This looks like the Wagner Group’s deceptive tactic, probably used in Ukraine. Putin tries to fan the flames of the Gaza conflict into the regional Middle East War, to divert the world’s attention further and farther from Ukraine.
“Enemy drone that killed US troops in Jordan was…— Michael Novakhov (@mikenov) January 30, 2024
Month: January 2024
drone strike in Jordan – Google Search https://t.co/Gy907OSKPt https://t.co/17O9o4VLX6
— Michael Novakhov (@mikenov) January 30, 2024
Three American troops were killed and 25 were injured Sunday in a drone strike in northeast Jordan near the Syrian border, the U.S. military said. President Joe Biden blamed Iran-backed militias for the first U.S. fatalities after months of strikes by the groups against American forces across the Middle East amid the Israel-Hamas war. (Jan. 29)
Videos
National Security Council spokesman John Kirby reiterates that the U.S. administration isn’t seeking to get into another conflict in the Middle East. But, Kirby tells reporters the U.S. will “respond appropriately to these attacks. ” (Jan. 29)
Associated Press News director for the Persian Gulf and Iran Jon Gambrell explains the new details emerging from Sunday’s deadly drone strike on a U.S. base in Jordan, killing three American troops and wounding dozens of others (Jan. 29)
The White House insists it’s not looking for war with Iran even as President Joe Biden vows retaliatory action for a drone attack on a U.S. forces in Jordan that killed three American troops that the Democratic administration believes Tehran was behind. (Jan. 29)
U.S. forces may have mistaken an enemy drone for an American one and let it pass unchallenged into a desert base in Jordan where it killed three U.S. troops and wounded dozens more, officials said Monday. The Associated Press News Director for the Persian Gulf and Iran Jon Gambrell explains what could happen next. (Jan. 29)
The U.S. Defense Department says three Army Reserve soldiers from Georgia were killed in a weekend drone strike in Jordan. They were identified as Sgt. William Jerome Rivers of Carrollton, Spc. Kennedy Sanders of Waycross and Spc. Breonna Alexsondria Moffett of Savannah. (Jan. 29)
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WASHINGTON (AP) — U.S. forces may have mistaken an enemy drone for an American one and let it pass unchallenged into a desert base in Jordan where it killed three U.S. troops and wounded dozens more, officials said Monday.
Details of the Sunday attack emerged as President Joe Biden faced a difficult balancing act, blaming Iran and looking to strike back in a forceful way without causing any further escalation of the Gaza conflict.
As the enemy drone was flying in at a low altitude, a U.S. drone was returning to the small installation known as Tower 22, according to a preliminary report cited by two officials, who were not authorized to comment and insisted on anonymity,
As a result, there was no effort to shoot down the enemy drone that hit the outpost. One of the trailers where troops sleep sustained the brunt of the strike, while surrounding trailers got limited damage from the blast and flying debris. While there are no large air defense systems at Tower 22, the base does have counter-drone systems, such as Coyote drone interceptors.
Aside from the soldiers killed, the Pentagon said more than 40 troops were wounded in the attack, most with cuts, bruises, brain injuries and similar wounds. Eight were medically evacuated, including three who were going to Landstuhl Regional Medical Center in Germany. The other five, who suffered “minor traumatic brain injuries,” were expected to return to duty.
Asked if the failure to shoot down the enemy drone was “human error,” Pentagon spokeswoman Sabrina Singh responded that the U.S. Central Command was still assessing the matter.
The Pentagon identified those killed in the attack as Sgt. William Jerome Rivers, 46, of Carrollton, Georgia; Spc. Kennedy Ladon Sanders, 24, of Waycross, Georgia; and Spc. Breonna Alexsondria Moffett, 23, of Savannah, Georgia.
The three U.S. Army Reserve soldiers were assigned to the 718th Engineer Company, 926th Engineer Battalion, 926th Engineer Brigade in Fort Moore, Georgia.
