BAGHDAD—A huge blast at a military base in Iraq early on Saturday killed a member of an Iraqi security force that includes Iran-backed groups. The force commander said it was an attack while the army said it was investigating and there were no warplanes in the sky at the time.
Two security sources earlier said that an airstrike caused the blast, which killed a member of Iraq’s Popular Mobilization Forces (PMF), or Hashed al-Shaabi, and wounded eight others at Kalso military base about 50 kilometers south of Baghdad.
In a statement, the PMF said its chief of staff Abdul Aziz al-Mohammedawi had visited the location and “reviewed the details of the investigative committees present in the place that was attacked.”
The Iraqi military said a technical committee was looking into the cause of an explosion and fire at the base, which it said happened at 1 a.m. on Saturday.
In a statement, the PMF said an “explosion” had inflicted “material losses” and casualties, without specifying the number of wounded.
The group confirmed that its premises on the military base had been hit and that investigators had been sent to the site.
Security sources would not identify who was responsible, or say whether it had been a drone strike.
Equipment, weapons hitAn Iraqi military official, who spoke on condition of anonymity due to the sensitivity of the subject, said the overnight explosion had occurred in “warehouses storing equipment.”
“The explosion hit equipment, weapons and vehicles,” said a source in the ministry of the interior.
There was no immediate claim of responsibility.
The military however said that the air defense command confirmed that there was no drone or fighter jet in the air over the base before and during the explosion.
The incident in Iraq’s Babil province occurred with tensions running even higher than usual across the Middle East, following what sources said was an Israeli attack in the Iranian city of Isfahan on Friday. Tehran has played it down and indicated it had no plans for retaliation.
Islamic Resistance
That incident came six days after Iran fired a barrage of missiles and drones at Israel in response to a presumed Israeli airstrike that destroyed part of Iran’s embassy in Damascus, killing seven Iranian Revolutionary Guards officers on April 1.
The PMF includes Iran-backed groups which, operating under the banner of the Islamic Resistance in Iraq, have attacked US troops in the region and targeted Israel since the eruption of the Gaza war, declaring support for the Palestinians.
Their attacks on US forces in Syria and Iraq stopped in early February after a drone strike killed three US soldiers in Jordan, prompting heavy US airstrikes in Iraq and Syria.
But they claimed responsibility for an attack on the Israeli city of Eilat on April 1.
The US military’s Central Command, in a post on X early on Saturday, denied what it said were reports that the United States had carried out airstrikes in Iraq. “The United States has not conducted airstrikes in Iraq today,” it said.
The PMF started out as a grouping of armed factions, many close to Iran, that was later recognized as a formal security force by Iraqi authorities.
When reached by AFP, the Israeli army said it “does not comment on information published in foreign media.” —reports from REUTERS, AFP
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