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US reportedly downs pro-Syrian drone that fired at coalition forces

An American military spokesman says the downed drone had made a strike but had caused no injuries or damages to the targeted coalition patrol; he dismisses the possibility that the drone fired a warning shot.

WASHINGTON—The United States shot down a pro-Syrian government drone that fired toward US-led coalition forces in Syria on Thursday, a US military spokesman said, in a major escalation of tensions between Washington and troops supporting Damascus.

 

 

The armed drone "hit dirt" and there were no injuries or damage done to the coalition patrol in southern Syria. But US Army Col. Ryan Dillon, a spokesman for the US-led coalition fighting ISIS, told reporters the drone meant to attack them and dismissed the possibility it had fired a warning shot.

 

"This clearly showed a threat even if it were a warning shot; it was something that showed a hostile intent, a hostile action and posed a threat to our forces because this drone still had munitions that were still on it," Dillon said.

 

A group of rebels attack Assad forces

A group of rebels attack Assad forces

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He added that it was the first known time that pro-Syrian government forces had fired at coalition forces in that region.

 

A US official, speaking on condition of anonymity, said the munition landed a few hundred yards from coalition forces and it failed to explode.

 

Dillon said the United States had earlier in the day carried out a strike against two pro-Syrian government pick-up trucks with weapons that had moved against US-backed fighters near the southern town of At Tanf.

 

A group of rebels fire at Assad forces
A group of rebels fire at Assad forces

It was the third such strike in as many weeks, and the second this week, by the Pentagon, which has sought to stay out of Syria's civil war to focus firepower instead on ISIS in Syria and Iraq.

 

The concern is that such strikes could take away attention from the fight against ISIS militants.

 

"Unfortunately, there have been (these) incidents that have taken our focus away from fighting ISIS," Dillon said.

 

American forces in Syria (File photo: AP)
American forces in Syria (File photo: AP)

 

The Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF) launched their assault to capture Raqqa, ISIS's de facto Syrian capital.

 

For months, air strikes and special forces from the US-led coalition have helped them encircle Raqqa, which Islamic State seized in 2014 and has used as a base to plan attacks abroad.

 

(File photo: EPA) (Photo: EPA)
(File photo: EPA)

 

On Tuesday, the United States launched an air strike against Iranian-backed fighters who it said posed a threat to US and US-backed forces in southern Syria.

 

A military alliance fighting in support of President Bashar al-Assad threatened on Wednesday to hit US positions in Syria, warning its "self-restraint" over US air strikes would end if Washington crossed "red lines".

 

 

In recent days, the US military has repeatedly warned massing forces to stay away from a 'deconfliction zone' near a garrison used by American special forces and US-backed fighters around At Tanf.

 

The zone was agreed with Russia, Syrian President Bashar Assad's ally. Assad is also backed by Iran and Shiite militias.

 

Tanf is part of a region known as the Badia, a vast, sparsely populated desert territory that stretches to the Jordanian and Iraqi borders and was declared a military priority by Syria's foreign minister in May.

 


פרסום ראשון: 06.08.17, 22:11
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