National Post

U.S. airstrike in central Baghdad kills Iran-backed militia leader

Tensions in region continue to mount

- Qassim abdul-zahra abby Sewell and

• A U.S. airstrike on the headquarte­rs of an Iran-backed militia in central Baghdad on Thursday killed a high-ranking militia commander, militia officials said.

Thursday’s strike comes amid mounting regional tensions fuelled by the Israel-hamas war and fears that it could spill over into surroundin­g countries. It also coincides with a push by Iraqi officials for U.s.-led coalition forces to leave the country.

The Popular Mobilizati­on Force, or PMF, a coalition of militias that is nominally under the control of the Iraqi military, announced in a statement that its deputy head of operations in Baghdad, Mushtaq Taleb al-saidi, or “Abu Taqwa,” had been killed “as a result of brutal American aggression.”

A U.S. official who spoke on condition of anonymity to provide informatio­n that has not yet been publicly released confirmed that U.S. forces had conducted a strike Thursday on a vehicle in Baghdad against the group Harakat al-nujaba. The group, one of the militias within PMF, was designated a terrorist organizati­on by Washington in 2019.

Iraqi military spokesman Yehia Rasool said in a statement that the Iraqi army blames the U.s.-led Internatio­nal Coalition Forces for the “unprovoked attack on an Iraqi security body operating in accordance with the powers granted to it by” the Iraqi military.

The primary mission of the U.s.-led coalition is to fight the Islamic State group (ISIL), the Sunni extremist militant group that continues to carry out periodic attacks in Iraq despite having lost its hold on the territory it once controlled in 2017. Since then, the coalition has transition­ed from a combat role to an advisory and training mission.

The PMF, a group of Iranian-backed, primarily Shiite militias, were also key in the fight against (ISIL) after it overran much of Iraq in 2014. The PMF is officially under the command of the Iraqi army, but in practice the militias operate independen­tly.

Thursday’s strike killed two people and wounded five, according to two militia officials who spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to speak publicly.

One of the officials said al-saidi was driving into the garage of the headquarte­rs affiliated with the Harakat al-nujaba militia, along with another militia official, when the car was hit, killing both.

Heavy security was deployed around the location of the strike on Baghdad’s Palestine Street, and Iraqi war planes could be seen flying overhead. An Associated Press photograph­er was eventually allowed access to the scene of the strike, where he saw the remains of the charred car.

Since the outbreak of the Israel-hamas war on Oct. 7, a group of Iranian-backed militias calling itself the Islamic Resistance in Iraq has carried out more than 100 attacks on bases housing U.S. troops in Iraq and Syria.

The group has said the attacks are in retaliatio­n for Washington’s support of Israel in the war against Hamas, and that they aim to push U.S. forces out of Iraq.

Thursday’s strike is likely to increase calls for a U.S. departure.

Last week, Iraqi Prime Minister Mohammed Shia al-sudani — who came to power with the backing of Iran-linked political factions but has also attempted to maintain good relations with the U.S. — said that his government is “is proceeding to end the presence of the internatio­nal coalition forces.”

 ?? AHMAD AL-RUBAYE / AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES ?? A member of Iraq’s Popular Mobilizati­on Forces reacts Thursday near the vehicle carrying the body of the group’s
slain commander Mushtaq Talib al-saidi in Baghdad.
AHMAD AL-RUBAYE / AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES A member of Iraq’s Popular Mobilizati­on Forces reacts Thursday near the vehicle carrying the body of the group’s slain commander Mushtaq Talib al-saidi in Baghdad.

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