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Rockets again fired at Iraq military base

As Iranian protests against the Ayatollah and their president spread, the Islamic regime may be trying to divert attention with more rockets fired in Iraq.

On Sunday rocket rained down on the Balad airbase in northern Iraq, that houses U.S. personnel, injured several people though no U.S. service members were injured.

U.S. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo announced the attacks, calling it continued aggression by Iranian proxies operating in Iraq.

READ: Iranians pour into streets to condemn their government

“Outraged by reports of another rocket attack on an Iraqi airbase. I pray for speedy recovery of the injured and call on the Government of Iraq to hold those responsible for this attack on the Iraqi people accountable,” wrote Pompeo on Twitter. “These continued violations of Iraq’s sovereignty by groups not loyal to the Iraqi government must end.”

The Iraqi military said that Katyusha rockets were fired at the base, located 50 miles north of Baghdad, in a statement, Reuters reported. Four people, including two officers, were injured. It didn’t appear any U.S. soldiers or citizens were injured in the attack.

The Iraqi military didn’t reveal who was behind the attack, and made no mention of the tensions between Iran and the United States, Reuters reported. Last week, Iran fired more than a dozen missiles at two Iraqi military bases that house American troops, saying it was in retaliation to a U.S. airstrike that killed Iranian commander Qassem Soliemani.

The Pentagon stated, after it carried out the fatal airstrike, that it targeted the general, who was in charge of the Iranian Revolutionary Guards Quds Force because he was “actively developing plans to attack American diplomats and service members in Iraq and throughout the region.” The strike intended to reduce the chances of an armed conflict with Iran President Donald Trump, and Defense Secretary Mark Esper said.

On Sunday, Esper and national security adviser, Robert O’Brien, said on nationally televised TV that Iran may have struck more than just the U.S. Embassy in Iraq.

“What the president said was, he believed that it probably and could’ve been attacks against additional embassies,” Esper told CBS News’ “Face the Nation.” “I shared that view, I know other members of the national security team shared that view, that’s why I deployed thousands of American paratroopers to the Middle East to reinforce our embassy in Baghdad and other sites throughout the region.”

Speaking to “Meet the Press,” O’Brien echoed Esper’s remarks and said the Pentagon received significant intelligence reports that Tehran was aiming to attack American facilities in the Middle East.

“The president’s interpretation of that intelligence is very consistent with it,” he said. “So I think this has been a Washington thing—when we tell the American people there was exquisite intelligence and there was going to be an attack on Americans, we had to stop that.”

–wire services

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