On March 23, 2023, at 1:38 p.m. local time (UTC+03:00), a kamikaze drone allegedly of Iranian origin struck a coalition base at Abu Hajar Airport near Rmelan, al-Hasakah Governorate in northeastern Syria. As a response, The US military carried out a series of attacks using
F-15 Fighters at the direction of President Joe Biden. On 24 March 2023, two retaliatory strikes at near oil and gas fields known as Conoco in the vicinity of Deir Ezzor by multiple rockets and at Green Village (US military base) by three drones targeted US and coalition forces.
Attacks
On March 23, 2023, at 1:38 p.m. local time (
UTC+03:00), a
kamikaze drone allegedly of Iranian origin struck a coalition base at
Abu Hajar Airport near
Rmelan,
al-Hasakah Governorate in northeastern Syria,[6] killing one United States
contractor and injuring five servicemen and second contractor.[7][8][9]The New York Times reported, US officials said the main air defense system at the base was "not fully operational" at the time of Thursday's Drone Strike.[9]
In retaliation, U.S. President
Joe Biden authorized a response with an airstrike on
IRGC-linked targets,[10] including a weapons warehouse in the Harabish neighborhood in
Deir ez-Zor, and military posts in the
al-Mayadin and
Abu Kamal countryside,[11] killing 14 people including nine Syrians, according to
SOHR.[12][13][14]
On 24 March, 10 rockets were launched at the Green Village near al-Omar oil field which injured another American serviceman.[9] By afternoon, another rocket attack targeted US forces near the oil and gas fields of
Conoco, east of Deir ez-Zor.[15] On 30 March, the
Pentagon revealed that twelve American were wounded in total with six U.S. troops in Syria suffering traumatic brain injuries due to the two attacks by Iran-backed militias.[16]
A little-known militant group known as Liwa Al-Ghaliboun (The Brigade of Those who Prevail)[6] claimed responsibility for the initial drone attack, although some observers believe the group to simply be a
front group for a larger Iranian-backed group or the IRGC.[1]
Reaction and aftermath
On 27 March, the
White House said that the attacks would not trigger a U.S. withdrawal from its nearly eight-year-long deployment in Syria. on 23 March 2023,
United States Central Command commander
Michael Kurilla said in his speech to
House Committee on Armed Services that today Iran has grown its military power exponentially compared to five years ago and claimed Iranian-backed groups have struck 78 times on US troops in Syria since January 2021.[17] Meanwhile, the
Syrian foreign ministry condemned the attacks and stated that Washington lied about where it had targeted and pledged to "end the American occupation" in Syria.
Iran's foreign ministry accused the U.S. forces of targeting "civilian sites".[16]
As of 13 April, US personnel wounded in the clashes reached at least 25, including troops diagnosed with
traumatic brain injury.[3]