U.S.-led coalition forces attacked more Islamic State militants late last week in Syria and Iraq as part of Joint Task Force Operation Inherent Resolve, through a mix of piloted and drone airstrikes.
The U.S. and 12 other allied nations took part in this latest effort. In Syria, drones hit various militant tactical units and destroyed an Islamic State vehicle. Those strikes also destroyed an enemy weapons cache.
Other strikes in Syria targeted construction equipment used by ISIL to fortify its positions, demolishing excavators and bulldozers.
In Iraq, a combination of drones, bombers and fighter aircraft conducted 28 separate strikes in cooperation with the Iraqi government, hitting Islamic State machine-gun positions, an explosives cache, an ISIL bunker, command centers, assembly areas and tactical units. Several vehicles were destroyed, as well as car bombs, a tunnel and six ISIL-controlled bridges.
Operation Inherent Resolve also flew four airstrike missions on Christmas Day, destroying various ISIL assets, including an anti-aircraft gun and two houses the extremist group had rigged with explosives. The strikes also took out roads to deny Islamic State fighters access to terrain.
Coalition members conducting strikes last week include the U.S., Denmark, United Kingdom, France, Jordan, the Netherlands, Saudi Arabia, Belgium, the United Arab Emirates, Canada, Bahrain, Australia and Turkey. The air campaign is aimed at limiting the reach and operations of Islamic State extremists.
More Stories
- U.S. DEPARTMENT OF STATE: Secretary Pompeo Approves New Cyberspace Security and Emerging Technologies Bureau
- DHS: Acting Secretary Wolf Condemns Violence at The U.S. Capitol
- ICYMI: President Trump signs Omnibus Spending and COVID Relief Bill, Uplifting American Families, Investing in American Infrastructure and Enhancing American Conservation
- DHS: Modernizes Critical Identification Requirements after Congress Passes REAL ID Modernization Act
- Institute for Defense Analyses taps Marrs to division director in Virginia
- DHS: Warns American Businesses about Data Services and Equipment from Firms Linked to Chinese Government
- U.S. DEPARTMENT OF STATE: Additional Restrictions on the Issuance of Visas for People’s Republic of China Officials Engaged in Human Rights Abuses
- U.S. DEPARTMENT OF THE STATE: Passing of Niger’s Ambassador to the United States
- DHS: Acting Secretary Chad F. Wolf Approves Appointments to the Faith-Based Security Advisory Council
- Center for a New American Security board member congratulated for pick as Biden’s National Intelligence director