Iran-backed Iraqi militia vows revenge to US airstrikes
An Iranian-backed militia said Monday that the death
toll from U.S. military strikes in Iraq and Syria against its fighters has
risen to 25, vowing to exact revenge for the “aggression of evil American
ravens.”
The U.S. attack — the largest yet targeting an Iraqi
state-sanctioned militia — and the calls for retaliation, represent a new
escalation in the proxy war between the U.S. and Iran playing out in the Middle
East that could threaten U.S. interests in the region.
The calls for revenge in Baghdad came a day after
U.S. Defense Secretary Mark Esper said Washington had carried out military
strikes targeting the Iranian-backed Iraqi militia it had blamed for a rocket
attack that killed an American contractor in Iraq last week.
Secretary of State Mike Pompeo said the strikes send
the message that the U.S. will not tolerate actions by Iran that jeopardize
American lives.
The U.S. military said “precision defensive strikes”
were conducted against five sites of Kataeb Hezbollah, or Hezbollah Brigades in
Iraq and Syria. The group, which is separate force from the Lebanese militant
group Hezbollah, operates under the umbrella of the state-sanctioned militias
known collectively as the Popular Mobilization Forces. Many of them are
supported by Iran.
“Our battle with America and its mercenaries is now
open to all possibilities,” Kataeb Hezbollah said in a statement around
midnight Sunday. “We have no alternative today other than confrontation and
there is nothing that will prevent us from responding to this crime.”
The U.S. blames the militia for a rocket barrage
Friday that killed a U.S. defense contractor at a military compound near
Kirkuk, in northern Iraq, as well as for a series of other attacks on bases
that house American troops in Iraq that have not been claimed by any faction.
Officials said as many as 30 rockets were fired in the Kirkuk attack.
A spokesman for Kataeb Hezbollah denied that the
group was behind the rocket attacks on U.S. bases, including the one that
killed the American contractor, saying Washington is using them as a pretext to
attack his group.
The spokesman, Mohammed Mohieh, told The Associated
Press the death toll from the American airstrikes rose to 25 on Monday and that
at least 51 militiamen were wounded, some of whom were in serious condition.
The militia would retaliate, he said but added that the group’s commanders
would decide on the form of retaliation.
“These forces must leave,” he said of U.S. troops in
Iraq, calling the latest attack a “crime” and a “massacre.”
The U.S. has maintained some 5,000 troops in Iraq at
the invitation of the Iraqi government, to help assist in the fight against the
Islamic State group.
An official with the Popular Mobilization Forces
said one of the American missiles struck a room where the fighters were taking
a nap in the afternoon, killing some of them in their sleep as the ceiling
collapsed. The official, who spoke on condition of anonymity because he was not
authorized to talk to reporters, said U.S. forces have targeted Kataeb
Hezbollah in the past but offered no evidence to support his claims.
In Tehran, foreign ministry spokesman Abbas Mousavi
condemned the U.S. strikes against Kataeb Hezbollah as an “obvious case of
terrorism” and accused Washington of ignoring Iraq’s sovereignty.
Lebanon’s Iran-backed Hezbollah also blasted the
“brutal American aggression,” saying those who took the decision to carry out
the attack “will soon discover how stupid this criminal decision was.”
Kataeb Hezbollah is led by Abu Mahdi al-Muhandis,
one of Iraq’s most powerful men. He once battled U.S. troops and is now the
deputy head of the Popular Mobilization Forces. In 2009, the State Department
linked him to the elite Quds Force of Iran’s Revolutionary Guard, designated a
foreign terrorist organization by President Donald Trump earlier this year.
The attack that killed the American contractor and
U.S. counter-strikes come as months of political turmoil roil Iraq. About 500
people have died in anti-government protests, most of them demonstrators killed
by Iraqi security forces.
The mass uprisings prompted the resignation last
month of Prime Minister Adel Abdul-Mahdi, who remains in a caretaker capacity.
In a statement, Abdul-Mahdi said Esper had called
him about a half-hour before the U.S. strikes on Sunday to tell him of U.S.
intentions to hit bases of the militia suspected of being behind Friday’s
rocket attack. Abdul-Mahdi said he asked Esper to call off the U.S. plan.