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Missile Fired at Base Hosting US Troops in Kirkuk, Iraq: Officials

Tokyo, IOC Officials Reiterate That the Olympics Are On

Tokyo Olympic organizers reiterated their message on Thursday at the start of two days of meetings with the International Olympic Committee (IOC): The 2020 Games will not be waylaid by the coronavirus that is spreading from neighboring China. “I would like to make it clear again that we are not considering a cancellation or postponement of the games. Let me make that clear,” organizing committee president Yoshiro Mori said, speaking through an interpreter to dozens of top IOC officials gathered in Tokyo, Japan. The Olympics open in just over five months, and the torch relay begins next month in Japan—a clear signal the games are getting close. Japan reported its first death from the coronavirus on Thursday, a development that will add to the jitters among organizers and IOC officials.…

Missile Fired at Base Hosting US Troops in Kirkuk, Iraq: Officials

A missile fired at a military base hosting U.S. troops near Kirkuk, Iraq, on Wednesday caused few losses, according to Iraqi military officials.

At least one missile “landed inside the K-1 base” and caused no “significant losses,” said Iraq’s official Security Media Cell, which falls under the jurisdiction of the prime minister’s office.

“Security forces are conducting a search operation to search for the perpetrators,” the officials wrote, adding that they “found a launching base carrying 11 missiles that have not yet been fired. The seized materials have been dealt with.”

The base in Kirkuk houses U.S. forces. A similar missile attack in December killed an American contractor, prompting the United States to launch an airstrike that killed Iranian commander Qassem Soleimani. Top White House officials said Soleimani was plotting more attacks on American assets.

In the December attack, about 30 missiles were reportedly fired at the K-1 base, which the United States blamed on Iran-aligned Kataib Hezbollah, a designated terrorist organization. Days later, the United States launched attacks on Kataib Hezbollah, triggering a response from an angry mob and Iran-backed militia groups who tried to storm the U.S. Embassy in Baghdad, Iraq, according to the State Department.

Iran then fired about two dozen missiles at two Iraqi airbases that house American troops, leaving about 100 with mild brain injuries, according to Pentagon officials in updates weeks later. However, the K-1 base wasn’t one of the facilities that Tehran attacked.

The K-1 base, located northwest of Kirkuk in northern Iraq, was built by the Iraqi government before it was taken over by U.S. forces following the 2003 invasion that also toppled longtime dictator Saddam Hussein. The base was briefly captured by the ISIS terrorist organization in 2014 before Kurdish forces pushed them out. Iraqi special forces have since controlled the base, and it has hosted U.S. and coalition personnel to fight ISIS.

U.S. troops belonging to the same anti-ISIS coalition said they came under fire in northern Syria on Wednesday and were forced to open fire.

“After coalition troops issued a series of warnings and de-escalation attempts, the patrol came under small arms fire from unknown individuals” in Qamishli, northeastern Syria, said Colonel Myles Caggins, a spokesman for the coalition, in a statement on Wednesday. Out of self-defense, the patrol returned fire and the situation was de-escalated, he said.

On Thursday, the Senate passed a resolution that would seek to curb President Donald Trump’s war powers with Iran, saying the president would need to get Congressional approval first. The measure is expected to be vetoed.

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