The explanation for how the enemy drone evaded U.S. air defenses came as the White House said Monday it’s not looking for war with Iran even as Biden vows retaliatory action. The Democratic administration believes Tehran was behind the strike.
Biden met with national security advisers in the White House Situation Room to discuss the latest developments and potential retaliation.
“There’s no easy answer here,” said National Security Council spokesman John Kirby. “And that’s why the president is meeting with his national security team weighing the options before him.”
The brazen attack, which the Biden administration blames on Iranian-based proxies, adds another layer of complexity to an already tense Mideast situation as the Biden administration tries to keep the Israel-Hamas war from expanding into a broader regional conflict.
“The president and I will not tolerate attacks on U.S. forces, and we will take all necessary actions to defend the U.S. and our troops,” Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin said as he met at the Pentagon with NATO Secretary General Jens Stoltenberg.
The drone attack was one of dozens on U.S. troops in the Middle East since Hamas launched attacks on Israel on Oct. 7, igniting the war in Gaza. But it’s the first in which American service members have been killed.
Biden promised on Sunday to “hold all those responsible to account at a time and in a manner (of) our choosing” but said the U.S. wasn’t seeking to get into another conflict in the Middle East.
Kirby also made clear that American patience has worn thin after more than two months of attacks by Iranian proxies on U.S. troops in Iraq, Syria and Jordan and on U.S. Navy and commercial vessels in the Red Sea. The proxy groups — including Yemen’s Houthi rebels and Iraq based Kataeb Hezbollah — say the attacks are in response to Israel’s ongoing military operations in Gaza.
“We are not looking for a war with Iran,” Kirby told reporters. “That said, this was a very serious attack. It had lethal consequences. We will respond, and we respond appropriately.”
Iran on Monday denied it was behind the Jordan strike.
“These claims are made with specific political goals to reverse the realities of the region,” Iran’s state-run IRNA news agency quoted foreign ministry spokesman Nasser Kanaani as saying. Iran regularly denies involvement in attacks linked back to it through the militias it arms across the wider Mideast.
Kirby said that U.S. officials are still working through determining which militant group was behind the attack. He noted that Iran has longed equipped and trained the militias.
Republicans have laid blame on Biden for doing too little to deter Iranian militias, which have carried out approximately 165 attacks on U.S. troops in the region since the start of the war.
Republican presidential front-runner Donald Trump on Sunday called the attack “yet another horrific and tragic consequence of Joe Biden’s weakness and surrender.”
The attack hit a U.S. military desert outpost in the far reaches of northeastern Jordan known as Tower 22. The installation sits near the demilitarized zone on the border between Jordan and Syria along a sandy, bulldozed berm marking the DMZ’s southern edge. The Iraqi border is only 10 kilometers (6 miles) away.
The base began as a Jordanian outpost watching the border, then saw an increased U.S. presence after American forces entered Syria in late 2015. The small installation includes U.S. engineering, aviation, logistics and security troops, with about 350 U.S. Army and Air Force personnel deployed.
Iraq’s government condemned the drone strike. Spokesman Bassem al-Awadi said in a statement that Iraq was “monitoring with a great concern the alarming security developments in the region” and called for “an end to the cycle of violence.” The statement said that Iraq is ready to participate in diplomatic efforts to prevent further escalation.
An umbrella group for Iran-backed factions known as the Islamic Resistance in Iraq has claimed dozens of attacks against bases housing U.S. troops in Iraq and Syria since the Israel-Hamas war began. On Sunday, the group claimed three drone attacks against sites in Syria, including near the border with Jordan, and one inside of “occupied Palestine” but so far hasn’t claimed the attack in Jordan.
John Bolton, who served as national security adviser to Trump, said Iran hasn’t paid a price for the havoc that its proxies have unleashed in the region. He suggested the Biden administration could send a strong message to Tehran with strikes on Iranian vessels in the Red Sea, Iranian air defenses along the Iraqi border, and bases that have been used to train and supply militant groups for years.
