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Old tweets resurface after US air strikes ​

Source: News Corp Australia Network:
February 26, 2021 at 14:05
US Vice President Kamala Harris speaks during a visit by US President Joe Biden to the Pentagon in Washington, DC, February 10, 2021. (Photo by SAUL LOEB / AFP)Source:AFP
US Vice President Kamala Harris speaks during a visit by US President Joe Biden to the Pentagon in Washington, DC, February 10, 2021. (Photo by SAUL LOEB / AFP)Source:AFP

Old tweets from US Vice President Kamala Harris have resurfaced after air strikes against Syria were launched by US forces.

Old tweets from US Vice President Kamala Harris and White House press secretary Jen Psaki have resurfaced after air strikes against Syria were launched by US forces on Thursday.

US President Joe Biden ordered US military air strikes against facilities the Pentagon says are held by Iran-backed militia. Mr Biden’s administration said it was sending a message to Tehran after recent rocket attacks on US troop locations in Iraq.

In its first military action against Iran-linked groups since Mr Biden became president five weeks ago, the US Defense Department said it had carried out strikes at a Syria-Iraq border control point used by those groups, destroying “multiple facilities.”

However, critics of Mr Biden’s administration were quick to point out tweets from Ms Harris from 2018, where she questioned strikes ordered by then US President Donald Trump’s administration.“I strongly support our men and women in uniform and believe we must hold Assad accountable for his unconscionable use of chemical weapons. But I am deeply concerned about the legal rationale of last night’s strikes,” Ms Harris said at the time.

“The president needs to lay out a comprehensive strategy in Syria in consultation with Congress — and he needs to do it now.”

In 2017, now White House Press Jen Psaki also questioned the “legal authority” of air strikes against Syria.
 

 

Mr Trump ordered the US military to carry out strikes on Syria along with French and UK forces following the Douma chemical in April. The US, UK and French governments determined the Syrian government had targeted civilians in the attack.

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US President Joe Biden at Pentagon earlier this month. Picture: Saul Loeb/AFP
US President Joe Biden at Pentagon earlier this month. Picture: Saul Loeb/AFPSource:AFP

 

 
Ms Harris said she was ‘deeply concerned’ by the Trump administrations strikes against Syria in 2018. Picture: Saul Loeb/AFP
Ms Harris said she was ‘deeply concerned’ by the Trump administrations strikes against Syria in 2018.
Picture: Saul Loeb/AFPSource:AFP

 

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“At President Biden’s direction, US military forces earlier this evening conducted air strikes against infrastructure utilised by Iranian-backed militant groups in eastern Syria,” said spokesman John Kirby in a statement.

“These strikes were authorised in response to recent attacks against American and Coalition personnel in Iraq, and to ongoing threats to those personnel,” he said.

Mr Kirby did not say whether there were any casualties in Thursday’s attack. But the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said that 17 people were killed after the strike hit three trucks loaded with munitions coming from Iraq near the Syrian city of Bukamal.

The group said all the dead were from Iraq’s state-sponsored Hashed al-Shaabi force, the umbrella group over many small militias that have ties to Iran.

Mr Kirby said the location was used by Kataeb Hezbollah and Kataeb Sayyid al-Shuhada, two armed Iraqi Shiite groups under Hashed al-Shaabi.

REPRISAL FOR ROCKET ATTACKS AGAINST US

The US action followed three rocket attacks on facilities in Iraq used by United States and coalition forces fighting the Islamic State group.

One of those strikes, on a military complex in the Kurdish region’s capital Arbil on February 15, killed a civilian and a foreign contractor working with coalition forces, and injured several US contractors and a soldier.
 

US President Joe Biden, centre, accompanied by Vice President Kamala Harris. Picture: Alex Brandon/AFP
US President Joe Biden, centre, accompanied by Vice President Kamala Harris.
Picture: Alex Brandon/AFPSource:AFP

 

The attacks in Iraq laid down a challenge to the new Biden administration just as it opened a door to resumed negotiations with Tehran over its alleged nuclear weapons program.

Last week, the administration offered talks with Iran led by European allies as it sought to salvage the 2015 nuclear deal, left on the brink of collapse after the Trump administration withdrew from it.

But the administration has also made clear it would not brook “malign activities” in the region by Iran.

Although Kataeb Hezbollah did not claim responsibility for the attacks, US Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin said that the powerful pro-Iranian organisation was behind them.

“We’re confident in the target we went after. We know what we hit,” he told reporters on the plane flying to Washington after a tour of the USS Nimitz aircraft carrier off the California coast.

“We are confident that the target was being used by the same Shia militia that conducted the strikes” against American interests in Iraq, he said.

Iran is believed to be searching for an opportunity to avenge the US assassination of top general Qasem Soleimani one year ago.

Mr Soleimani, a senior officer in the Iranian Revolutionary Guard Corps, was Tehran’s key liaison to allied groups and figures in Iraq, Syria, Lebanon and elsewhere in the region.

He was killed in a US drone strike just as he arrived in Baghdad for meetings with top Iraqi officials.

State Department spokesman Ned Price said Monday the US would “hold Iran responsible for the actions of its proxies that attack Americans” but would not “lash out” and risk destabilising Iraq.

Mr Kirby called Thursday’s strikes “proportionate” and said it “was conducted together with diplomatic measures,” including consultation with US partners in the anti-IS coalition.

“The operation sends an unambiguous message: President Biden will act to protect American and Coalition personnel,” he said.

“At the same time, we have acted in a deliberate manner that aims to de-escalate the overall situation in both eastern Syria and Iraq,” he added.

— with AFP


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