Tag: US officials

  • US drones reportedly scanning Gaza for hostages

    US drones reportedly scanning Gaza for hostages

    US officials have said that surveillance drones from the US are flying over Gaza to assist in finding hostages who were taken when Hamas and Israel started fighting on October 7th.

    According to two unnamed US officials, Reuters said that the drone flights have been happening for more than a week.

    Two people who work for the US government said that there were flights, and they told this to a news station called CBS, which is partnered with the BBC.

    Another report from the New York Times mentioned that the drones, called MQ-9 Reapers, are being used mostly in the southern part of Gaza, and they do not have any weapons.

    Some of the flights have been seen on a public website called Flightradar24

    The US military and other countries like the UK and Italy use MQ-9 Reaper drones in places like Iraq, Afghanistan, and Syria.

    Israel does not rely on other countries for drones and makes its own within the country.

  • A US convoy attack in Nigeria resulted in four deaths

    A US convoy attack in Nigeria resulted in four deaths

    As reported by local the police and US officials, an attack on a US convoy took place in Nigeria on Tuesday. Four individuals were killed, including two police officers and two members of the US embassy staff. Three other people were also taken hostage.

    The attack happened in the southeast Anambra state, according to the Anambra Police Command, who told CNN that the attackers “murdered two police operatives and two staff of the US consulate and set their bodies and their vehicles ablaze.”

    According to the White House and the neighbourhood police, none of the dead personnel were US nationals. John Kirby of the US National Security Council stated that “no US citizens were involved and no US citizens were injured.” “There have been some injuries, and possibly some deaths,”

    When the assailants saw security forces “they made away with two police operatives and a driver of the second vehicle in the convoy,” Ikenga Tochukwu, deputy superintendent of police, said. “No US citizen was in the convoy,” he added.

    Police said that joint security forces “have embarked on a rescue and recovery operation in the area.”

    A State Department spokesperson said Tuesday that “Mission Nigeria personnel are working with Nigerian security services to investigate.”

    They continued: “The security of our personnel is always paramount, and we take extensive precautions when organizing trips to the field,” they continued.

  • Kiev disputes responsibility for a purported Kremlin drone strike

    Kiev disputes responsibility for a purported Kremlin drone strike

    Ukraine vigorously denied Russia‘s unusual allegation that it attempted to kill Russian President Vladimir Putin by using a drone strike on the Kremlin late on Wednesday.

    The attack was stopped, according to the Kremlin, and the supposed drones were destroyed. The Kremlin, the official house of the Russian president and the most prominent emblem of power in Moscow, was visible in a video that surfaced on social media.

    The Kremlin said in a statement that it saw the purported attack as terrorism and a calculated attempt on Putin’s life. “Russia reserves the right to take retaliatory measures wherever and whenever it sees fit,” it continued.

    Ukraine denied involvement in the alleged strike. “As President Zelensky has stated numerous times before, Ukraine uses all means at its disposal to free its own territory, not to attack others,” the Ukrainian presidential spokesman, Sergiy Nykyforov, told CNN on Wednesday.

    US officials said they were still assessing the incident, and had no information about who might have been responsible. Whatever the truth, any admission of a security breach at the heart of the Kremlin is remarkable.

    Moscow said the alleged attack took place in the early hours of Wednesday. The Russian president was not in the building at the time, Kremlin spokesperson Dmitry Peskov said.

    CNN analysis of video showing the incident support the Kremlin’s claim that two drones were flown above the Kremlin early Wednesday, but did not show evidence of Ukrainian involvement:

    A video that appeared to show smoke rising from the Kremlin surfaced on a local neighborhood channel on social media platform Telegram at 2:37 a.m. local time Wednesday. The first reports of the incident citing the Kremlin came via Russian state media TASS and RIA around 2.33 pm local time – around 12 hours later.

    Shortly after the first media reports, another video appearing to show the moment a drone exploded above the Kremlin began circulating widely on social media. In the video, the drone appears to fly towards the building’s domed roof, followed by what looks like a small explosion.

    In this video, two people appear to be climbing on the dome holding flashlights, and can be seen ducking down just before the moment of the explosion. The people climbing the drone are not present in the first of these videos, but appear in the second, suggesting they were responding to the fire caused by the first drone at the time the subsequent drone appeared.

    The Kremlin Press Service has called the purported drone attack an “attempt on the President’s life,” said it was an “act of terrorism” and blamed Ukraine.

    But Kyiv said that accusation of terrorism was better directed at Russia. “A terror attack destroyed blocks of residential buildings in Dnipro and Uman, or a missile at a line at Kramatorsk rail station and many other tragedies,” said Nykyforov, the Ukrainian presidential spokesman.

    “What happened in Moscow is obviously about escalating the mood on the eve of May 9.” That day is known as “Victory Day” inside Russia, commemorating the Soviet Union’s role in defeating Nazi Germany in World War II.

    “It’s a trick to be expected from our opponents,” he said.

    Ukrainian presidential adviser Mykhailo Podolyak also denied Kyiv had any involvement and said it made no sense for Ukraine to have carried out the alleged strike.

    “First of all, it absolutely does not solve any military goals. And it is very unhelpful in the context of preparing for our offensive actions. And it definitely does not change anything at a battlefield,” he said. “This would allow Russia to justify mass strikes on Ukrainian cities, civilians and infrastructure facilities. Why would we need that? What’s the logic?”

    Podolyak also said Moscow’s claims were an attempt at controlling the narrative ahead of a much-anticipated Ukrainian counteroffensive.

