IS rocket attack kills three Turkish soldiers in Syria

IS rocket attack kills three Turkish soldiers in Syria
Three Turkish soldiers were killed and five wounded on Tuesday in a rocket attack by the Islamic State group, the first IS-caused Turkish fatalities since Ankara's cross-border incursion into Syria.
3 min read
06 September, 2016
Turkish military tanks along the Turkey-Syria border in Gaziantep [Anadolu]
Three Turkish soldiers were killed and five wounded on Tuesday in a rocket attack by Islamic State [IS] group militants in northern Syria, in the first deadly attack on Ankara's armed forces to be blamed on the extremists in Turkey's cross-border incursion.

Turkey launched an unprecedented operation inside Syria on August 24. Dubbed Euphrates Shield, it backs pro-Ankara opposition fighters with the goal of rooting out IS militants and Kurdish militia from the border area.

A senior Turkish official confirmed two soldiers were killed and five injured in an attack by IS in northern Syria.

One of the wounded soldiers later died in hospital despite all attempts to save his life, lifting the death toll to three, an army statement quoted by NTV television said.

The fatalities are the first of the Turkish operation inside Syria to be blamed on IS. Turkey had blamed the death of one soldier on August 28 in a similar attack on Kurdish militia.

The army said in a statement carried by the private NTV television that the deaths were caused by a rocket attack on two Turkish tanks.

"Two of our hero comrades were martyred and five were wounded in a rocket attack on two of our tanks by Daesh elements," it said, using the Arabic acronym for the IS group.

The army said the attack took place south of Al-Rai, where Turkish tanks opened a second front in their Syria operation at the weekend.

The area is west of Jarabulus near the Turkish border which was retaken by pro-Ankara rebels at the start of the operation from jihadists.

Turkish television showed pictures of military helicopters flying across the border to take the wounded for treatment in Turkey.

Separately, two pro-Ankara Syrian fighters were killed and two others wounded in clashes in the same region, the army statement added.

Turkey has so far hailed its operation as a success and IS fighters were at the weekend expelled from their last positions along the Turkish-Syrian border, depriving the group of a key transit point for recruits and supplies.

Turkey wants to establish a safe zone in the 98-kilometre (61-mile) area stretching from Jarabulus to Azaz to the west. The government says this has been completely secured in the weekend's operation.

The army also said on Tuesday "44 targets were struck 153 times with precision by Firtina howitzers in a region identified as belonging to terrorists," adding that coalition warplanes also launched air raids on IS positions.

Syrian rebels, backed by coalition forces, retook two villages near Al-Rai, it added. "The operation is continuing in the region."