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US probes 'friendly fire' strike on Syria allies

The U.S.-led coalition fighting ISIS in Syria may have accidentally hit allied rebels during an air strike at the end of last month, a U.S. military spokesman said Saturday.

Coalition forces carried out three airstrikes against tactical ISIS units and vehicles near Maara on May 28, Centcom spokesman Colonel Patrick Ryder said in a statement.

"The coalition was subsequently informed that one of the airstrikes may have hit counter-ISIL (ISIS) forces and their vehicle, instead of ISIL forces. Initial reports were that four counter-ISIL personnel may have been killed in the strike," he said, adding that an investigation was under way.

"We will continue our support of counter-ISIL forces and will apply any lessons learned derived from the investigation to improve our operation in the future," Ryder said, confirming a Wall Street Journal report.

According to Centcom, the coalition had conducted three bombings that day in that area of the province of Aleppo, along the Turkish border, where heavy fighting took between rebels and extremists has raged in recent weeks.

The spot hit is located in the city of Manbij further east, in the last stretch of territory along the border with Turkey still under extremist control.

According to the Journal, the rebels hit by the bombing belonged to the Mutasim brigade, which claims to have lost 10 fighters in the strike.

The newspaper said the brigade is one of the groups that received weapons and equipment from the Pentagon as part of the U.S. training program for Syrian rebels.

The $500 million program launched in early 2015 was suspended a few months later when the rebels failed to progress. It was relaunched this year in a simpler form.

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