Images purporting to show the result of the strike circulated on social media. In one photo, the remains of a mangled, burning vehicle can be seen on a dirt road.
Thursday’s strike was the latest in a string of US killings of suspected al-Qaeda officials in Syria’s opposition-held northwest, a region in which Turkish forces are present.
Turkey has agreed with Russia to remove extremist groups from the area as part of a cease-fire that halted the Syrian government’s Russia-backed offensive against the opposition-held province earlier this year.
But Turkey has not cracked down on Huras al-Din’s rival, Hayat Tahrir al-Sham, leading to speculation that Hayat Tahrir al-Sham may have been providing Turkish intelligence information about Huras al-Din figures.
Both Hayat Tahrir al-Sham and Huras al-Din both have roots in al-Qaeda’s branch in Syria, the defunct Jabhat al-Nusra.
The United States has repeatedly killed suspected al-Qaeda affiliates in Idlib using a non-explosive Hellfire missile dubbed the R9-X “Ninja,” named for the six blades that deploy from the missile as it strikes a target.
The weapon is designed to assassinate targets while minimizing harm to bystanders.