said a report by SOHR, specifying the destructio­n of three trucks loaded with ammunition. A source told Reuters that 17 people were killed in the airstrike, while a militia member told the news agency that at least one person was killed.

The US said the attack was launched in conjunctio­n with “diplomatic measures, including consultati­on with coalition partners” that may include the UK and France.

“The operation sends an unambiguou­s message: President Biden will act to protect American and coalition personnel,” said the Pentagon statement. “At the same time, we have acted in a deliberate manner that aims to de-escalate the overall situation in both eastern Syria and Iraq.”

Iran provides financial, military and political support for powerful and often highly ideologica­lly motivated Iraqi armed groups that are often rooted in similar strains of populist Shia Islamism as the leadership in Tehran. The groups, officially called Popular Mobilisati­on Forces, have grown more politicall­y powerful since taking up a fighting role in the five-year war to dislodge Isis from Iraq and Syria.

Both Israel and the US have occasional­ly targeted the Iranian-backed militias, which extend Tehran’s influence and power and are seen as a major threat by Arab autocracie­s aligned with the US.

Washington and Tehran are now seeking to re-engage in diplomacy and resurrect a deal curtailing Iran’s nuclear programme after four years of sour relations under president Donald Trump but have been hampered by mistrust.

Hours before the airstrikes, Mr Biden held his first phone call as president with Saudi King Salman, raising the issue of the Iranian aligned groups, according to readouts from both Riyadh and Washington.

Iran and Syria’s foreign ministers conferred after the latest airstrikes and called on “the west to adhere to UN Security Council resolution­s regarding Syria”, according to a website of the Iranian government.

Russia, which serves as a patron of the Bashar al-Assad regime in Syria and maintains a measure of control over its airspace, condemned the American airstrikes.

“We call for unconditio­nal respect for the sovereignt­y and territoria­l integrity of Syria,” said Maria Zakharova, a spokespers­on for the Russian foreign ministry. “We reaffirm our rejection of any attempts to turn Syrian territory into an arena for settling geopolitic­al scores.”

On Thursday, Russian forces released a video showing their own forces in Syria launching an Iskander missile that then later allegedly struck a hospital in opposition-controlled territory, according to activists. The release of the video, from an earlier incident, was meant to countercla­ims in Armenia that its Iskander missiles were ineffectiv­e.

Syria condemned the airstrikes and urged President Biden not to follow “the law of the jungle”.

“Syria condemns in the strongest terms the US cowardly attack on areas in Deir al-Zor near the Syrian-Iraqi border,” the Syrian foreign ministry said in a statement.

 ?? (AFP/Getty) ?? The president faces backlash from some corners over his first sanctioned airstrike
(AFP/Getty) The president faces backlash from some corners over his first sanctioned airstrike

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