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  • U.S. troops killed in Syria suicide attack claimed by ISIS

    U.S. troops killed in Syria suicide attack claimed by ISIS

    Updated on: January 16, 2019 / 11:01 AM
    U.S. troops were among those killed Wednesday in an attack in northern Syria, the U.S. military has confirmed to CBS News. The U.S.-led coalition in Syria, Operation Inherent Resolve, confirmed in a tweet that, "U.S. service members were killed during an explosion while conducting a routine patrol in Syria today."

    A U.S. military official confirmed separately to CBS News senior national defense correspondent David Martin reports by Kurdish media outlets that at least two Americans were among the dead in the city of Manbij, not far from the Turkish border, after an explosion hit a coalition convoy.

    The U.S. military has not confirmed how many American casualties were among the bombing victims on Wednesday, but at least one report said as many as four U.S. service members were killed. If true, Martin notes that it would be the single largest loss of U.S. life in Syria since American forces were deployed there in 2015.

    The attack comes just weeks after President Trump declared ISIS defeated and said U.S. troops were coming home. Speaking to a gathering of U.S. ambassadors at the State Department on Wednesday, after the Pentagon confirmed the deaths of American troops in Syria, Vice President Mike Pence repeated both of Mr. Trump's assertions.


    White House press secretary Sarah Sanders told CBS News on Wednesday that President Trump had been "fully briefed and we will continue to monitor the ongoing situation in Syria." She referred all further questions to the U.S. military.

    Manbij is just 20 miles from the border with Turkey, in an area held by Kurdish forces allied with the U.S. military coalition fighting ISIS. The terror group's self-styled news agency Amaq claimed online that the attack was carried out by a member of the group wearing a suicide vest.

    The U.S. has about 2,000 troops still in Syria, though President Trump has ordered a withdrawal which is expected to be completed within four months.

    U.S. plans to withdrawal troops from Syria

    Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan said Tuesday that President Donald Trump had reassured him in a phone conversation that the U.S. was in the process of pulling its troops out of Syria, appearing to tamp down tension between the two nations which manifested itself just hours earlier in a testy exchange of tweets.

    Turkey wants the remaining American forces in Syria to come out, which would give the Turks free rein to launch offensive operations against the Kurdish militia in the war-torn country's north. But many of those Kurdish fighters are U.S. allies who have been crucial to the fight against ISIS. The Trump administration has made guarantees for their security a precondition of the complete U.S. withdrawal from Syria.

    Erdogan told his nation's lawmakers on Tuesday that he had told Mr. Trump the U.S.-allied YPG Kurdish militia, "tortures the groups in Syria that do not depend on them," and that his government had shared its evidence that America's allies are in fact terrorists with the White House.

    But the Trump administration has not backed away from its insistence that the Kurds of the YPG be protected. Nor has it officially backed away from Mr. Trump's decision to pull U.S. troops out of Syria -- though that process is happening far slower than the president initially suggested.

    In the meantime, as CBS News correspondent Charlie D'Agata reported this week, there's been an increase in the intensity of the battle against ISIS holdouts. The YPG-led Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF) are making the most of U.S. military support while they still have it.

    Administration officials have stressed that the outcome of the battle against ISIS is not reliant on the physical presence of the roughly 2,000 U.S. forces in Syria, but as D'Agata reported, the Americans have played a vital role in the fight on the ground. They provide not only tactics, weapons and equipment, but crucially they also direct airstrikes against ISIS targets.

    D'Agata and his team witnessed that for themselves on board the American aircraft carrier USS John C. Stennis last week. From the waters of the Persian Gulf, wave after wave of F-18 fighter jets rocketed into the sky to launch bombing raids against ISIS targets in Iraq and Syria.

    The Kurdish fighters who spoke to D'Agata in northern Syria are not only concerned that the withdrawal of U.S. troops could enable an ISIS comeback, but that Turkish forces will go on the attack the moment the last American soldier leaves.t

    https://www.cbsnews.com/news/us-troo...ay-2019-01-16/

  • #2
    Originally posted by GAME OVER View Post
    U.S. troops killed in Syria suicide attack claimed by ISIS

    Updated on: January 16, 2019 / 11:01 AM
    U.S. troops were among those killed Wednesday in an attack in northern Syria, the U.S. military has confirmed to CBS News. The U.S.-led coalition in Syria, Operation Inherent Resolve, confirmed in a tweet that, "U.S. service members were killed during an explosion while conducting a routine patrol in Syria today."

    A U.S. military official confirmed separately to CBS News senior national defense correspondent David Martin reports by Kurdish media outlets that at least two Americans were among the dead in the city of Manbij, not far from the Turkish border, after an explosion hit a coalition convoy.

    The U.S. military has not confirmed how many American casualties were among the bombing victims on Wednesday, but at least one report said as many as four U.S. service members were killed. If true, Martin notes that it would be the single largest loss of U.S. life in Syria since American forces were deployed there in 2015.

    The attack comes just weeks after President Trump declared ISIS defeated and said U.S. troops were coming home. Speaking to a gathering of U.S. ambassadors at the State Department on Wednesday, after the Pentagon confirmed the deaths of American troops in Syria, Vice President Mike Pence repeated both of Mr. Trump's assertions.


    White House press secretary Sarah Sanders told CBS News on Wednesday that President Trump had been "fully briefed and we will continue to monitor the ongoing situation in Syria." She referred all further questions to the U.S. military.

    Manbij is just 20 miles from the border with Turkey, in an area held by Kurdish forces allied with the U.S. military coalition fighting ISIS. The terror group's self-styled news agency Amaq claimed online that the attack was carried out by a member of the group wearing a suicide vest.

