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Second wave of US airstrikes

August 8, 2014

The US military has struck Islamic State positions in northern Iraq, according to the Pentagon. US President Obama authorized airstrikes to protect local minorities and US military personnel in the region.

https://p.dw.com/p/1CrgC
F/A-18 Super Hornet US-Kampfjet USA Irak Islamischer Staat Symbolbild Angriff
Image: picture-alliance/dpa

US drones and F/A-18 planes carried out a second wave of airstrikes on Sunni extremists in northern Iraq on Friday. According to the Pentagon, a mortar position and an "Islamic State" (IS) convoy were destroyed in the attack.

"As the president made clear, the United States military will continue to take direct action against [the Islamic State] when they threaten our personnel facilities," the Pentagon said.

It was not immediately clear how many militants were killed.

With a humanitarian crisis worsening in northern Iraq, US President Barack Obama authorized the targeted strikes on Thursday, which had been preceded by an air drop of supplies to refugees in the region.

Following the US strikes, Iraq's army chief of staff Lieutenant General Babaker Zebari said he now expected federal troops and Kurdish forces (called peshmerga) to reclaim large parts of land taken over by IS.

"There will be huge changes on the ground in the coming hours," Zebari told the news agency AFP.

UN humanitarian corridor

The UN announced on Friday that it was "urgently preparing a humanitarian corridor."

Tens of thousands of minorities – including Christians – have been fleeing the extremist militant group in recent days.

An estimated 50,000 members of Iraq's Yazidi population have been driven into the mountains near the northwestern town of Sinjar over the past week, where they are now trapped. The Islamic State considers Yazidis, who borrow their religious practices from Christianity and Islam, as apostates.

The UN estimates that over 200,000 additional people have fled to the Dahuk governorate in the past three days. The northern locality lies close to Iraq's border with Turkey.

kms/lw (AP, AFP, Reuters, dpa)