WASHINGTON: USÂ troops in eastern Syria came under rocket attack Monday, with no reported casualties, one day after USÂ Air Force planes carried out airstrikes near the Iraq-Syria border against what the Pentagon said were facilities used by Iran-backed militia groups to support drone strikes inside Iraq.
Iraq's military condemned the USÂ airstrikes, and the militia groups called for revenge against the US.
Pentagon Press Secretary John Kirby said the militias were using the facilities to launch unmanned aerial vehicle attacks against USÂ troops in Iraq. It was the second time the administration has taken military action in the region since Biden took over earlier this year.
There was no indication that Sunday's attacks were meant as the start of a wider, sustained USÂ air campaign in the border region. But a spokesman for the USÂ military mission based in Baghdad, Col. Wayne Marotto, wrote on Twitter Monday that at 7:44 p.m. local time âUSÂ forces in Syria were attacked by multiple rockets.â He said there were no injuries and that attack damage was being assessed.
Marotto later tweeted that while under rocket attack, USÂ forces in Syria responded in self-defense with artillery fire at the rocket-launching positions.
Kirby said the USÂ military targeted three operational and weapons storage facilities â two in Syria and one in Iraq. In its release of videos of the strikes by Air Force F-15 and F-16 aircraft, the Pentagon described one target as a coordination center for the shipment and transfer of advanced conventional weapons.
Kirby said the airstrikes were âdefensive,â saying they were launched in response to the attacks by militias.
âThe United States took necessary, appropriate, and deliberate action designed to limit the risk of escalation â but also to send a clear and unambiguous deterrent message,â Kirby said.
The Pentagon said the facilities were used by Iran-backed militia factions, including Kataâib Hezbollah and Kataâib Sayyid al-Shuhada.
A Pentagon spokeswoman, Navy Cmdr. Jessica McNulty, said Monday that each strike hit its intended target and that the USÂ military was still assessing the results of the operation.
âThe targets selected were facilities utilized by the network of Iran-backed militia groups responsible for the series of recent attacks against facilities housing USÂ personnel in Iraq,â McNulty said. She said those groups have conducted at least five such "one-wayâ drone attacks since April.
Secretary of State Antony Blinken, speaking to reporters in Rome on Monday, said Biden has been clear that the USÂ will act to protect American personnel.
âThis action in self-defense to do whatâs necessary to do to prevent further attacks, I think sends a very important and strong message. And I hope very much that it is received,â he said. âI think weâve demonstrated with the actions taken last night and actions taken previously, that the president is fully prepared to act and act appropriately and deliberately to protect us.â
Blinken also said that the strikes on pro-Iran fighters in Iraq and Syria should send a âstrongâ message of deterrence not to keep attacking US forces.
âI would hope that the message sent by the strikes last night will be heard and deter future action,â Blinken told reporters on a visit to Rome.
âThis action in self-defense to do whatâs necessary to prevent further attacks sends a very important and strong message,â he said.
Asked in Rome if the United States was holding Iran responsible for the attacks, Blinken said: âA number of the groups involved in recent attacks are militia that are backed by Iran.â
Two Iraqi militia officials told The Associated Press in Baghdad that four militiamen were killed in the airstrikes near the border with Syria. Both spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to give statements. They said the first strike hit a weapons storage facility inside Syrian territory, where the militiamen were killed. The second strike hit the border strip.
The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, a Britain-based group that closely monitors the Syrian conflict through activists on the ground, reported that at least seven Iraqi militiamen were killed in the airstrikes.
The Iran-backed Iraqi militia factions vowed revenge for the attack and said in a joint statement they would continue to target USÂ forces. âWe ... will avenge the blood of our righteous martyrs against the perpetrators of this heinous crime and with God's help we will make the enemy taste the bitterness of revenge,â they said.
The Popular Mobilization Forces, an Iraqi state-sanctioned umbrella of mostly Shiite militias â including those targeted by the USÂ strikes â said their men were on missions to prevent infiltration by Daesh and denied the presence of weapons warehouses.
Iraq's military condemned the strikes as a âblatant and unacceptable violation of Iraqi sovereignty and national security.â It called for avoiding escalation, but also rejected that Iraq be an âarena for settling accounts" â a reference to the USÂ and Iran. It represented rare condemnation by the Iraqi military of USÂ airstrikes.
In Iran, foreign ministry spokesman Saeed Khatibzadeh accused the USÂ of creating instability in the region. âDefinitely, what the USÂ is doing is disrupting the security of the region," he said on Monday.
USÂ military officials have grown increasingly alarmed over drone strikes targeting USÂ military bases in Iraq, which became more common since a US-directed drone killed Iranian Gen. Qassem Soleimani near the Baghdad airport last year. Iraqi militia leader Abu Mahdi al-Muhandis was also killed in the attack. The strike drew the ire of mostly Shiite Iraqi lawmakers and prompted parliament to pass a nonbinding resolution to pressure the Iraqi government to oust foreign troops from the country.
Sunday's strikes mark the second time the Biden administration launched airstrikes along the Iraq-Syria border region. In February, the USÂ launched airstrikes against facilities in Syria, near the Iraqi border, that it said were used by Iranian-backed militia groups.
The Pentagon said those strikes were retaliation for a rocket attack in Iraq earlier that month that killed one civilian contractor and wounded a USÂ service member and other coalition troops.
At that time, Biden said Iran should view his decision to authorize USÂ airstrikes in Syria as a warning that it can expect consequences for its support of militia groups that threaten USÂ interests or personnel.
âYou canât act with impunity. Be careful,â Biden said when a reporter asked what message he had intended to send.
(With AP and AFP)