    The U.S. has about 2,000 troops still in Syria, though President Trump has ordered a withdrawal which is expected to be completed within four months.

    U.S. plans to withdrawal troops from Syria

    Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan said Tuesday that President Donald Trump had reassured him in a phone conversation that the U.S. was in the process of pulling its troops out of Syria, appearing to tamp down tension between the two nations which manifested itself just hours earlier in a testy exchange of tweets.

    Turkey wants the remaining American forces in Syria to come out, which would give the Turks free rein to launch offensive operations against the Kurdish militia in the war-torn country's north. But many of those Kurdish fighters are U.S. allies who have been crucial to the fight against ISIS. The Trump administration has made guarantees for their security a precondition of the complete U.S. withdrawal from Syria.

    Erdogan told his nation's lawmakers on Tuesday that he had told Mr. Trump the U.S.-allied YPG Kurdish militia, "tortures the groups in Syria that do not depend on them," and that his government had shared its evidence that America's allies are in fact terrorists with the White House.

    But the Trump administration has not backed away from its insistence that the Kurds of the YPG be protected. Nor has it officially backed away from Mr. Trump's decision to pull U.S. troops out of Syria -- though that process is happening far slower than the president initially suggested.

    In the meantime, as CBS News correspondent Charlie D'Agata reported this week, there's been an increase in the intensity of the battle against ISIS holdouts. The YPG-led Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF) are making the most of U.S. military support while they still have it.

    Administration officials have stressed that the outcome of the battle against ISIS is not reliant on the physical presence of the roughly 2,000 U.S. forces in Syria, but as D'Agata reported, the Americans have played a vital role in the fight on the ground. They provide not only tactics, weapons and equipment, but crucially they also direct airstrikes against ISIS targets.

    D'Agata and his team witnessed that for themselves on board the American aircraft carrier USS John C. Stennis last week. From the waters of the Persian Gulf, wave after wave of F-18 fighter jets rocketed into the sky to launch bombing raids against ISIS targets in Iraq and Syria.

    The Kurdish fighters who spoke to D'Agata in northern Syria are not only concerned that the withdrawal of U.S. troops could enable an ISIS comeback, but that Turkish forces will go on the attack the moment the last American soldier leaves.t

    https://www.cbsnews.com/news/us-troo...ay-2019-01-16/
    RIP bring em all home!

    Comment


    • #3
      Just reinforces the President's position on bringing them home. We shouldn't be dying for a bunch of radicals still living in the 7th century.

      Comment


      • #4
        Originally posted by GhostofDempsey View Post
        Just reinforces the President's position on bringing them home. We shouldn't be dying for a bunch of radicals still living in the 7th century.



        Wait!........wasn't ISIS defeated?

        Comment


        • #5
          Originally posted by GhostofDempsey View Post
          Just reinforces the President's position on bringing them home. We shouldn't be dying for a bunch of radicals still living in the 7th century.
          Exactly.

          But these pathetic superfans using the deaths of American soldiers to score Gotcha! points are incapable of seeing the big picture.

          They ought to be ashamed of themselves, but as I have to point out countless times;
          Team loyalty > everything else

          Sadly American lives fall under everything else to them.

          Comment


          • #6
            Originally posted by GAME OVER View Post
            Wait!........wasn't ISIS defeated?
            Don't worry about that, you got ISIS right in your backyard in the UK! Jihadi John was your homegrown boy!

            Comment


            • #7
              Originally posted by Theodore View Post
              Don't worry about that, you got ISIS right in your backyard in the UK! Jihadi John was your homegrown boy!
              Wait, he's British?!?!

              And he's running around trying to score Gotcha! points over American politics???

              Sad, sad, sad.

              He needs to get to building more rape crisis centers and digging more graves, which is always the consequence of allowing more muslims into your country.

              Comment


              • #8
                Originally posted by Theodore View Post
                Don't worry about that, you got ISIS right in your backyard in the UK! Jihadi John was your homegrown boy!





                LMFAO........You're so funny!


                "The Somalian Al-Shabab (“the youth”) have recruited strongly in Minneapolis and St. Paul, Minnesota. The 30+ Somali-Americans received training by senior al-Qaeda leaders in Somalia. Hoffman believes this indicates that radicalization and recruitment is not an isolated, lone-wolf phenomenon unique to Somali-Americans, but that there is terrorist recruitment infrastructure in the United States."


                https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Domestic_terrorism

                Comment


                • #9
                  Originally posted by GAME OVER View Post
                  Wait!........wasn't ISIS defeated?
                  Much more so than Muslims coming into the UK, stabbing your kin and raping your women.

                  Comment


                  • #10
                    Originally posted by GAME OVER View Post
                    LMFAO........You're so funny!


                    "The Somalian Al-Shabab (“the youth”) have recruited strongly in Minneapolis and St. Paul, Minnesota. The 30+ Somali-Americans received training by senior al-Qaeda leaders in Somalia. Hoffman believes this indicates that radicalization and recruitment is not an isolated, lone-wolf phenomenon unique to Somali-Americans, but that there is terrorist recruitment infrastructure in the United States."


                    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Domestic_terrorism
                    That doesn't refute my point does it? Jihadi John was your homegrown terrorist member. Same thing with the one that blew up a bunch of little girls at an Ariana Grande concert!

                    Also, you posting about Somali-Americans being recruited for terrorism supports 1bad65's assertion that western countries should severely limit or ban Muslims from entering Western countries.

                    No gotcha points for you this time homey!

                    Comment

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