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Thursday, 15 August 2024

Pentagon reveals losses in Syria attack

Pentagon reveals losses in Syria attack

Pentagon reveals losses in Syria attack




File photo: US Army soldiers at an outpost in northeastern Syria, May 25, 2021.
©John Moore/Getty Images






Eight US troops were injured in a drone attack on their base in northeastern Syria, the Pentagon has revealed. Initial reports of the strike mentioned no casualties.







According to footage shared online last week, a drone may have started a fire at the installation in Rimelan, near the border with Türkiye and Iraq.


Air Force Major-General Patrick Ryder, the spokesman for the US Department of Defense, revealed the number of injuries to reporters on Tuesday. The eight personnel affected were treated for “traumatic brain injury” and smoke inhalation, he added, and three of them have already returned to duty.





According to Ryder, the US believes that “Iran-backed forces” carried out the attack, but the Pentagon is still working to determine which particular militia may have been behind it.


Initial reports of the drone strike at Rimelan did not disclose injuries, but an unnamed US official told Reuters last Friday that medical evaluations and damage assessments were ongoing.


Rimelan, also known as Rmelan and Rumalyn, is located in Syria’s Hasakah governorate. In late 2015, US troops took over the Abu Hajar airport and set up a base there, dubbed the Rumalyn Landing Zone (RLZ). The facility has been used to supply US troops and their Kurdish allies in the fight against Islamic State (IS, formerly ISIS) terrorists.


IS took over large portions of Syria and Iraq in 2014. As Iran and Russia backed Syrian government troops against the terrorists, the US sent troops and recruited Kurdish militias in order to claim the eastern part of Syria, where most of the country’s oil reserves and agricultural land is located.


Washington has since kept around 900 troops in Syria, despite objections from Damascus and in violation of international law. The Pentagon has described its mission as “preventing a resurgence” of IS. Meanwhile, the Kurdish militias holding the area with US support have refused to reintegrate into Syria.






The attack, which occurred on Saturday night, involved an explosive-laden unmanned aerial vehicle striking the base. No group has claimed responsibility for the attack. “Following the attack, out of an abundance of caution, eight service members were transported to a separate location for further assessment and evaluation. All eight received treatment for TBI and smoke inhalation,” Press Secretary Maj. Gen. Pat Ryder said at a press conference on Tuesday.


Ryder claimed that three of the troops had returned to duty, while the others remained under observation.


US bases in the region came under increasing attacks, largely by the Islamic Resistance in Iraq, in concurrence with the Israeli war on Gaza. The Iraqi Resistance viewed these bases as a legitimate target in support of the Palestinian people, due to the US vast support to the Israeli regime, as well as the US destabilizing presence in the region.


The developments coincide with battles between Arab tribes and the US-backed separatists Syrian Democratic forces in eastern Syria. Earlier, Arab tribes launched wide-scale attacks on the SDF’s position on the eastern bank of the Euphrates in Deir Ezzor in rejection of the US-imposed status quo in the region. On the other hand, the SDF launched counter-attacks on tribal forces with US assistance






















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