    “Russia without a doubt is very afraid of Ukraine starting an offensive on the front line and is trying to seize the initiative, distract the attention and create distractions of a catastrophic nature,” he said. “So, Russian statements on such staged operations need to be taken as an attempt to create pretext for a large-scale terrorist attack in Ukraine.”

    A US official said Washington had no warning about the alleged drone attack. “Whatever happened, there was no advanced warning,” the official told CNN, adding that authorities are still trying to find out more.

    Another US official told CNN they are still working to assess Russia’s claims, and have not yet validated the Kremlin assertion that Ukraine tried to assassinate Putin.

    US Secretary of State Antony Blinken said he had seen reports from Moscow about the alleged attack, but “can’t in any way validate them.”

    “We simply don’t know,” Blinken said Wednesday at a Washington Post Live event.

    “We’ll see what the facts are. And it’s really hard to comment or speculate on this without really knowing what the facts are,” Blinken added.

    The founder and financier of the Wagner private military company, Yevgeny Prigozhin, declined to comment on the alleged attack when asked about the incident.

    “I can’t comment on this phenomenon in any way. Maybe it was lightning,” Prigozhin said in a post on his official telegram channel. Instead, the Wagner leader asked for more ammunition.

    In his response to the attack, Russian State Duma Speaker Vyacheslav Volodin called for the use of weapons capable of “stopping and destroying the Kyiv terrorist regime.”

    Kyiv is approximately 862 kilometers (about 535 miles) from Moscow. Russia has accused Ukraine of multiple attempted drone strikes deep inside Russian territory, including one earlier this year when the governor of the Moscow region claimed a Ukrainian drone had crashed near the village of Gubastovo, southeast of the capital.

  • Americans abducted in Mexico, two dead, two survives

    Americans abducted in Mexico, two dead, two survives

    Mexican and US officials, have indicated that two of the four Americans who were abducted in Mexico last week at gunpoint are dead, while the other two are still alive and have returned home.

    Four US citizens were kidnapped by armed men on 3 March while driving into the city of Matamoros in the north-eastern state of Tamaulipas, Mexico, across the border from Texas.

    They had travelled there for cosmetic surgery, relatives told US media.

    One man, named only as José “N”, 24, from Tamaulipas, has been arrested.

    White House National Security Council spokesman John Kirby said: “We offer our deepest condolences to the friends and families of those who were killed in these attacks.”

    The two surviving victims were delivered to the US on Tuesday in co-operation with the US consulate in Matamoros, Tamaulipas Attorney General Irving Barrios Mojica said in a tweet.

    They were brought back under armed escort by a heavily armed convoy.

    The FBI later confirmed that two Americans were found dead and that the other two have been brought to American hospitals for treatment.

    “One of the surviving victims sustained serious injuries during the attack,” the FBI said.

    The statement added that the agency will work with international partners and other law enforcement agencies to “hold those responsible for this horrific and violent attack accountable for their crimes”. 

    The bodies of Zindell Brown and Shaeed Woodard have been recovered and are being repatriated, US officials said.

    Mexican President Andrés Manuel López Obrador said: “We are very sorry that this happened in our country and we send our condolences to the families of the victims, friends, and the United States government, and we will continue doing our work to guarantee peace and tranquillity.”

    The injured Americans were named by family members as Latavia “Tay” McGee, a mother of six from South Carolina, and Eric James Williams.

    The four were driving through Matamoros – a city of 500,000 located directly across the border from the Texas town of Brownsville – in a white minivan with North Carolina licence plates when unidentified gunmen opened fire, the FBI said this week.

    Video shows them being loaded into a pickup truck by heavily armed men. One is manhandled on to the vehicle while others appear to be unconscious and are dragged to the truck.

    A Mexican woman, believed to be a 33-year-old bystander more than one block away, was killed in last Friday’s incident.

    At a news conference later on Tuesday, Mexican officials confirmed a 24-year-old man had been arrested and that the four Americans were discovered at a wooden shack outside Matamoros.

    The victims had been transferred to various locations between the kidnapping on Friday and their discovery on Tuesday “to create confusion”, officials say.

    Map of the key locations in Matamoros, Mexico

    Investigators think the Gulf Cartel, one of the oldest organised crime groups in Mexico, is responsible for the attack, a US law enforcement source told CBS.

    It is still unclear whether the Americans were ambushed, mistaken for competing drug traffickers, or were caught in cross-fire between warring factions.

    US state department officials said on Tuesday that the investigation was still in the early stages.

    Ms McGee was said to be travelling to the Mexican border town to have a tummy tuck, a cosmetic surgery procedure to remove abdominal fat.

    Her mother Barbara Burgess told ABC News that she had asked her daughter not to go, but her daughter had reassured her she would be safe.

    The FBI offered a $50,000 (£42,000) reward for the return of the Americans.

    Matamoros is in Tamaulipas state, one of six Mexican states that the US state department advises travellers not to visit because of “crime and kidnapping”.

    Medical tourism is common, particularly among people living in US border states.

    But Matamoros is one of the most dangerous cities in the country, as drug cartels control large swathes of the state of Tamaulipas and can hold more power than local law enforcement.   

    State police officers keep watch at the scene where authorities found the bodies of two of four Americans kidnapped by gunmen, in Matamoros, Mexico, March 7, 202
    Image caption,State police kept watch at the scene where the bodies of two Americans were found

    Source: BBC