The troops are there to train Iraqi forces tackling an Islamic State insurgency.
BBC security correspondent Frank Gardner earlier said he did not think anyone in the UK was given an indication the air strike
was going to take place, adding: "My sense is this has caught the British government largely by surprise."
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The killing of Gen Soleimani marks a major escalation in tensions between Washington and Tehran.
Iran's Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei said "severe revenge awaits the criminals" behind the attack, but a statement
from the Pentagon said Gen Soleimani "was actively developing plans to attack American diplomats and service members in
Iraq and throughout the region".
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'Closer to the brink'
Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn said earlier that the "US assassination" was an "extremely serious and dangerous escalation".
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Mr Corbyn said the UK "should urge restraint" from both Iran and the US - and called for the government to "stand up to the
belligerent actions and rhetoric coming from the United States".
He added: "All countries in the region and beyond should seek to ratchet down the tensions to avoid deepening conflict, which
can only bring further misery to the region, 17 years on from the disastrous invasion of Iraq."
The acting leader of the Liberal Democrats, Sir Ed Davey, said Iran was governed by "a brutal regime", but accused President
Trump of "yet again radically and recklessly escalated tensions in an area where peace-keeping was already on a knife
edge".
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