(Reuters) - U.S. planes pounded Islamic State positions in Syria
for a second day on Wednesday, but the strikes did not halt the
fighters' advance in a Kurdish area where fleeing refugees told of
villages burnt and captives beheaded. U.S. President Barack Obama,
speaking at the United Nations, asked the world to join together to
fight the militants and vowed to keep up military pressure against them. "The
only language understood by killers like this is the language of force,
so the United States of America will work with a broad coalition to
dismantle this network of death," Obama said in 40-minute speech to the
U.N. General Assembly. British
Prime Minister David Cameron recalled Parliament to vote on Friday on
whether to join the air strikes. He said in an address at the U.N. that a
comprehensive strategy was needed to combat Islamic State. "Our
strategy must work in tandem with Arab states, always in support of
local people, in line with our legal obligations and as part of a plan
that involves our aid, our diplomacy and, yes, our military," Cameron
said at the U.N. "We need to act and we need to act now," he said. Syrian Kurds said Islamic State had responded to U.S. attacks by intensifying its assault near the Turkish border in northern Syria, where 140,000 civilians have fled in recent days in the fastest exodus of the three-year civil war. Washington
and its Arab allies killed scores of Islamic State fighters in the
opening 24 hours of air strikes, the first direct U.S. foray into Syria
two weeks after Obama pledged to hit the group on both sides of the
Iraq-Syria border. However,
the intensifying advance on the northern town of Kobani showed the
difficulty Washington faces in defeating Islamist fighters in Syria,
where it lacks strong military allies on the ground. "Those air strikes are not important. We need soldiers on the ground," said Hamed, a refugee who fled into Turkey from the Islamic State advance. Mazlum
Bergaden, a teacher from Kobani who crossed the border on Wednesday
with his family, said two of his brothers had been taken captive by
Islamic State fighters. "The
situation is very bad. After they kill people, they are burning the
villages.... When they capture any village, they behead one person to
make everyone else afraid," he said. "They are trying to eradicate our
culture, purge our nation." Fighting
between Islamic State militants and Kurds could be seen from across the
border in Turkey, where the sounds of sporadic artillery and gunfire
echoed around the hills. FRENCH HOSTAGE KILLED Islamist
militants in Algeria boasted in a video they had beheaded a French
hostage captured on Sunday to punish Paris for joining air strikes
against Islamic State in Iraq. French President Francois Hollande confirmed the execution. "My
determination is total and this aggression only strengthens it,"
Hollande said. "The military air strikes will continue as long as
necessary." The United
States said it was still assessing whether Mohsin al-Fadhli, a senior
figure in the al Qaeda-linked group Khorasan, had been killed in a U.S.
strike in Syria. A U.S.
official earlier said Fadhli, an associate of al Qaeda founder Osama bin
Laden, was thought to have been killed in the first day of strikes on
Syria. The Pentagon said any confirmation could take time. Washington
describes Khorasan as a separate group from Islamic State, made up of
al Qaeda veterans planning attacks on the West from a base in Syria. As
Obama tried in meetings in New York to widen his coalition, Belgium
said it was likely to contribute warplanes in the coming days, and the
Netherlands said it would deploy six F-16s to support U.S.-led strikes. The
initial days of U.S. strikes suggest one aim is to hamper Islamic
State's ability to operate across the Iraqi-Syrian frontier. On
Wednesday U.S.-led forces hit at least 13 targets in and around Albu
Kamal, one of the main border crossings between Iraq
and Syria, after striking 22 targets there on Tuesday, said the Syrian
Observatory for Human Rights, a body which monitors the conflict in
Syria. The U.S. military
confirmed it had struck inside Syria northwest of al Qaim, the Iraqi
town at the Albu Kamal border crossing. It also struck inside Iraq west
of Baghdad and near the Iraqi Kurdish capital Arbil on Wednesday. An
Islamist fighter in the Albu Kamal area reached by phone said there had
been at least nine strikes on Wednesday by "crusader forces". Targets
included an industrial area. U.S.
officials said air strikes under way in Syria late on Wednesday
targeted oil infrastructure controlled by Islamic State, a move that
appeared aimed at the militants' cash flow. Perched
on the main Euphrates valley highway, Albu Kamal controls the route
from Islamic State's de facto capital Raqqa in Syria to the front lines
in western Iraq and down the Euphrates to the western and southern
outskirts of Baghdad. Islamic
State's ability to move fighters and weapons between Syria and Iraq has
provided an important tactical advantage for the group in both
countries: fighters sweeping in from Syria helped capture much of
northern Iraq in June, and weapons they seized and sent back to Syria
helped them in battle there. France,
which has confined its air strikes to Iraq, said it would stay the
course despite the killing of hostage Herve Gourdel, 55, a mountain
guide captured on vacation in Algeria on Sunday by a group claiming
loyalty to Islamic State. In
a video released by the Caliphate Soldiers group entitled "a message of
blood to the French government", gunmen paraded Gourdel's severed head
after making him kneel, pushing him on his side and holding him down. DAMASCUS: CAMPAIGN GOES "IN RIGHT DIRECTION" The
campaign has blurred the traditional lines of Middle East alliances,
pitting a U.S. coalition comprising countries opposed to Syrian
President Bashar al-Assad against fighters that form the most powerful
opposition to Assad on the ground. The
attacks have so far encountered no objection, and even signs of
approval, from Assad's Syrian government. Syrian state TV led its news
broadcast with Wednesday's air strikes on the border with Iraq, saying
"the USA and its partners" had launched raids against "the terrorist
organisation Islamic State." U.S. officials say they informed both Assad and his main ally Iran in advance of their intention to strike but did not coordinate with them. Jordan, Bahrain, the United Arab Emirates, Qatar and Saudi Arabia
have joined in the strikes. All are ruled by Sunni Muslims and are
staunch opponents of Assad, a member of a Shi'ite-derived sect, and his
main regional ally, Shi'ite Iran. But
some of Assad's opponents fear the Syrian leader could exploit the U.S.
military campaign to rehabilitate himself in the eyes of Western
countries, and that strikes against Islamic State could solidify his
grip on power. ISLAMIC STATE ADVANCES ON KURDS Even
as Islamic State outposts elsewhere have been struck, the fighters have
accelerated their campaign to capture Kobani, a Kurdish city on the
border with Turkey. Nearly 140,000 Syrian Kurds have fled into Turkey
since last week, the fastest exodus of the entire three-year civil war. An
Islamic State source, speaking to Reuters via online messaging, said
the group had taken several villages to the west of Kobani. Footage
posted on YouTube appeared to show Islamic State fighters using weapons
including artillery as they battled Kurdish forces near Kobani. The
Islamists were shown raising the group's black flag after tearing down a
Kurdish one. A Turkish
official, speaking on condition of anonymity, said the advance had been
rapid three days ago but was slowed by the U.S.-led air strikes. But
Ocalan Iso, deputy leader of Kurdish forces defending Kobani, said more
militants and tanks had arrived in the area since the coalition began
air strikes on the group. "Kobani is in danger," he said. More
than 190,000 people have died in the Syrian conflict and millions have
fled their homes. Gun battles, bombings, shelling and air strikes
regularly kill over 150 people a day.
Islamist fighters advance in Syria despite U.S. strikes
Reuters
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