Civilians reported dead after US conducts counterterrorism raid in Syria
Washington (CNN)US Special Forces conducted a "successful" counterterrorism mission in northwest Syria Wednesday evening, the Pentagon said, but offered few other details.
Sources
on the ground reported multiple fatalities. At least 13 people were
killed in clashes that took place during and after the raid -- including
six children and four women -- according to the Syrian civil defense
group, the White Helmets. There were no US casualties, according to the
Pentagon.
Pentagon
press secretary John Kirby said in a statement late Wednesday night
that the mission was conducted by US Central Command, which controls
military operations and activities in the Middle East.
"More information will be provided as it becomes available," the statement said.
The
three-sentence Pentagon statement did not disclose a target for the
special operations mission or whether there was any indication of
civilian casualties. But witnesses and rescue workers told CNN that
shelling and explosions preceded an airdrop of US forces shortly after
midnight and targeted a house in the Syrian-Turkish border area of
Atmeh, in the rebel enclave of Idlib.
One
witness in Atmeh, who asked not to be named for security reasons, said
that machine gunfire erupted from at least three helicopters flying
overhead, followed by an explosion some minutes later. The area has a
heavy presence of Hay'at Tahrir al-Sham (HTS) forces, that were formerly
affiliated to al Qaeda.
"I
heard from a distance a person who is speaking Arabic in an Iraqi
accent asking for families to evacuate the area and they will be safe,"
said the witness. "I saw from a distance that there were machine guns
shooting back from the ground towards the helicopters."
The
witness said two of the three helicopters he saw landed an hour after
the clashes began. "Around 3:20 a.m., the helicopters left and I saw a
faraway light which looked like a fire," said the witness.
The
witness also said he heard what sounded like drone strikes, and said
HTS forces were preventing civilians from entering the area.
CNN has reached out to Central Command.
The
US has repeatedly targeted al Qaeda and its affiliates in northwest
Syria, with the Pentagon acknowledging at least one strike in recent
months may have resulted in civilian casualties.
In
September, the military targeted a senior al Qaeda leader near Idlib,
Syria, according to a statement from Central Command. One month later,
the military carried out a drone strike against Abdul Hamid al-Matar, a
senior al Qaeda leader, Central Command said.
And
then in December, the military targeted Musab Kinan, a senior leader of
al Qaeda affiliate Hurras al-Din, near Idlib. Central Command opened an
investigation into the possibility of civilian casualties from the
strike, but the Pentagon was unable to provide updates at the time.
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