Tool used in attack on Iraq PM's house carrying fingerprints of perpetrators
The house of Iraqi Prime Minister Mustafa Al-Kadhimi was the target of a drone attack early in the day on November 7.
The attack
left the house in significant damage. However, it caused no human losses, even
as it left some of the security guards of the Iraqi premier injured.
Nonetheless,
the attack has raised questions about the party executing it, especially since
the means used in carrying it out is distinctive of a particular faction.
This faction
is known for its opposition to Al-Kadhimi's efforts to liberate Iraqi decision-making
from those who are loyal to some outside parties, including Iran.
Details
The head of
the Security Media Cell in Iraq, Saad Maan, said three drones were used in the
attack on the house of the prime minister.
He noted
that security forces managed to shoot down two of the three drones used in the
attack, whereas the third one succeeded in completing the attack on the house
which is located in the Green Zone in Baghdad.
Iraqi
security sources indicated, meanwhile, that the incident caused damage to the prime
minister's house and left some bodyguards injured.
Al-Kadhimi
told Iraqi television that 'cowardly' missile and drone attacks do not build nations.
"Nor do
they build a good future for nations," he said.
He mentioned
the reasons that could stand behind the attack on his house.
"We
work to build our country by respecting the state and its institutions, and
establishing a better future for all Iraqis," the Iraqi prime minister
said.
He invited
Iraqi parties for what he described as a 'calm' and 'constructive' dialogue.
He probably
especially referred to Iraqi political forces that do not abide by the
constitutional frameworks and legal contexts of the electoral process that took
place in Iraq recently.