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Dozens of Hashed al-Shaabi militants killed in US-led coalition strikes in Syria

26 fighters of Iraqi paramilitary group Hashed al-Shaabi in eastern Syria after a deadly attack on US-led coalition troops in Iraq, a war monitor said Thursday. Before the strike near the border town of Albu Kamal, rockets were fired at a military base north of Baghdad hosting coalition troops, killing two Americans and one Briton.

Agencies and A News WORLD
Published March 12,2020
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The U.S.-led anti-Daesh coalition struck military sites in eastern Syria belonging to the Iran-backed paramilitary group Hashed al-Shaabi early Thursday.

The move came after two American service members and a British national were killed in a rocket attack Wednesday on an Iraqi base.

The coalition struck three sites belonging to Iran-backed militants in Syria, according to sources in Deir ez-Zur city.

The Imam Ali military base, located close to the eastern Syrian town of Abu Kamal near the Iraqi border, and military points in industrial regions and the al-Hizam area were targeted in coalition air strikes, sources said.

A total of 26 terrorists affiliated with the Iran-backed foreign groups, including two so-called top military commanders, were neutralized and tens of others were injured, they added.

Gen. Wisam al-Tufayli, a so-called top commander of the Iraqi Haidariyyoun group, and Gen. Ali Zahbander, a so-called top commender of the Zainabiyoun Brigade, were among the fatalities, according to the sources.

Meanwhile, the U.S.-led Operation Inherent Resolve confirmed that three coalition personnel were killed in the rocket attack on the Iraqi base.

It said at least 12 personnel were wounded in the attack on Camp Taji.

The U.S. media blamed the attack on Iranian-backed groups in the country.

Deir ez-Zur, located on the Syrian-Iraq border, provides a land connection from Iran to Lebanon. Pipelines from Iraq and Jordan as well as trade routes pass through the city.

West of Deir ez-Zur has been controlled since November 2017 by Iranian-based groups and Syria's Bashar al-Assad regime.

The east of Deir ez-Zur is under occupation by the U.S.-backed terrorist group of YPG/PKK.