
US armed forces deployed in the two countries have been attacked more than 55 times since mid-October, according to the Pentagon, coinciding with US ally Israel’s war on Hamas fighters in Gaza.
In a statement released late yesterday on Telegram, Kataeb Hezbollah spokesman Abu Ali al-Askari said attacks by “the Islamic resistance in Iraq” were part of a “strategy of attrition”, dismissing sanctions as ineffectual.
“The inclusion of certain brothers in the so-called ‘American sanctions list’ is ridiculous,” Askari argued, saying “Such actions will not dissuade our courageous fighters”.
The US treasury said on Friday that it had sanctioned six individuals affiliated with Kataeb Hezbollah as well as the leader of another pro-Iranian group in Iraq which Washington said was also involved in attacks against US troops.
In its statement, the treasury said Kataeb Hezbollah was trained, funded, and supported by Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps and “is behind a spate of recent attacks against the US and partners in Iraq and Syria following the horrific attacks by Hamas against Israel”.
Attacks on southern Israel launched on Oct 7 by the Palestinian group killed 1,200 people, mostly civilians, according to Israeli officials.
A relentless air, land, and naval assault Israel launched in response has killed upwards of 12,000 people in the Gaza Strip, according to Hamas.
Attacks on US forces in the region since the start of the Israel-Hamas war have caused minor injuries to dozens of troops, according to the Pentagon.
Most were rocket or drone attacks claimed by a group called “the Islamic resistance in Iraq”.
“The calculated strikes of the Islamic resistance in Iraq…are part of a strategy of attrition of the enemy, deciding the level of escalation of operations, trajectory, and timing,” said the Kataeb Hezbollah spokesman.
The group was designated a “terrorist organisation” by the US state department in 2009.
The US has about 2,500 soldiers in Iraq and another 900 in Syria, deployed as part of efforts to prevent a resurgence of the Islamic State group.