US strike in Baghdad kills Iran-backed militia leader as regional tensions rise
The Guardian|January 05, 2024
A US airstrike in Baghdad yesterday killed the commander of an Iranian-backed Shia militia which Washington blames for attacks on American forces in the region, according to US officials.
Peter Beaumont , Julian Borger
US strike in Baghdad kills Iran-backed militia leader as regional tensions rise

One official said that a leader of Harakat al-Nujaba, whom the official did not name, was killed in his car as he was about to enter the garage at his group's Baghdad headquarters. News footage from Baghdad showed damage to the building.

Harakat al-Nujaba, which has been active in Syria and Iraq, is loyal to Tehran but also forms part of Iraq's Popular Mobilisation Forces (PMF), a collection of largely autonomous militias. The Iraqi government called the airstrike a "dangerous escalation and aggression".

The PMF issued a statement that its deputy head of operations in Baghdad, Mushtaq Taleb al-Saidi, also known as Abu Taqwa, had been killed "as a result of brutal American aggression". Two people were killed in the attack and five were injured, according to militia officials.

In the days before the Baghdad strike, more than 80 Iranians were killed in an apparent suicide attack claimed by Islamic State, Israel killed a Hamas leader with a missile strike in the Beirut suburbs, and the US issued a joint threat with 11 of its allies to attack positions held by the Iranianbacked Houthi forces in Yemen if there are further Houthi attacks on international shipping in the Red Sea.

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