Syria yesterday summoned the US charge d'affaires to Damascus and protested
against a US helicopters attack on its civilians earlier in the day.
Eight Syrian civilians were killed in a US helicopters attack in a Syrian
farm near its border with Iraq on Sunday afternoon, according to the official
SANA news agency.
"Syria condemns and denounces this act of aggression and holds the US forces
responsible for this aggression and its repercussions," an official was quoted
as saying.
Syrian deputy foreign minister summoned the charge d'affaires of the US
embassy in Damascus, informing him of Syria's condemnation and complaint of this
dangerous aggression, holding the US administration fully responsible for it,
said the report.
Meanwhile, Syria summoned the Iraqi charge d'affaires for the same purpose,
demanding Iraq to prevent the use of its territory to attack Syria.
"Syria also demands the Iraqi government to assume its responsibilities and
make an immediate investigation into this dangerous violation and prevent the
use of the Iraqi lands from launching aggression on Syria," SANA said.
"Four US military helicopters violated the Syrian airspaces at 4:45 pm (1345
GMT) in al-Boukamal, 8 km deep at the al-Sukariah farm," an official media
source was quoted as saying. Al-Boukamal is a main border crossing from Syria to
Iraq.
"The four helicopters launched aggression on a civilian building under
construction and opened fire against the workers inside the building, among them
the wife of the building's guard," said the source.
The attack killed eight citizens and wounding one and the US helicopters then
left for the Iraqi lands, added the source.
SANA identified the eight killed citizens as Daoud Mohammad al-Abdullah and
his four sons, Ahmad Khalefa, Ali Abbas and his wife.
An earlier report by the independent Damaspost website put the death toll at
seven with four injured.
Damaspost also said four US helicopters were involved in the attack, adding
that two of the helicopters landed in the town while the others remained in the
sky.
Eight US soldiers disembarked and opened fire against a group of construction
workers, killing seven and injured four, said Damaspost.
Damaspost quoted hospital sources as saying that seven bodies and four
wounded persons were sent to the hospital and they all suffered gunshot wounds.
Syria has been blacklisted by Washington as a sponsor of terrorism and under
continuous US isolation.
Syria's icy relations with Washington, starting in 2003 when Damascus
strongly objected the US war on Iraq, became more tense following the
assassination of former Lebanese premier Rafik Hariri in Feb. 2005, after which
Washington withdrew its ambassador to Syria Margaret Scobey and never sent her
back.
The US has been accusing Syria of not doing enough to stop anti-US militants
and weapons from entering Iraq and destabilizing situations there.
Last month, US President George W. Bush slammed Syria and Iran for allegedly
continuing to sponsor terror in a speech to the UN General Assembly's annual
general debate.
"A few nations -- regimes like Syria and Iran -- continue to sponsor terror,
yet their numbers are growing fewer and they're growing more isolated from the
world," Bush said.