“So until Iran bears a cost, you’re not going to reestablish deterrence, you’re not going to put the belligerence on a downward slope.”
The attack came as U.S. officials were seeing signs of progress in negotiations to broker a deal between Israel and Hamas to release the more than 100 remaining hostages being held in Gaza in exchange for an extended pause in fighting. While contours of a deal under consideration would not end the war, Americans believed that it could lay the groundwork for a durable resolution to the conflict.
Qatar’s prime minister said Monday that senior U.S. and Mideast mediators had achieved a framework proposal to present to Hamas for freeing hostages and pausing fighting in Gaza.
Prime Minister Mohammed al-Thani’s comments at the Atlantic Council in Washington came after talks Sunday in Paris among U.S., Israeli, Qatari and Egyptian officials seeking a new round of hostage releases and a cease-fire in Gaza.
___
Associated Press writers Qassim Abdul-Zahra in Baghdad, Jon Gambrell in Jerusalem and Geir Moulson in Berlin contributed reporting.
From left, Army Sgt. William Jerome Rivers, Spc. Kennedy Ladon Sanders, and Spc. Breonna Alexsondria Moffett. (U.S. Army)
ATLANTA — The three U.S. service members killed in a one-way drone strike in Jordan were Army reservists from Georgia, the Pentagon said Monday.
Sgt. William Jerome Rivers, Spc. Kennedy Ladon Sanders and Spc. Breonna Alexsondria Moffett were killed in the strike on the small base in northeast Jordan known as Tower 22, according to the Pentagon. The soldiers were assigned to the 718th Engineer Company, 926th Engineer Battalion from the 926th Engineer Brigade based at Fort Moore, Ga.
Rivers, 46, was from Carrollton, Ga.; Sanders, 24, was from Waycross, Ga.; and Moffett, 23, was from Savannah, Ga. Pentagon officials said the three soldiers were killed when the attack drone struck their container housing quarters early Sunday morning.
The soldiers’ deaths have “left an indelible mark on the United States Army Reserve,” said Lt. Gen. Jody Daniels, the Army Reserve’s top general. “I share in the sorrow felt by their friends, family and loved ones. Their service and sacrifice will not be forgotten, and we are committed to supporting those left behind in the wake of this tragedy.”
Pentagon officials said an Iran-backed militia was responsible for the drone strike. Pentagon spokeswoman Sabrina Singh declined to say specifically which militia launched the drone but said it was one backed by Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps, an elite unit of Iran’s armed forces that supports terrorist groups and anti-American militants in Iraq and Syria.
The drone struck Tower 22, a logistics support base in Jordan, along the Syrian border, where U.S. forces support the decade-old Operation Inherent Resolve, a mission to ensure the defeat of Islamic State.
U.S. Central Command in a statement Sunday said approximately 350 U.S. Army and Air Force troops were deployed to the base.
An investigation was ongoing into how the drone was able to evade U.S. air defenses used to protect forces on the Jordan base, Singh said.
The al-Tanf military outpost in southern Syria is seen on Oct. 22, 2018. Three American troops were killed and dozens more were injured in an overnight drone strike at Tower 22 in northeast Jordan near the Syrian border. (Lolita Baldor/AP)
Initial reports indicate that as the enemy drone was flying in at a low altitude, a U.S. drone was also returning to the small desert installation and might have been let pass by mistake, according to a preliminary conclusion first reported by The Wall Street Journal. As a result, there was no effort to shoot down the enemy drone that hit the outpost, the newspaper reported.
Singh vowed a response “in a time and place of our choosing.” She said the United States holds Iran responsible for the Sunday attack and 164 other assaults on U.S. forces in Iraq and Syria since Oct. 7, when Hamas militants attacked Israelis, launching a new war in Gaza and raising tensions across the Middle East.
“We know that Iran is behind it,” Singh said. “Iran continues to arm and equip these groups to launch these attacks, and we will continue to hold them responsible. … They fund and train and support and equip these militias that operate in Iraq and Syria.”
