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Kurds: U.S. Airpower Backing Operation To Retake Mosul Dam

Map of northern Iraq locating Mosul dam and the Kurdish capital Arbil (also spelled "Irbil"), where the U.S. carried out airstrikes targeting Islamic State fighters on Saturday.
Reuters/Landov
Map of northern Iraq locating Mosul dam and the Kurdish capital Arbil (also spelled "Irbil"), where the U.S. carried out airstrikes targeting Islamic State fighters on Saturday.

Kurdish forces say they've retaken areas near the country's largest dam in Mosul from Islamic separatists, a day after U.S. officials acknowledged conducting airstrikes in the region.

The Associated Press, quoting Kurdish peshmerga leader Gen. Tawfik Desty, said his fighters, backed by Iraqi and U.S. warplanes, started an operation to retake Mosul Dam from Islamic State, or ISIS, rebels early Sunday.

"Desty, a commander with the Kurdish forces at the dam, which was seized on Aug. 7, said they now control the eastern part of the dam and that fighting is still underway," the AP says.

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As we reported on Saturday, U.S. carrier-based F/A-18s and drones were conducting strikes near the dam on the Tigris River in northern Iraq, which has seen stepped up fighting between Islamic State militants and peshmerga forces.

Ghassan Salim, 29, a lawyer who lives near the dam, told NPR by telephone that the U.S. airstrikes came from the east and west targeting an area about 3 miles from the dam. They lasted into Sunday morning. But he said he witnessed no clear progress by Kurdish forces on the ground as yet.

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