Biden Takes First Military Action With Syria Strike On Iran-Backed Militias
The US has
carried out an air strike targeting Iran-backed militias in Syria, in the first
military action undertaken by the Biden administration.
The Pentagon
said the strike destroyed "multiple facilities" and was ordered in
response to attacks against US and coalition personnel in Iraq.
Militia
officials said one person had been killed but a war monitor reported at least
22 fatalities.
Syria
condemned the attack as a "bad sign" from the new US administration.
The Pentagon
said its strike near the Iraqi border in eastern Syria was a "proportionate
military response" that was taken "together with diplomatic
measures", including consulting coalition partners.
It came
after a civilian contractor was killed in a rocket attack on US targets earlier
this month. A US service member and five other contractors were also injured
when the rockets hit sites in Irbil, including a base used by the US-led
coalition.
Rockets have
also struck US bases in Baghdad, including the Green Zone, which houses the US
embassy and other diplomatic missions.
There are
about 2,500 US troops in Iraq to assist Iraqi forces in the fight against the
Islamic State (IS) group.
The
messaging around this strike is probably more important than the strike itself.
Ten days
elapsed between the trigger - 15 February's rocket attack in Irbil - and
retaliation.
The US
defence secretary made a point of thanking the Iraqi government for its
intelligence input.
The Pentagon
said the air strikes had been conducted "together with diplomatic
measures", including consultation with coalition partners.
Nor did the
attacks take place on Iraqi soil, thus minimising any embarrassment for the
government in Baghdad.
In short,
Washington seems to be drawing a sharp distinction with the more intemperate,
unilateral instincts of the previous administration.
But at a
time when the Biden administration is exploring ways of reviving the 2015 Iran
nuclear deal, the strikes also sends a message to Tehran: just because we're
willing to sit down and talk doesn't mean your proxies around the region can do
what they want.
The Pentagon
said the strike on Friday was launched "at President Biden's
direction".
It targeted
facilities located at a border control point used by a number of Iran-backed
militia groups, including Kataib Hezbollah and Kataib Sayyid al-Shuhada, who
are allied with the Damascus government.
Kataib
Hezbollah and Kataib Sayyid al-Shuhada have previously carried out or supported
rocket attacks targeting US assets in the country. The US has launched
retaliatory strikes.
But Kataib
Hezbollah has denied involvement in recent attacks against US interests.
In its
statement, the Pentagon said its latest operation "sends an
unambiguous message".
"President
Biden will act to protect American and Coalition personnel. At the same time,
we have acted in a deliberate manner that aims to de-escalate the overall
situation in both eastern Syria and Iraq," it said.
US Defence
Secretary Lloyd Austin told reporters he was "confident in the target that
we went after".
"We
know what we hit," he said. "We're confident that that target was
being used by the same Shia militants that conducted the strikes" on 15
February.
Syria's
foreign ministry said it "strongly condemns the cowardly American
aggression".
"It is
a bad sign regarding the policies of the new US administration, which should
adhere to international" norms, it said in a statement.
Russian
Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov said the US needed to spell out directly its
plans for the region, and criticised the "four or five minutes"
warning of the strike that the US had given Moscow, Syria's key ally.
Pentagon
Press Secretary John Kirby said the strike was meant to punish the militias but
not to escalate tensions with Iran, with whom the US is seeking to renew
talks over a nuclear deal abandoned by former President Donald Trump, the
New York Times reports.
Since 2009,
the US has designated Kataib Hezbollah as a terrorist organisation, accusing
them of threatening the peace and stability of Iraq.
Iran's
influence over Iraq's internal affairs has grown steadily since the US-led
invasion that toppled Saddam Hussein in 2003.
The US did
not confirm any casualties, but an Iraqi militia official told the Associated
Press news agency at least one fighter was killed and a number of others
wounded.
The official
said the strikes hit an area along the border between the Syrian city of
Boukamal and the Iraqi town of Qaim.
The Syrian
Observatory for Human Rights, a UK-based monitoring group, said the US attack
had killed at least 22 fighters from the Popular Mobilisation Forces, an Iraqi
umbrella group of mostly Shia paramilitaries that includes Kataib Hezbollah.
"The
strikes destroyed three lorries carrying munitions," the observatory's
Rami Abdul Rahman earlier told AFP. "There were many casualties."
Several
attacks targeting US personnel have been claimed by little-known groups. But
some Iraqi and Western officials say these are a front for established
militias, so they can carry out attacks without being held accountable.
No comments