(Reuters) - New
U.S.-led air strikes against Islamic State fighters failed to stop them
from pressing their assault on a strategic Syrian town near the Turkish
border on Saturday, hitting it with shell fire for the first time. The U.S. Central
Command said the air strikes destroyed an IS building and two armed
vehicles near the border town of Kobani, which the insurgents have been
besieging for the past 10 days. It
said an airfield, garrison and training camp near the IS stronghold of
Raqqa were also among the targets damaged in seven air strikes conducted
by the United States, Saudi Arabia, Jordan and the United Arab
Emirates, using fighter planes and remotely piloted aircraft. Three air strikes in Iraq destroyed four IS armed vehicles and a "fighting position" southwest of Arbil, Centcom said. The United States has been carrying out strikes in Iraq since Aug. 8 and in Syria,
with the help of Arab allies, since Tuesday, in a campaign it says is
aimed at "degrading and destroying" the Islamist militants who have
captured swathes of both countries. A
day after the UK parliament voted to allow British warplanes to attack
IS in Iraq, two British fighter jets flew a mission over the country,
the Ministry of Defence said, adding they had gathered intelligence but
did not carry out air strikes. IS,
which swept across northern Iraq in June, has proclaimed an Islamic
"caliphate", beheaded Western hostages and ordered Shi'ites and
non-Muslims to convert or die. Its rise has prompted President Barack
Obama to order U.S. forces back into Iraq, which they left in 2011, and
to go into action over Syria for the first time. The
Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, a monitoring group that supports
opposition forces fighting Syrian President Bashar al-Assad, said
Saturday's air strikes set off more than 30 explosions in Raqqa. Rami
Abdulrahman, who runs the British-based Observatory, said 23 Islamic
State fighters were killed. He said the heaviest casualties were
inflicted in attacks on an airport. But
the monitoring group said IS was still able to shell eastern parts of
Kobani, wounding several people, in a sign that its fighters were
drawing closer. The insurgents' offensive against the Kurdish town, also
known as Ayn al-Arab, has prompted around 150,000 refugees to pour
across the border into Turkey since last week. ERDOGAN SHIFT Turkish
President Tayyip Erdogan signaled a shift in Ankara's position by
saying for the first time that Turkish troops could be used to help set
up a secure zone in Syria, if there was international agreement to
establish one as a haven for those fleeing the fighting. Turkey
has so far declined to take a frontline role in the U.S.-led coalition
against IS, but Erdogan told the Hurriyet newspaper: "The logic that
assumes Turkey would not take a position militarily is wrong." He
said negotiations were under way to determine how and by which
countries the air strikes and a potential ground operation would be
undertaken, and that Turkey was ready to take part. "You
can't finish off such a terrorist organization only with air strikes.
Ground forces are complementary ... You have to look at it as a whole.
Obviously I'm not a soldier but the air (operations) are logistical. If
there's no ground force, it would not be permanent," he said. Turkish
officials near the Syrian border said IS fighters battling Kurdish
forces for Kobani sent four mortar shells into Turkish territory,
wounding two people. One
of the shells hit a minibus near Tavsanli, a Turkish village within
sight of Kobani. A large hole was visible in the rear of the vehicle. "Two
people were injured in the face when the minibus was hit. If they'd
been 3 meters (10 feet) closer to the car, many people would have died,"
said Abuzer Kelepce, a provincial official from the pro-Kurdish party
HDP. Heavy weapons fire was audible, and authorities blocked off the road towards the border. "The
situation has intensified since the morning. We are not letting anyone
through right now because it is not secure at all. There is constant
fighting, you can hear it," the official said. Kobani
sits on a road linking north and northwestern Syria. IS militants were
repulsed by local forces, backed by Kurdish fighters from Turkey, when
they tried to take it in July, and that failure has so far prevented
them from consolidating their gains in the region. COALITION WIDENS Syria's
government, which in the past accused its opponents of being Western
agents trying to topple Assad, has not objected to the U.S.-led air
strikes, saying it was informed by Washington before they began. It
too has carried out air strikes across the country, including in the
east, and its ground forces have recaptured the town of Adra, northeast
of Damascus, tightening Assad's grip on territory around the capital. But
Russia has questioned the legality of U.S. and Arab state air strikes
in Syria because they were carried out without the approval of Damascus,
Moscow's ally. General
Martin Dempsey, chairman of the U.S. Joint Chiefs of Staff, said on
Friday that this week's strikes in Syria had disrupted Islamic State's
command, control and logistics capabilities. But he said a
Western-backed opposition force of 12,000 to 15,000 would be needed to
retake areas of eastern Syria controlled by the militants.
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