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US-led coalition foils rocket attacks in Syria
by AFP Staff Writers
Washington (AFP) Jan 4, 2022

The US-led coalition fighting the Islamic State in Syria said Tuesday they had foiled an attack in the Deir-Ezzour region in the northeast of the country, a day after the second anniversary of the killing of Iranian General Qassem Soleimani.

After spotting "several launch sites of indirect fire rockets that posed an imminent threat," coalition forces "conducted strikes to eliminate the threat," a coalition official said in a statement.

The rockets were aimed at a US base called "Green Village" in the Euphrates Valley where fighters from the Islamic State group are still active and where US forces continue to cooperate alongside the Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF).

"Indirect fire attacks pose a serious threat to innocent civilians because of their lack of discrimination" and the coalition "reserves the right to defend itself" added the official.

Asked about who might be behind the attack, the third in less than 48 hours in the region after others targeting the Ain Al-Assad air base on Tuesday in western Iraq and Baghdad international airport on Monday, Pentagon spokesman John Kirby said he could not identify them.

"I'm not in a position now to get into specific attribution," he said. "That said, we continue to see threats against our forces in Iraq and Syria by militia groups that are backed by Iran."

None of the attacks resulted in casualties, but came as Iraq marked the second anniversary of the US assassination of Soleimani, the architect of Iranian strategy in the Middle East, and his Iraqi lieutenant, killed by drone fire in Iraq on January 3, 2020.

Some 900 US troops remain deployed in northeastern Syria and at the Al-Tanf base in the south, on the borders of Iraq and Jordan.


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WAR REPORT
India extends security law after botched army ambush
New Delhi (AFP) Dec 30, 2021
The Indian government extended on Thursday a special law giving armed forces sweeping powers in the north-eastern state of Nagaland, days after a botched army ambush killed 14 people. The killings triggered protests against the law which gives the armed forces sweeping powers to conduct raids, warrantless searches and open fire, with broad protection from prosecution. But the six-month extension issued by India's ministry of home affairs said the government believed the state was "in a disturbed ... read more

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