Suicide attack on Kurdish-U.S. convoy in Syria ‘kills 5’

Agence France-Presse

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Suicide attack on Kurdish-U.S. convoy in Syria ‘kills 5’

AFP

The assault, claimed by ISIS jihadists, comes less than a week after another deadly attack on US forces in Syria, and a month after Washington announced a US troop pullout from the war-torn country

BEIRUT, Lebanon – A suicide bomber attacked a convoy of US troops and their allies in Syria on Monday, January 21, killing 5 members of a Kurdish-led force fighting the Islamic State group (IS, formerly known as ISIS or the Islamic State in Syria and Iraq), a monitor said.

The assault, claimed by ISIS jihadists, came less than a week after another deadly attack on US forces in Syria, and a month after Washington announced a US troop pullout from the war-torn country.

The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, a Britain-based monitoring group, said 5 fighters from the US-backed Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF) were killed in the blast on a road in northeastern Hasakeh province.

“A suicide attacker driving a bomb-laden car targeted a convoy of American forces accompanied by the SDF on the Hasakeh-Shadadi road,” said the Observatory, which relies on a network of sources inside Syria.

Shadadi lies to the south of Hasakeh, capital of the eponymous province, which has been relatively spared by the war that erupted in Syria nearly 8 years ago.

The coalition confirmed the attack by a vehicle-borne improvised explosive device (VBIED), but said there were no US casualties.

“A combined US and Syrian partner force convoy was involved in an apparent VBIED attack today in Syria,” coalition spokesman Sean Ryan said on Twitter.

“There were no US casualties.”

Observatory head Rami Abdel Rahman said the attacker had plowed into an SDF vehicle.

Gray smoke

Footage on Kurdish media showed a plume of gray smoke rising from a road flanked by dry land.

A witness told Agence France-Presse the blast happened by a checkpoint held by Kurdish forces a dozen kilometers (around 8 miles) outside Shadadi as the convoy drove past.

The witness said he heard planes fly overhead, before the area was completely cordoned off by Kurdish fighters.

The Kurdish security forces known as Asayesh said the attack hit 10 meters from a checkpoint outside Shadadi, but unlike the Observatory it said no one had died.

“A bomb-laden car driven by a terrorist tried to target a coalition convoy as it passed by, lightly wounding a female member of the Asayesh,” the statement said, reporting no other injuries.

The reason for the conflicting casualty tolls was not immediately clear.

The Islamic State group’s propaganda channel Amaq claimed the attack.

The car bombing came less than a week after another attack, also claimed by ISIS, on the US-led force and its local partners in the strategic city of Manbij.

Four Americans – two members of the military, a Pentagon civilian and a contractor – were killed in a suicide bombing targeting a restaurant in the city center on January 16.

That attack cost Washington its worst combat losses since it deployed in the war-torn country to combat ISIS jihadists, who established a self-proclaimed “caliphate” across swathes of Iraq and Syria in 2014.

Ten civilians and 5 SDF fighters were also killed in the Manbij attack.

The US Department of Defense had previously reported only two American personnel killed in combat in Syria, in separate incidents.

‘Provocation’

This month’s attacks targeting the US-led coalition and its allies follow US President Donald Trump’s shock December announcement that he had ordered a complete troop pullout from Syria, as ISIS had been “largely defeated”.

Trump and other senior US officials have since sent mixed messages about the pace and scope of the withdrawal.

On Sunday, January 20, a former envoy to the US-led coalition said the United States had no plan for Syria after the pullout.

Brett McGurk, who quit in protest after Trump’s pullout announcement, told an interview with CBS “there’s no plan for what’s coming next” and this is increasing the risk to US forces.

Turkey has repeatedly urged Washington to make way for its own military plans in northern Syria, where the beleaguered Kurds are increasingly turning to the regime and its Russian sponsor for support.

In a phone call with Trump on Sunday, Turkey’s President Recep Tayyip Erdogan said Ankara was ready to take over ensuring the security of Manbij.

He said last week’s deadly attack was a “provocation” aiming to impact the decision to withdraw US troops from Syria, where a civil war has killed more than 360,000 people since 2011.

The SDF is fighting to expel ISIS fighters from the remaining shreds of their “caliphate” in eastern Syria near the Iraqi border, but the jihadists have continued to claim attacks nationwide and abroad. – Rappler.com

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