Iran struck eastern Syria on Friday, Iranian state media ​and a Syrian military source said, in the first ‌known attack by Tehran on Syrian territory since a regional war erupted earlier this year.

Iran’s Revolutionary Guards said they had attacked a U.S. special operations ​command centre at al-Tanf in Syria in retaliation for the ​killing of Iranian soldiers in Iranshahr, state media reported.

Reuters ⁠could not independently verify the claim. A Syrian military source told Reuters ​that Iran had carried out an attack near Tanf but that ​it had not hit the base itself. The source said there were no casualties or material damage.

The U.S. military said in February it had completed a withdrawal from ​the al-Tanf base positioned at the tri-border confluence of Syria, Jordan ​and Iraq.

Syria has sought to avoid being drawn into the regional conflict that has ‌engulfed ⁠neighbouring countries, including Lebanon, where Hezbollah has fought Israeli forces, and Iraq, where Iran-backed armed groups have launched drone and rocket attacks.

Syrian President Ahmed al-Sharaa said in March that his country would stay out ​of any conflict ​unless it ⁠came under attack.

“Unless Syria is targeted by any party, Syria will remain outside any conflict,” Sharaa said ​at an event hosted by the Chatham House ​think tank ⁠in London.

The Guards also said Iran retained full control of the Strait of Hormuz and that no oil or gas would be exported ⁠through ​the waterway for as long as ​U.S. attacks continued, according to the state media report.

Source:  Reuters