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The New Zealand Herald
The New Zealand Herald
World
Louisa Loveluck

US troops, civilians killed in blast in Syria claimed by Isis

Isis (Islamic State) asserted responsibility today for a suicide blast in the US-patrolled Syrian city of Manbij, the first such attack since US President Donald Trump said American forces would withdraw from the country because the militant group has been largely defeated.

A spokesman for the US-led coalition battling Isis said that USservice members were killed while conducting a routine patrol in the city but did not say how many died or provide further details.

US officials told the Post that initial reports suggested four Americans may have died. Those dead were two troops and two civilians, AP reported.

In addition, at least three Americans are believed to have been wounded, one of them critically, according to a person familiar with the situation.

Isis' unofficial news agency, Amaq, said the attacker used an explosives-laden vest to target coalition forces and that nine American troops were killed or injured. Amaq presented no evidence for that claim.

The White House said that Trump has been "fully briefed" on the Manbij attack and that officials would continue to monitor the situation.

Vice-President Mike Pence, speaking at the State Department several hours after the US casualty reports, did not mention the bombing or the deaths, but instead hailed Trump's leadership in combatting the militants in Syria.

"We are bringing our troops home," Pence said in an address to 180 US ambassadors and chiefs of missions abroad gathered for a conference in Washington. "The caliphate has crumbled, and Isis has been defeated."

Surveillance camera video, apparently from the site of the attack, showed the explosion erupting on a busy footpath, sending a child running from the flames with hands clasped over his ears. Bodies and blood trails could be seen spread across the ground in photographs from the immediate aftermath.

The Britain-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said at least 19 people were wounded or killed. A Kurdish news agency reported that at least 10 people were injured in the attack, which it said occurred outside a popular restaurant.


Trump announced last month that about 2000 US military personnel would be leaving Syria, almost four years after they intervened as part of an international coalition to dislodge Isis from its self-declared "caliphate" straddling Syria and Iraq.

In public pronouncements, Trump initially justified the decision by saying that Isis had been defeated. Advisers then launched a weeks-long lobbying effort in an attempt to get Trump to change his mind or slow the withdrawal, and defence officials have reminded the President that Isis continues to wage stiff resistance in eastern Syria, while maintaining the ability to launch strikes elsewhere in the country.

The US military announced last weekend that it has begun withdrawing equipment from Syria but declined to provide details, leaving it unclear whether any material has been pulled out of the Manbij area. Pentagon officials said then that initial withdrawals would be limited to equipment and that no troops had yet departed.

The drawdown is widely seen as likely to spark battles for control of areas vacated by the Americans, but there was no immediate indication of any link between the withdrawal plan and today's attack in Manbij.

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