US military strikes ‘Iranian-backed’ fighters in Syria for a second day

The US military said it carried out strikes against an Iranian-backed armed group in Syria, its second such operation in two days.

The United States military has again carried out air strikes in Syria targeting “Iranian-aligned targets” following a recent rocket attack against US forces at a base in Syria’s northeastern Hasakah province.

US Central Command (CENTCOM), which is responsible for US forces deployed in the Middle East, did not specify on Wednesday how many air strikes were conducted – or who the targets were – stating only that the Iranian-aligned “group’s weapons storage and logistics headquarters” were hit.

The unnamed fighters had fired rockets at the US Patrol Base Shaddadi, in northeast Syria, but inflicted no damage to the facility or injuries to US or “partner forces”, CENTCOM said.

On Tuesday, CENTCOM also said it had carried out attacks against “Iranian backed groups” in Syria, hitting nine targets at two separate locations in the country over the previous 24-hour period.

“US Central Command, alongside our regional partners, will aggressively pursue any threat to US forces, allies, partners, and security in the region,” CENTCOM’s commander Michael Erik Kurilla said in a statement following the latest strikes.

pic.twitter.com/U9RDrmpK1L

— U.S. Central Command (@CENTCOM) November 13, 2024

An estimated 900 US soldiers are based in the eastern part of Syria – and 2,500 in neighbouring Iraq – as part of a longstanding operation that continues to focus on preventing a resurgence of the ISIL (ISIS) group, which seized large areas of both Syria and Iraq in 2014 before being militarily defeated.

CENTCOM’s strikes on Monday reportedly killed four Syrian members of Iranian-backed armed groups and wounded 10 others, some of them severely, in the Al Mayadeen area of eastern Syria’s Deir Az Zor countryside, according to the United Kingdom-based monitoring group Syrian Observatory for Human Rights.

CENTCOM did not specify the locations of their separate attacks in Syria.

Then-US President Donald Trump ordered the withdrawal of all US forces from Syria in 2018 on the grounds that ISIL had been defeated.

The US military, however, later said that a contingency force would remain in the country, where some see them as both a deterrent to ISIL as well as an attempt to limit neighbouring Iran’s spreading influence in Syria.

Read More

  • Related Posts

    Thunderstorm strikes Sydney ahead of home commute as thousands are warned large hail and damaging winds are on the way

    Sydneysiders faced a chaotic commute home after severe thunderstorms smashed the city on Tuesday afternoon. The storms brought heavy downpours, hail and gale force winds across the city and surrounding…

    Israeli military blows up Gaza’s Turkish hospital and medical school

    Skip linksSkip to Content Live Navigation menu News Africa Asia US & Canada Latin America Europe Asia Pacific Middle East Explained Opinion Sport Video Features Economy Human Rights Climate Crisis…

    You Missed

    North Lakes: Bombshell charges for teenage girl, 17, after man was shot in the chest in a carpark

    North Lakes: Bombshell charges for teenage girl, 17, after man was shot in the chest in a carpark

    Trump’s top team rips into America’s European allies -loaders’: Astonishing text messages are leaked in security shambles that saw journalist added to war plans group

    Trump’s top team rips into America’s European allies -loaders’: Astonishing text messages are leaked in security shambles that saw journalist added to war plans group

    Glamping park is dubbed a ‘field of nightmares’ by neighbours who say they were told ‘party venue’ would be an eco-friendly food-tourism venue

    Glamping park is dubbed a ‘field of nightmares’ by neighbours who say they were told ‘party venue’ would be an eco-friendly food-tourism venue

    Pete Hegseth’s blistering response to journalist wrongly added to high-level government group text on war plans

    Pete Hegseth’s blistering response to journalist wrongly added to high-level government group text on war plans