Two U.S. Army soldiers and a civilian interpreter were killed and three others were injured in an ambush by a gunman from the ISIS terrorist group in Syria on Dec. 13, according to the Pentagon and U.S. Central Command.
“Today in Palmyra, Syria, two United States Army soldiers and one civilian U.S. interpreter were killed, and three were wounded,” Parnell said, noting that the incident is under active investigation.
The names of the fallen U.S. soldiers and identifying information about their units are being withheld pending notification of their next of kin. Officials said the information will be released no sooner than 24 hours after families have been notified, in line with Department of War policy.
President Donald Trump expressed condolences for the three killed service members, noting that another three who were wounded appear to be doing “pretty well.”
“We mourn the loss,” Trump told reporters as he was departing the White House on Dec. 13. “These are three great people, and it’s just a terrible thing.”
Trump said Syrian forces were fighting alongside U.S. forces when the incident occurred and that interim Syrian President Ahmed al-Sharaa was “devastated” by word of the attack.
“This was an ISIS attack on us and Syria,” Trump said. “We will retaliate.”
Secretary of War Pete Hegseth warned that any attack on U.S. forces would be met with severe consequences.
Syrian state-owned Syrian Arab News Agency, citing a security source, reported that two Syrian service members were also wounded in the attack, without giving further details.
The Syrian Arab News Agency reported that U.S. helicopters evacuated the wounded to a U.S. base in Syria’s Al-Tanf region near the border with Iraq.
Earlier, two local Syrian officials told Reuters that a convoy of Syrian military forces and U.S.-led coalition troops came under fire.
The United States maintains troops in northeastern Syria as part of an international coalition seeking to prevent a resurgence of the ISIS terrorist group, which lost its territorial control in Syria in 2019 but continues to carry out sporadic attacks.
That meeting came six months after Trump and al-Sharaa met in Saudi Arabia and days after the United States lifted terrorism-related sanctions on the Syrian leader.
Although the footprint of ISIS in the Middle East has diminished, the group has expanded its reach globally and remained the world’s deadliest terrorist organization through the end of 2024, per ICCT. Following the 2019 collapse of its self-declared caliphate in Syria and Iraq and the loss of tens of thousands of fighters, the group has restructured itself both organizationally and operationally.
“In 2025, [ISIS] relies primarily on a dynamic network of regional affiliates who operate with a greater autonomy of action than ever before, with Afghanistan-based IS-Khorasan being the most prominent branch linked to numerous high-profile attacks,” ICCT associate fellow Adrian Shtuni wrote in a July note.
Lakanwal had worked with the CIA during the war in Afghanistan. Authorities charged him with first-degree murder and two counts of assault with intent to kill, among other charges.







