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Thursday, 9 October 2014
US says air power 'not enough' to save Kobane
US-led coalition continues air strikes against ISIL
as Pentagon official admits besieged Syrian city
"could be taken".
US-led coalition air strikes have managed to push
back some fighters belonging to the Islamic State
of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL) in the Syrian city of
Kobane, but US and UK officials have said that air
power alone cannot prevent the city from falling.
"Kobani could be taken. We recognise that," John
Kirby, the press secretary for the US Defence
Department told reporters on Wednesday.
"We're doing everything we can from the air to try
to halt the momentum of ISIL against that
town. Air power is not going to be alone enough
to save that city."
Kirby's comments came as the coalition
intensified its bombing of ISIL targets in Kobane,
also known as Ayn al-Arab, while the Turkish
military deployed tanks on its side of the frontier
on Thursday.
In a statement on Wednesday, US Central
Command (USCC) said it appeared that Syrian-
Kurdish fighters continued to control most of the
town and were holding out against ISIL.
But the Syrian Observatory of Human Rights
(SOHR) said on Thursday that ISIL now controls
more than a third of the town.
"All eastern areas, a small part of the northeast
and an area in the south east [are controlled by
ISIL]," the SOHR said.
If Kobani fell to ISIL, the armed group would be in
control of more than half of Syria's 820km border
with Turkey, but US Secretary of State John Kerry
said the loss of the town would not be a strategic
defeat.
Philip Hammond, the UK's foreign secretary, said
that his country was a full partner of the coalition
and was open to the possibility of extending its
commitment to miliitary action within Syria, a
move which he said would require parliamentary
approval.
"We absolutely have not ruled out playing a role
in Syria. We will require further parliamentary
approval if we decide that that is the right thing
for us to do," Hammond said.
Buffer zone confusion
Meanwhile, the US has been sending mixed
signals over Turkey's proposal to create a buffer
zone along the Syria-Turkey border, with Kerry
initially saying that Washington was willing to
consider the idea, but the White House later
denied doing so.
US and Jordanian aircraft conducted eight
additional strikes on ISIL around Kobane, for a
total of 14 coalition strikes for the day and 19
bombing raids near the town since
Tuesday, USCC, which is overseeing the airstrikes
and US forces in the Middle East, said on
Wednesday.
The latest strikes near Kobane destroyed five
armed vehicles, an ISIL supply depot, a command
centre, a logistics compound, and eight occupied
barracks, the USCC said.
Another air raid southwest of the Syrian city of
Raqqa destroyed four armed vehicles
and damaged two more, it said.
US fighter jets and other aircraft also kept up
bombing runs in Iraq, with one attack northwest
of Ramadi, one in Mosul and another raid south
of Kirkuk, it said.
About 200,000 people have already fled Kobane
and surrounding villages since the fighting began.
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