Miami Herald

U.S.-led military base in Syria hit by rockets fired from Iraq

- BY SHERIF TAREK Bloomberg News

A MILITANT GROUP GAVE THE PRIME MINISTER OF IRAQ SIX MONTHS TO GET U.S. TROOPS OUT OF THE COUNTRY.

A military base in Syria belonging to a U.S.-led coalition came under a rocket attack late on Sunday, the government­affiliated Iraqi Security Media Cell said in a statement.

At least one rocket landed at the base, said Rami Abdulrahma­n, the director of the U.K.-based Syrian Observator­y for Human Rights in an interview with Al-Arabiya.

It wasn’t immediatel­y clear if there were any casualties. U.S. Central Command, which oversees American forces in the Middle East, had not commented.

The attacks are the first against U.S. bases in the region since early February, when Washington struck Iran-backed militias in Iraq and Syria.

That campaign was undertaken in retaliatio­n for a drone assault that killed three American soldiers in Jordan and was blamed by the United States on an umbrella group called the Islamic

Resistance in Iraq.

Iran backs a number of anti-U.S. and anti-Israel militias in Iraq and Syria, and those groups ramped up attacks on American bases after the IsraelHama­s war began in October.

Iraqi forces are conducting a search operation west of Nineveh, near the Syrian border, to try to capture the perpetrato­rs of the latest attack, according to Iraqi Security Media Cell.

The Islamic Resistance in Iraq did not explicitly claim responsibi­lity for the strike, but in a statement on Telegram, the militant group said it decided to resume military operations against American troops after Iraqi Prime Minister Mohammed Shia Al-Sudani visited the White House and met President Joe

Biden this month. The group gave Al-Sudani three months to negotiate the departure of the roughly 2,000 U.S. forces in Iraq.

“What happened a short while ago is the beginning that must be escalated,” according to the group’s statement.

The attack followed an explosion on a base in Iraq this weekend controlled by the Popular Mobilizati­on Forces, a coalition of Iranallied militias, killing one person and injuring eight, the Associated Press reported. The U.S. said it was not behind that blast.

 ?? ODD ANDERSON AFP/TNS, file ?? At least one rocket landed at a base in Syria, said Rami Abdulrahma­n, the director of the Syrian Observator­y for Human Rights.
ODD ANDERSON AFP/TNS, file At least one rocket landed at a base in Syria, said Rami Abdulrahma­n, the director of the Syrian Observator­y for Human Rights.

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