San Diego Union-Tribune (Sunday)

AIR FORCE SAYS IT WAS SUBJECT OF ‘PROPAGANDA ATTACK’

U.S. says militants falsely claimed to strike Kuwait base

- BY JON GAMBRELL Gambrell writes for The Associated Press.

The U.S. Air Force said Saturday it was the subject of a “propaganda attack” by a previously unheard-of Iraqi militant group that falsely claimed it had launched a drone attack targeting American troops at an air base in Kuwait.

The statement by the Air Force’s 386th Air Expedition­ary Wing came hours after the group calling itself

Al-waretheen, or “The Inheritors,“put out an online statement claiming that on Aug. 12 it targeted Kuwait’s Ali Al Salem Air Base. The statement included a video showing a drone being launched from a stand, but offered no evidence of an attack or any damage done at the base.

The statement claimed the alleged attack aimed to avenge the U.S. drone strike that killed Iranian Revolution Guard Gen. Qassem Soleimani in Baghdad in January 2020.

The air base is located a few dozen miles from the Iraqi border.

“The misinforma­tion falsely stated an Iranian militia group used (drones) to carry out an attack on base,” the Air Force statement to The Associated Press said. “No such attack occurred.”

The statement suggests the U.S. believes that Alwarethee­n is likely an Iranian group, though it described itself as Iraqi.

The Air Force added that the online claim “only aims to deceive their audience in believing a lie” and that the Air Force and Kuwait “continue to project air power throughout the region without disruption.”

Kuwait, a small, oil-rich nation bordering Iraq and Saudi Arabia also near Iran, is considered a major NONNATO ally of the United

States. Kuwait and the U.S. have had a close military partnershi­p since America launched the 1991 Gulf War to expel Iraqi troops after Iraqi dictator Saddam Hussein invaded the country.

Some 13,500 American troops are stationed in Kuwait, which also hosts U.S. Army Central’s forward headquarte­rs. Those forces have supported the U.S. invasion of Iraq in 2003 and later operations against the Islamic State group.

Kuwait did not immediatel­y acknowledg­e the claimed attack. Its Informatio­n Ministry did not immediatel­y respond to a request for comment Saturday night.

Kuwait’s Al-qabas newspaper, quoting anonymous “responsibl­e” sources, called the claims about an attack “completely untrue.”

Satellite photos from Planet Labs PBC analyzed by the AP since Aug. 12 show no apparent damage at the base.

A series of militant groups that analysts believe have ties back to Iran have claimed attacks they say targeted U.S. troops in Iraq over recent years. However, those roadside bombings targeted Iraqi contractor­s supplying American forces in the country.

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