WASHINGTON, US
Iranian-backed militias do not appear to be backing down despite a U.S. airstrike thought to have largely destroyed a key weapons storage facility in eastern Syria.
The Pentagon on Thursday
hailed the strike, carried out by two U.S. F-15 fighter jets late Wednesday, as
a success, citing a series of secondary explosions that left the building
"non-usable." But U.S. officials also admitted that, at least for
now, it failed to slow the pace of attacks by Iranian-backed militias on U.S.
forces in the region.
A U.S. official told VOA on
Thursday that following the U.S. airstrike, Iranian-backed militias launched
four drone and rocket attacks against U.S. troops and bases — three in Syria
and one in Iraq.
One of the attacks, late
Wednesday targeting the U.S. facility in the Green Village in Syria, injured
three troops.
Officials said two of the
troops were diagnosed with traumatic brain injuries, or TBI, but that none of
the injuries was serious and that all three returned to duty.
The officials also said that
none of the drone and rocket attacks damaged any U.S. infrastructure.
"These attacks have been,
for the majority, unsuccessful," Pentagon deputy press secretary Sabrina
Singh told reporters Thursday.
"Thankfully, none of our
troops have been injured seriously and our infrastructure at the bases that
have been targeted, we have not experienced significant damage," she
added.
U.S. bases and facilities have
come under attack at least 46 times since Iranian-backed militias began
targeting U.S. forces in Iraq and Syria last month in a show of support for
Hamas in its fight against Israel.
Since October 17, 56 U.S.
troops have been injured, with 25 diagnosed with TBI as a result of the blasts
from exploding rockets or drones. Still, the Pentagon said all of the injuries
were minor, and that all injured forces have returned to duty.
Pentagon officials also note
that most of the injuries were incurred before the U.S. launched a first set of
self-defense strikes, targeting two weapons and storage facilities used by
Iranian proxies in Syria on October 26.
Wednesday's strike targeted a
larger weapons storage facility in Syria's Deir el-Zour province that belonged
to Iran's Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps. U.S. officials said the facility
had been providing many of the Iranian-linked groups with rockets and other
materials used to launch attacks on U.S. forces.
Pentagon officials on Thursday
voiced optimism that the operation would have the intended effect.
"We know that there were
secondary explosions. We know that the facility was significantly
damaged," Singh said. "We feel confident we were able to degrade
their capabilities."
"We won't hesitate to
take further necessary measures to protect our people and to do so at a time
and place of our choosing," she added.
The Pentagon on Thursday also
officially confirmed that Iranian-backed Houthi rebels in Yemen had
successfully shot down a U.S. drone flying over the Red Sea.
Singh told reporters there
were indications that the U.S. MQ-9 drone landed in the water and that the
Houthis tried to recover it before it sank.
"We know that there was
an attempt by Houthis to try and recover the MQ-9 but it is unlikely that they
will be able to retrieve anything of significance," she said. "We
[the U.S.] are not right now looking to recover anything either."
In recent weeks, the United
States has bolstered its force presence in the Middle East, sending two
aircraft carrier strike groups, dozens of fighter jets and a ballistic missile
submarine to the region to deter Iran and its proxies from expanding the conflict
between Israel and Hamas.
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