US says blast hits Iraq convoy, border attack claim false

An explosion targeted a U.S.-led coalition convoy in
Iraq on Tuesday and caused no casualties, just hours after a newly formed
Shiite militant group falsely claimed bombing a similar convoy at the
Iraq-Kuwait border, the American military said.
The little-known Ashab al-Kahf group claimed in an
overnight statement it destroyed “equipment and vehicles belonging to the
American enemy” in a bombing targeting a border crossing south of the Iraqi
city of Basra.
The group later published an 11-second video it
claimed showed the blast, according to the SITE Intelligence Group, which
monitors militant groups. The out-of-focus video shows what appeared to be an
explosion and lights in the distance but The Associated Press could not verify
the video.
The Iraqi and Kuwait militaries both denied any
attack occurred. U.S. Army Col. Myles B. Caggins III similarly dismissed the
claim.
“It’s absolutely false,” Caggins told the AP. “It
was a complete fabrication.”
There was, however, an explosion that targeted a
coalition convoy on Tuesday in the Taji area, north of Baghdad, the Iraqi
military said. The attack damaged a truck and caused no injuries, Caggins said.
No one claimed responsibility for that attack.
Since the 2003 U.S.-led invasion that toppled Saddam
Hussein and the later war against the Islamic State group, American troops and
contractors sometimes travel by road with equipment and supplies between Iraq
and Kuwait.
Ashab al-Kahf, or “Companions of the Cave” in Arabic
— a reference to a Christian and Islamic story about youths escaping religious
persecution by hiding in a cave for hundreds of years — emerged alongside
renewed threats by Shiite militias amid rising U.S.-Iran tensions.
In January, an American drone strike killed a top
Iranian general in Baghdad. Tehran responded with a ballistic missile attack
that wounded dozens of American troops at a military base in Iraq.
The Ashab al-Kahf initially threatened U.S. forces
in April and claimed an attack on a convoy in July in Iraq's Salaheddin
province. On Aug. 9, another explosion targeted a convoy in the southern Dhi
Qar province, reportedly causing minor damage.