Iran denied involvement in the Sunday attack.
“Resistance groups in the region do not take orders from the Islamic Republic of Iran,” Foreign Ministry Spokesman Nasser Kanaani said Monday, according to Bloomberg news.
At least 40 other American service members were injured in the strike, she said. That number could rise as troops are evaluated for injuries, including traumatic brain injuries, Singh added.
Eight service members required evacuation from Jordan to the Baghdad Diplomatic Support Center, Singh said. Three are scheduled for imminent transport to Landstuhl Regional Medical Center in Germany, she said. Five have been assessed for mild traumatic brain injuries and are expected to return to duty.
The fallen soldiers deployed late last year in support of Operation Inherent Resolve with their unit, which had split time between Kuwait and Jordan, an Army official said. The soldiers were expecting to return home in the summer.
Rivers was the longest tenured of the three fallen soldiers, enlisting in the service in 2011 as an interior electrician, according to the Army. He served a previous nine-month deployment to Iraq in 2018, also in support of OIR.
His awards and decorations included the Army Achievement Medal, National Defense Service Medal, Global War on Terrorism Service Medal, Army Service Ribbon, Overseas Service Ribbon, two Army Reserve Component Overseas Training Ribbons, Armed Forces Reserve Medal with “M” Device and the Inherent Resolve Campaign Medal with Campaign Star.
Sanders enlisted in the Army in 2019 as a horizontal construction engineer, according to the service. Like Rivers, she was on her second overseas deployment, after serving an eight-month rotation in 2021 in Djibouti.
Army Spc. Kennedy Sanders, right, posing for a selfie with her mother, Oneida Oliver-Sanders, at a ceremony in Columbus, Ga., on Aug. 9, 2023. (Shawn Sanders via AP)
Her awards and decorations include the National Defense Service Medal, Global War on Terrorism Expeditionary Medal, Global War on Terrorism Service Medal, Army Service Ribbon, Overseas Service Ribbon and the Armed Forces Reserve Medal with “M” Device.
In Sanders hometown of Waycross in southeast Georgia on Monday, officials ordered flags to be flown at half-staff in her honor.
“The City [of Waycross] is deeply saddened to hear of the passing of Kennedy Ladon Sanders, who gave her life in service to our country,” the Waycross government wrote in a statement. “We offer our heartfelt condolences to her family and friends during this difficult time.”
Moffett was on her first deployment, according to the Army. She enlisted in the service in 2019 as a horizontal construction engineer. Her awards include the National Defense Service Medal and the Army Service Ribbon.
Moffett was a former drum major at Savannah’s Windsor Forest High School, according to the school’s band program.
In a message posted to the Windsor Forest Mighty Marching Knights Facebook page, the program asked supporters to “spam green hearts” in Moffett’s honor.
“We will forever remember Breonna Moffet … as a Knight and a service woman in the U.S. Army,” the post read.
White House says Israel-Hamas talks shouldn’t be impacted by drone attack that killed US troops https://t.co/b1D7NOQ7ye via @YahooNewsAU
— Michael Novakhov (@mikenov) January 30, 2024
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💥 Russia: Electrical substation blew up in Chelyabinsk. Locals lost electricity. pic.twitter.com/m2TVljiRe9
— Igor Sushko (@igorsushko) January 29, 2024
⚡️ Zelensky: Europe cannot support Ukraine without US.
Europe will likely not be able to support Ukraine financially and militarily if the U.S. were to significantly reduce its aid, President Volodymyr Zelensky said in an interview with ARD on Jan. 29.https://t.co/nnGZZYmwtP
— The Kyiv Independent (@KyivIndependent) January 29, 2024
Today, I was briefed by members of my national security team in the Situation Room on the latest developments regarding the attack on U.S. service members in northeastern Jordan.
As I’ve said, we’ll hold all those responsible to account at a time and in a manner of our choosing. pic.twitter.com/pLScFuXjk2
— President Biden (@POTUS) January 29, 2024