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US denies bombing Iraqi Shia militia near Syrian border

August 8, 2017 at 11:42 pm

The US-led coalition fighting Daesh on Tuesday denied responsibility for an attack near the Syrian border which killed dozens of members of an Iraqi Shia militia and, that group said, several of Iran’s elite Revolutionary Guards.

A spokesman for the Iran-backed Kataib Sayyid al-Shuhada militia said 36 of its fighters had been killed in the attack on Monday and 75 others were wounded and receiving treatment.

“We hold the American army responsible for this act,” the militia said in a statement late on Monday, noting that they were targeted with smart rockets.

Iraq’s Prime Minister Haider al-Abadi said on Tuesday that initial investigation showed that Daesh launched the attack against the militia group.

“It seems that Daesh carried out a breach using artillery and car bombs,” Abadi said in a televised press conference in Baghdad.

The US-led coalition, which is attacking Daesh militants from the air in Syria and Iraq, said the allegations were “inaccurate” and denied conducting air attacks in that area at the time.

In a statement circulated by its supporters, Daesh claimed it was responsible for the attack and said it had captured armoured vehicles, weapons and ammunition. The Iraqi Defence Ministry declined to comment.

Read: US downs pro-Syrian drone that fired at coalition forces

As Daesh is driven back by an array of forces in Iraq and Syria, its opponents and their regional patrons are vying for control of territory and seeking to secure their interests in the wider region within a shrinking battlespace.

Monday’s attack took place near At Tanf in Syria, where US forces have twice before struck Iranian-backed militia in defence of a garrison used by US and US-backed forces.

Iran-backed Kataib Sayyid Al-Shuhada is part of an umbrella of Iraqi Shia paramilitary groups known as the Popular Mobilisation Forces, which is answerable to Baghdad, but includes factions loyal to Iran’s clerical leadership.

In an interview with Iran’s Tasnim news agency, Abu Ala Welayi, Kataib Sayyid al-Shuhada’s leader, accused the United States and Daesh of jointly attacking his forces.

He said seven Revolutionary Guards had been killed, one of them being Hossein Qomi, their main commander and strategist.

No spokesman for the Revolutionary Guards was immediately available to comment.