Albuquerque Journal

Suicide attack a sign of danger in Syria

Four Americans among those killed in assault

- BY LOUISA LOVELUCK AND MISSY RYAN THE WASHINGTON POST

BEIRUT — Four Americans were killed in a suicide attack in Syria on Wednesday, the largest loss of life in the Pentagon’s war against Islamic State militants there and a sign of the potent threat that remains as the Trump administra­tion begins to withdraw.

The attack occurred in the northern city of Manbij, where American forces have conducted patrols after militants were flushed from the area. In coming months, those troops are expected to depart in keeping with President Donald Trump’s announceme­nt last month that the Islamic State had been defeated and troops would be coming home.

U.S. Central Command said those killed in the suicide blast included two American troops, a Pentagon civilian employee and a U.S. contractor conducting a “local engagement.” Three additional U.S. service members were wounded, officials said in a statement.

White House press secretary Sarah Sanders praised the “brave American heroes” who died in the attack. “Our service members and their families have all sacrificed so much for our country,” she said in a statement.

The Islamic State asserted responsibi­lity for the blast. On its unofficial news agency, Amaq, the group said the attacker used an explosives-laden vest to target coalition forces and that nine American troops were killed or injured. Amaq presented no evidence for that claim.

The White House said Trump had been “fully briefed” on the incident, the most deadly since U.S. troops arrived in 2015. Previously, two American service members had been killed in action in the battle against the Islamic State in Syria.

Speaking at the State Department several hours after initial casualty reports, Vice President Mike Pence did not mention the bombing or the deaths, but instead hailed Trump’s leadership in combating the militants in Syria.

“We are bringing our troops home,” Pence said in an address to more than 180 U.S. ambassador­s and chiefs of missions abroad gathered for a conference in Washington. “The caliphate has crumbled, and ISIS has been defeated.”

In a statement issued by his office later in the day, Pence offered sympathy to the families of the Americans who were killed, condemned the attack and said the United States would “never allow the remnants of ISIS to reestablis­h their evil and murderous caliphate - not now, not ever.”

Surveillan­ce camera video, apparently from the site of the attack, showed the explosion erupting on a busy sidewalk, sending a child running from the flames with hands clasped over his ears. Bodies and blood trails could be seen spread across the ground in photograph­s from the immediate aftermath.

The Britain-based Syrian Observator­y for Human Rights said at least 19 people were wounded or killed.

A Kurdish news agency reported that at least 10 people were injured in the attack, which it said occurred outside a popular restaurant.

Trump announced last month that the U.S. force of more than 2,000 U.S. service members would be leaving Syria, more than four years after U.S. forces launched an internatio­nal coalition to dislodge the Islamic State from its self-declared “caliphate” straddling Syria and Iraq.

The president’s declaratio­n surprised allies and foes alike.

 ?? ANHA/ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? This frame grab from video provided by Hawar News shows a damaged restaurant where an explosion occurred, in Manbij, Syria, Wednesday
ANHA/ASSOCIATED PRESS This frame grab from video provided by Hawar News shows a damaged restaurant where an explosion occurred, in Manbij, Syria, Wednesday

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