- Two unidentified drones killed two Iraqi members of an Iran-backed paramilitary force
- No one claimed responsibility, and the PMF statement did not assign blame
BAGHDAD: Two paramilitary fighters were killed on Sunday in an unclaimed drone attack near Iraq’s western border with Syria, the powerful Hashed Al-Shaabi force said in a statement.
The deaths come after a month of mysterious blasts at Hashed Al-Shaabi arms depots and training camps that some of the force’s top officials blamed on the US.
“Two unidentified drones targeted a Brigade 45 position belonging to the Hashed Al-Shaabi in the Anbar district, 15 kilometers (10 miles) from the Iraqi-Syrian border,” the statement said.
The attack “killed two fighters from the unit, wounded another and burned two vehicles,” it added.
The statement did not accuse any particular force and there was no immediate claim of responsibility.
The Hashed was established from disparate armed groups and volunteers that united to fight back Daesh’s sweep across a third of Iraq in 2014.
The network is mostly Shiite and has received Iranian training and advice, but operates officially under Iraq’s armed forces and uses military unit names.
Brigade 45 is one of several units made up of Kataib Hezbollah fighters, designated by the US as a “foreign terrorist organization.”
Over the last month, a string of suspicious explosions and drone sightings at Hashed bases have sparked concerns that escalating tensions between the US, Israel and Iran are boiling over into Iraq.
Hashed chief and Iraqi National Security Adviser Faleh Al-Fayyadh has said preliminary investigations found the incidents were premeditated but had not yet revealed the perpetrators.
Meanwhile, his deputy Abu Mehdi Al-Muhandis, whom analysts say holds the real reigns in the Hashed, has been unequivocal in blaming Washington.
The Pentagon has denied involvement, and US officials have told the New York Times that Israel had carried out multiple strikes in Iraq this month.
Israel has not claimed responsibility but Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu hinted at involvement last week, saying his country would “act against (Iran) whenever necessary.”