ISIS Attack in Syria: Two US Soldiers Killed Amid Trump's Vow for Retaliation

Two American soldiers and a civilian translator were killed in an attack by ISIS in Syria. President Trump has promised a strong response to the incident. The attack raises serious questions about security cooperation with the Syrian government. It also marks the first US casualties in Syria since the overthrow of Bashar al-Assad.

Key Points: US Soldiers Killed in Syria ISIS Attack, Trump Vows Retaliation

  • Attack targeted US personnel in Palmyra during a key leader engagement
  • Syrian govt spokesperson says attacker was a member of its own forces
  • Incident tests the fragile US cooperation with Syria's post-Assad government
  • Trump claims the area is not fully under Damascus government control
3 min read

Two US soldiers, translator killed in ISIS attack in Syria; Trump vows 'serious retaliation' 

Two US soldiers and a translator killed in ISIS attack in Syria. Trump vows "serious retaliation" as the incident tests US-Syria cooperation.

"very serious retaliation - President Donald Trump"

New York, Dec 14

Two US soldiers and a civilian translator who were a part of the campaign to root out the Islamic State were killed in an attack in Syria by the terrorist group, and President Donald Trump has vowed “very serious retaliation”.

Trump said in a Truth Social post that three soldiers were also wounded in the attack on Saturday.

In a tumultuous region infested with terrorist groups and civil strife, the attack on US personnel tests the US cooperation with the Syrian government that took power after President Bashar al-Assad was ousted in December last year.

It also tests the authority of Syrian President Ahmed al-Sharaa's government as the alleged attacker was a member of the Damascus government forces, according to a government spokesperson, and Trump acknowledged the area was not under full Damascus control.

The Syrian spokesperson, quoted by Syrian news agency SANA, also said that the US had not heeded warnings about the danger in Palmyra, where the attack took place.

He said the attacker was “neutralised”.

The first casualties in Syria after al-Assad was overthrown, the victims were cadres in US Operation Inherent Resolve (OIR) against the terrorist organisation known formally as the Islamic State of Iraq and ash-Sham (ISIS).

Chief Pentagon Spokesperson Sean Parnell described their mission as “support of ongoing counter-ISIS/counter-terrorism operations”.

The attack happened “as the soldiers were conducting a key leader engagement”, he said.

Media reports quoted a Syrian government spokesperson, Noureddine al-Baba, as acknowledging that the terrorist who shot the US personnel was a member of the Syrian government forces.

But SANA reported that he said that the attacker “held no leadership role within Internal Security and was not an escort to the Internal Security Commander”.

SANA quoted him as saying that Damascus had warned the US about a security breach or attack by ISIS, “but these warnings were not taken into consideration”.

He said investigators were examining “the attacker’s digital data to determine whether he had direct organisational ties to ISIS or merely adopted extremist ideology, as well as reviewing his acquaintances and relatives”.

The assailant was already under investigation into whether he held “extremist or takfiri views”, and a decision had been expected on Sunday.

Trump, who has established ties with al-Sharaa, said the attack took place “in a very dangerous part of Syria, that is not fully controlled by" his government.

Al-Sharar “is extremely angry and disturbed by this attack”, he added.

A former member of al-Qaeda, who had once been in US custody, al-Sharaa is seen as a reformed leader and was welcomed to the White House by Trump last month to strengthen cooperation between the two countries, especially in the fight against terrorism.

- IANS

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Reader Comments

S
Sarah B
The Syrian government's statement is concerning. If they had warnings, why wasn't more done? And if the attacker was from their own forces, it shows deep infiltration. Complex situation.
A
Arjun K
Trump's foreign policy is all over the place. First he pulls out, then he engages with a former al-Qaeda member turned President? This inconsistency creates security vacuums where our soldiers get killed. Needs a stable, long-term strategy, not just vows of retaliation.
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Priyanka N
My heart goes out to the families. The translator's death hits hard—local allies take immense risks. Hope the investigation is thorough. The region is a tinderbox.
V
Vikram M
This shows the enduring threat of ISIS. They are down but not out. The world cannot afford to be complacent. India must also stay vigilant on its fronts.
K
Karan T
The geopolitics is messy, but at the core, lives were lost fighting terror. Respect for the fallen. Hope the response is measured and effective, not just for show.

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