Iraq rocket attack kills US contractor, wounds military personnel

Iraq rocket attack kills US contractor, wounds military personnel

WASHINGTON-Agence France-Presse

A rocket attack in northern Iraq killed an American contractor and wounded several military personnel on Dec. 28, the first U.S. casualties from a string of recent strikes, the international coalition against the ISIL group said.    

While the coalition did not attribute blame for the incident, it threatens to escalate already-high tensions between Washington and Tehran, which backs various paramilitary groups in Iraq that the United States has accused of being behind rocket attacks on its interests.    

"One U.S. civilian contractor was killed and several U.S. service members and Iraqi personnel were wounded in a rocket attack on an Iraqi military base in Kirkuk," the U.S.-led coalition said in a statement.    

Federal security forces and Shiite militia units -- as well as ISIL sleeper cells -- all have a presence in volatile Kirkuk province, which is claimed by both Iraq's Kurdish minority and Arab majority.    

"Iraqi Security Forces are leading the response and investigation" into the attack, which took place at 7:20 pm (2220 GMT), the coalition said.    

A U.S. official with knowledge of the investigation told AFP on condition of anonymity that at least 30 rockets hit the base, including an ammunition depot, causing more explosions, while four more rockets were found in their tubes in a truck at the launch point.    

The official described the attack as the biggest in the series of rocket strikes launched against U.S. interests in the country since late October, killing one Iraqi soldier and leaving others wounded, as well as causing material damage in the vicinity of the U.S. embassy in Baghdad's Green Zone.    

A U.S. source has said that pro-Iran factions in Iraq are now considered a more significant threat to American soldiers than the ISIL -- the threat that saw Washington deploy thousands of troops to the country to assist Baghdad in countering the jihadists' sweeping 2014 offensive.

Five rockets hit Al-Asad airbase on December 3, just four days after U.S. Vice President Mike Pence visited troops there.     

More than a dozen rockets hit the Qayyarah air base in northern Iraq in November, one of the largest attacks in recent months to hit an area where US troops are based.     

Multiple U.S. diplomatic and military sources have told AFP of their growing frustration with such attacks.     

 

U.S. Defense Secretary Mark Esper told reporters earlier this month that he had expressed "concern about the optics in attacks on bases in Iraq where U.S. troops and material might be," in a call with outgoing prime minister Adel Abdel Mahdi.    

The U.S. has "a right of self-defense, that we would ask our Iraqi partners to take proactive actions... to get that under control, because it's not good for anybody," he said.    

Abdel Mahdi's office called on everyone "to spare no effort to prevent an escalation that will threaten all parties," warning that "unilateral decisions will trigger negative reactions that will make it more difficult to control the situation."    

Tensions between Iran and the United States have soared since Washington pulled out of a landmark nuclear agreement with Tehran last year and enacted crippling sanctions.    

Baghdad -- which is close to both countries -- is worried about being caught in the middle.