And the U.S. military
said its aircraft continued attacking ISIS forces Friday near Mosul Dam,
where Iraqi forces are expanding control of the area after retaking the
dam this month.
Those are some of the
latest developments in the push by Iraqi and Kurdish forces -- in some
cases boosted by U.S. air support and airstrikes since August 8 -- to
push back the extremist Sunni Muslim militant group, which calls itself
the Islamic State and controls large swaths of northern Iraq and eastern
Syria.
The reported gains come
as high-level defense officials are leaving the door open to the
possibility of targeting ISIS fighters in Syria as well as in Iraq.
Defense Secretary Chuck
Hagel and Gen. Martin Dempsey, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, on
Thursday stopped short of calling for U.S. military action in eastern
Syria, an ISIS stronghold.
"Can they be defeated
without addressing that part of the organization that resides in Syria?
The answer is no," Dempsey said during the briefing at the Pentagon.
Repeatedly pressed by
reporters about whether that meant operations against ISIS in Syria,
Hagel said, "We're looking at all options."
Push toward Jalawla and Tikrit
Kurdish forces, known as
the Peshmerga, and Iraqi commandos inflicted heavy losses against ISIS
on Friday as they took back a number of towns and villages around
Jalawla in Diyala province, Pershmerga spokesman Brig. Gen. Halgord
Hikmat told CNN.
Jalawla, a mostly
Kurdish town of about 50,000 people roughly 70 miles northeast of
Baghdad, was taken by ISIS earlier this year. Kurdish and Iraqi forces
are now surrounding it, Hikmat said.
Hikmat said Peshmerga and Iraqi forces had U.S. air support, but did not elaborate.
In neighboring
Salaheddin province, also north of Baghdad, Iraqi helicopters on Friday
killed 30 ISIS fighters in the town of Dhuluiya, about 70 kilometers
northeast of Baquba, Iraqi security officials told CNN.
This came a day after
ISIS posted pictures to the Internet showing what it said was ongoing
fighting in the ISIS-held town between its fighters and the Al Jubouri
tribe, a Sunni Muslim tribe that rose up against the occupiers.
Also Friday, Iraqi
fighters in that same province took another step in their attempt to
surround the ISIS-held city of Tikrit, the birthplace of former Iraqi
ruler Saddam Hussein, Iraqi security sources said.
Iraqi security forces
secured a road that extends from a military base that it holds --
formerly known as Camp Speicher -- north of Tikrit, killing several ISIS
fighters in the process, security forces said.
Iraqi forces took that
base back from ISIS only last month, and ISIS has attacked it since
then. Gaining the road would help relieve the attacks and perhaps help
the Iraqis, who also hold a university north of the city, eventually
stage an attack on ISIS in Tikrit.
More U.S. airstrikes near Mosul Dam
Meanwhile, U.S. aircraft conducted three more airstrikes Friday against ISIS forces near the Mosul Dam, the Pentagon said.
"The strikes destroyed
two (ISIS) armed vehicles and a machine gun emplacement that was firing
on Iraqi forces," the Pentagon said in a news release.
Since August 8, the U.S.
military has carried out 93 airstrikes, 60 of them in support of Iraqi
forces near the Mosul Dam, according to the Defense Department.
65 killed in Iraq mosque shooting, police say
Gunmen shot and killed 65
people and injured 17 others in a Sunni Muslim mosque during Friday
prayers in Iraq's Diyala province northeast of Baghdad, police officials
in the province said.
The unidentified attackers used automatic machine guns in the Musab bin Omar mosque in the village of Bani Weis, police said.
Bani Weis is about 75 kilometers northeast of the provincial capital, Baquba.
It wasn't immediately
clear who was behind the attack. Both Sunni militants and Shiite Muslim
militias have been active in the province.
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