US servicemen killed in Iraq during mission against ISIS identified, were part of Marine Raider Battalion

Pongo, left, and Navas were killed Sunday while accompanying Iraqi Security Forces on a mission to eliminate an ISIS terrorist stronghold. (Department of Defense)

Two U.S. Marines killed by “enemy forces” in north-central Iraq on Sunday during a mission to eliminate an ISIS terrorist stronghold have been identified.

Gunnery Sgt. Diego D. Pongo, 34, of Simi Valley, Calif., and Capt. Moises A. Navas, 34, of Germantown, Md., were supporting Iraqi Security Forces in a mountainous area of Iraq as part of Operation Inherent Resolve, the Department of Defense said Tuesday.

Both Marines were assigned to the 2nd Marine Raider Battalion, Marine Forces Special Operations Command out of Camp Lejeune in N.C.

The U.S.-led coalition launched additional forces to recover the bodies from the southern Makhmur Mountains, about 37 miles (60km) south of Erbil, coalition spokesman Col. Myles Caggins said in a statement.

As the forces trekked across the mountainous terrain, they eliminated four hostile ISIS fighters who were barricaded in caves, Caggins said. The full recovery operation took about six hours.

The deaths of Pongo and Navas marked the first U.S. troops to be killed in Iraq this year. The last American to be killed in action in Iraq was a U.S. Marine in August 2019.

There have now been 19 American service members killed fighting ISIS since August 2014, when U.S. military involvement began.

Fox News’ Danielle Wallace, Lucas Tomlinson and Jennifer Griffin contributed to this report.

Read more at FOXNews.com.

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