At least 10 rockets were fired towards a military base in western Iraq that hosts U.S.led coalition troops on Wednesday March 3, with an American contractor dying from a resulting heart attack, the US and Iraqi military have announced.
The rockets struck Ain
al-Asad airbase in Anbar province at 7:20 a.m., coalition spokesman Col. Wayne
Marotto said. No group has claimed responsibility for the attack but the US
believe that Iran is responsible as this was the same base that was attacked
last year by Iran in response to the US' killing of General Soleimani.
It was an unusual
attack because the base is rarely targeted and it reportedly had Patriot air
defense installed last year.
President Joe Biden,
speaking at the White House on Wednesday, told reporters that "we're
following that through right now."
"Thank God, no
one was killed by the rocket -- one individual, a contractor, died of a heart
attack. But we're identifying who is responsible and will make judgments from
that point," Biden said.
Secretary of State
Antony Blinken said the US will respond to the attack "at a place and time
of our choosing," once it has determined who is responsible.
"The first thing we have to do is get to the bottom of it and find out to the best of our ability who in fact is responsible, and I think the President has been very clear that we will take appropriate action at a place and time of our choosing," Blinken told the PBS NewsHour later on Wednesday.
British Ambassador to
Iraq Stephen Hickey, has condemned the attack.
“Coalition forces are
in Iraq to fight Daesh at the invitation of the Iraqi government,” he tweeted,
using the Arabic acronym for IS. “These terrorist attacks undermine the fight
against Daesh and destabilize Iraq.”
The attack comes two
days before Pope Francis' is scheduled to visit Iraq in a much anticipated trip
that will include Baghdad, southern Iraq and in the northern city of Irbil.
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