Eleven American soldiers were wounded in the attack on Iran: US confession


Washington, Ta. January 17, 2020, Friday

The American Central Command has admitted that 11 US troops were injured in last week's attack on Iran at the American base in Iraq. American troops earlier denied any damage immediately after the attack.

On the other side, Iran's top leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, participated in Friday prayers in Tehran for the first time since 2012, calling the attack on Iran a black spot on America's image as a superpower.

Iran attacks US base in retaliation for drone strikes by Iran's top general commander Qasim Sulaimani at Iraq's Baghdad airport. However, immediately after the attack, the United States denied any major damage to the attack.

It's been about a week now and the clouds of war between the United States and Iran are wiping out, with American Central Command spokesman Captain Bill Urban saying no American soldier was killed in Iran's January 8 raid on al-Assad air base in Iraq. , But some have been injured and the damage from the attack is still being evaluated.

More than 1,500 US troops were packed into bunkers at the airbase following advanced warning over Iran's attack following the assassination of Qasim Sulaimani. The raid damaged goods, but no casualties were reported, the US military said in a previous report.

The next morning after the attack, US President Trump also said no American soldier was harmed in the Iran attack. Urban said eight Americans injured in the attack have been shifted to Camp Arifjan, Germany's Landsatul and three to Kuwait for further treatment.

Iran and Iraq have now decided to file a case against the US President Donald Trump and the US military in an international court seeking revenge for the death of Iran's top commander, General Qasim Sulaimani.

A spokesman for the Iranian judiciary said that a case will be filed in Iran before the US terrorist act of killing Iran and Iraqi Sulaimani. We will then make a case in Iraq and international court.

Meanwhile, Iran's top leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei publicly participated in Friday prayers for the first time since 2012 in Tehran.

He described Iran's January 8 attack as a black stain on the image of the superpower America. He said the United States had mercilessly killed Iran's top commander, General Suleimani, in fighting IS. He also warned the United States of suffering serious consequences after the death of Solomon.

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