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After drone attack, several French soldiers are wounded and one officer is killed in Iraq

French President Emmanuel Macron condemned on Friday an attack that left one French officer dead and?wounded a number of soldiers in?Erbil.

The French army announced on Thursday that six French soldiers who were 'providing counter-terrorism training' in the area had been injured in a drone strike, only hours after another Italian base in the same region was targeted.

France has hundreds in Erbil as part of an international coalition fighting?Islamic State militants.

In a tweet, Macron stated that Chief Warrant Officer 'Arnaud?Frion "died" for France and that several of our soldiers were injured in the attack.

He said: "This attack on?our forces that have been fighting Daesh since 2015, is unacceptable."

The presence of French soldiers in Iraq falls'strictly under the umbrella of the fight against terror. The war in Iran does not 'justify' such attacks.

The drone's origin was not immediately apparent.

According to two Iraqi sources who are close to the group and three Iraqi sources, the Shi'ite militants of Iraq have increased the number of missile and drone attacks against U.S. interests within Iraq over the past three to four days.

In a press release, Erbil Governor Omed Koshnaw stated that the drone strike was carried out in the Makhmour region.

The Italian Defence Ministry said that the overnight airstrike on an Italian military base was deliberate. It targeted a facility hosting NATO personnel.

France has deployed about a dozen navy vessels, including an aircraft carrier strike group to the Mediterranean Sea, Red Sea, and possibly the Strait of Hormuz, as part of its defensive support for ally countries threatened by the Middle East conflict.

Leaders of Iran, Israel, and the United States have all voiced their defiance, and pledged to continue fighting as the Middle East war approaches the two-week mark this Friday. The conflict has killed thousands, disrupted the lives of millions, and shaken financial markets. (Reporting and editing by John Irish and Ahmed Rasheed; Mrinmay dey and Michael Perry).

(source: Reuters)