Iran-backed militants launched ballistic missiles at a base hosting US forces in western Iraq, causing one Iraqi and possible US casualties, the US Central Command (CENTCOM) said on Saturday.
“Multiple ballistic missiles and rockets were launched by Iranian-backed militants in western Iraq targeting al-Assad Airbase,” CENTCOM said in a social media post, which placed the time of the attack at 6:30pm Baghdad time on Saturday evening.
Most of the projectiles were intercepted by the base’s air defense systems, but “others impacted on the base,” the statement said.
Photo: AFP
“A number of US personnel are undergoing evaluation for traumatic brain injuries. At least one Iraqi service member was wounded,” it added.
Since mid-October last year, there have been dozens of attacks on US and coalition forces in Iraq and Syria, deployed there to fight militants of the Islamic State.
Most have been claimed by “Islamic Resistance in Iraq,” a loose alliance of Iran-linked armed groups that oppose US support for Israel in the Gaza conflict.
The group in a press release on Saturday said that it had carried out the latest attack.
The use of ballistic missiles marks an escalation in the attacks on US forces in Iraq and Syria, who had previously been targeted with lower-tech rockets and drones.
Saturday’s air base attack comes amid soaring tensions in the Middle East following the outbreak of the Israel-Hamas war on Oct. 7 last year.
Five members of Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps were also killed in a strike on Saturday in Damascus that Tehran blamed on Israel, threatening reprisals.
Last Monday evening, Iran itself launched a deadly strike in northern Iraq’s autonomous Kurdistan region, saying it had targeted a site used by “spies of the Zionist regime [Mossad].”
There are about 2,500 US troops in Iraq and about 900 in Syria.
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