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News ID: 69445
Publish Date : 18 August 2019 - 21:53

U.S. Military Forced to Comply With Orders to Halt Flights Over Iraq

BAGHDAD (Dispatches) – The U.S. military has been forced to comply with Iraqi demands to halt flying planes, helicopters and drones over the country after its prime minister warned that violating aircraft would be targeted by Iraq’s air defense systems.
Senior U.S. military commanders in Iraq met the nation’s defense minister this week to discuss a recent demand from Iraqi Prime Minister Adel Abdul-Mahdi to cease all military flights over the country’s airspace following an unexplained explosion at Camp al-Saqr just outside the capital of Baghdad, Military.com reported.
"The U.S.-led coalition immediately complied with all directions received from our Iraqi partners as they implemented the Prime Minister's order," said a statement issued by American military’s Combined Joint Task Force-Operation Inherent Resolve that continues to operate in Iraq with the purported objective of conducting aerial strikes against already defeated Daesh terrorists in the war-torn country.
The decision by US military officials to abide by Abdul-Mahdi’s directive -- as "guests within Iraq's sovereign borders" -- came after he reportedly urged "Iraqi and non-Iraqi parties” to comply with the demand or risk being considered "an enemy flight.”
According to the report, the Iraqi premier further cautioned that unauthorized flight activity would be "dealt with from our air defenses immediately."
However, U.S. commanders did not indicate for how long they had agreed to keep American aircraft out of the Iraqi skies.
This is while the investigation surrounding the blast at Camp Al-Saqr remains ongoing but expected to be completed within a week. It comes amid press reports that the Zoionist regime is the main suspect for launching an air strike against the base, which hosted a weapons depot for Iraq’s Popular Mobilization Forces (PMF) – credited with playing a key role in defeating the Daesh terrorists across the country.
Moreover, a PMF commander identified as Abu Alaa al-Walae described Abdul-Mahdi’s "decision to ban American drones in Iraqi airspace” as brave in a Twitter message cited in an AP report.
The report further cited an unnamed PMF official as saying that there is evidence of a drone attack causing the recent blast.
The Zionist troops have also been blamed for striking compounds of Syrian military forces battling foreign-backed terrorists still occupying parts of the terror-ravaged nation.
The recent explosion shook the Iraqi capital and sent explosives and mortar shells shooting into the sky, damaging nearby homes and terrifying residents who ran into the streets with their cellphones, added the AP report.