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Chemical weapon wasn’t used near U.S. troops in Iraq

Test raised concerns about rocket shell

- Jim Michaels @jimmichael­s USA TODAY

A rocket fired last week at an Iraqi base where American troops are present did not contain a chemical agent despite suspicions, the U.S. military reported Tuesday.

Extensive laboratory tests concluded that the munition did not contain mustard agent, Air Force Col. John Dorrian, a U.S. military spokesman, said.

No one was killed or injured in the attack Sept. 20. The shell landed several hundred yards from the nearest U.S. troops.

The improvised weapon had been crudely made and fired from a rocket launcher, the military said. It was one of a small number of shells that fell on the base, according to the U.S. military.

One initial field test proved inconclusi­ve, but another test uncovered traces of sulfur mustard, a dangerous and banned substance that can cause painful burns on skin and lungs if breathed in.

Marine Gen. Joseph Dunford, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, told Congress last week the military assessed that the munition contained sulfur mustard agent. His assessment was based on the informatio­n available at that time, the Pentagon said.

The substance was sent to labs for more extensive tests, a process that can take days.

The munition landed on Qayara West, an air base that was seized from the Islamic State recently and serves as a staging area for the upcoming offensive to retake Mosul, Iraq’s second-largest city.

The Islamic State, which battles U.S.-backed Iraqi and Kurdish forces, has used chemical weapons, and coalition aircraft have targeted a number of facilities where the militants have manufactur­ed such munitions, including a large pharmaceut­ical facility in Mosul. The Islamic State, also known as ISIS or ISIL, “continues to try and develop a chemical weapons capability,” Dorrian said.

Islamic State militants will probably try to use chemical weapons as Iraqi forces launch the Mosul offensive, Navy Capt. Jeff Davis, a Pentagon spokesman, said.

“They’re dead set on it. They would love to be able to use chemical weapons against us, against the Iraqis, as they move forward,” he said.

Militants are building elaborate defenses around Mosul, which include tunnels and moats filled with oil, which can be set ablaze.

The Pentagon estimated there are thousands of militants defending the city, which they consider an important part of the Islamic State’s caliphate.

The Islamic State “would love to be able to use chemical weapons against us, against the Iraqis, as they move forward.” Navy Capt. Jeff Davis

 ?? MAYA ALLERUZZO, AP ?? A soldier from the 1st Battalion of the Iraqi Special Operations Forces runs through smoke during training.
MAYA ALLERUZZO, AP A soldier from the 1st Battalion of the Iraqi Special Operations Forces runs through smoke during training.

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