ERBIL, Kurdistan Region - Erbil experienced renewed aerial threats overnight into Wednesday, as drones and missiles targeting the city were intercepted, according to security sources.
Residents reported aircraft circling over the city late Tuesday night and into the early hours of Wdnesday, raising concerns. However, officials stressed there was no immediate danger. A security source told Rudaw that anti-Islamic State (ISIS) coalition forces fighter jets were heavily deployed across Erbil and other parts of the Kurdistan Region to secure the airspace.
The source said, “More than four missiles and five drones were launched toward Erbil from Iran and the northern borders. The drones were intended to distract and overwhelm the C-RAM defense system; however, they were intercepted and destroyed in mid-air by US fighter jets before reaching their targets.”
Erbil Governor Omed Khoshnaw reassured the public, telling Rudaw, “There is no need for fear or anxiety. The sounds heard in the skies over Erbil are from Coalition aircraft patrolling and monitoring the city's airspace.”
According to the same security source, debris from intercepted missiles fell in multiple areas, with one missile fragment landing south of Soran administration and another inside the border of Erbil International Airport.
Military aircraft activity was reported across a wide area, from Haji Omran to Kirkuk. The source explained this was due to “unidentified objects being detected within the Coalition’s radar and network systems; therefore, the aircraft remain on high alert to repel any further attacks.”
In a separate incident early Wednesday, a drone crashed into a building in the Lebanese Village residential complex along the Erbil-Bahrka road, damaging vehicles and causing a power outage, but resulting in no casualties.
The developments come a day after a deadly strike on a Peshmerga base in Soran killed six fighters and wounded 30 others, according to the Ministry of Peshmerga.
Since the start of the US-Israeli military campaign against Iran, the Kurdistan Region has faced repeated drone and missile attacks. The Kurdistan Regional Government (KRG) has maintained neutrality, describing itself as a “factor of peace” and urging dialogue.
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