Islamic State Intensifies Its Fight In Response to U.S. Attacks

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Residents inspect damaged buildings in what activists say was a U.S. strike, in Kfredrian, Idlib province September 23, 2014. Abdalghne Karoof/Reuters

DAMASCUS/MURSITPINAR Turkey (Reuters) - U.S. planes pounded Islamic State positions in Syria for a second day on Wednesday, but the strikes did not halt the fighters' advance in a Kurdish area where fleeing refugees told of villages burnt and captives beheaded.

President Barack Obama, speaking at the United Nations, asked the world to join together to fight the militants and vowed to keep up military pressure against them.

"The only language understood by killers like this is the language of force, so the United States of America will work with a broad coalition to dismantle this network of death," Obama said in 40 minute speech to the U.N. General Assembly.

Islamist militants in Algeria claimed in a video they had executed a French hostage captured on Sunday to demand that France end its involvement in air strikes against Islamic State in Iraq, according the SITE monitoring service.

A U.S. official said the leader of an al Qaeda unit called Khorasan had been killed in the first day of strikes on Syria. Washington describes Khorasan as a separate group from Islamic State, made up of al Qaeda veterans planning attacks on the West from a base in Syria.

"We believe he is dead," he said of Khorasan chief Mohsin al-Fadhli, an associate of al Qaeda founder Osama bin Laden.

Syrian Kurds said Islamic State had responded to U.S. attacks by intensifying its assault near the Turkish border innorthern Syria, where 140,000 civilians have fled in recent days in the fastest exodus of the three-year civil war.

Washington and Arab allies have killed scores of Islamic State fighters in the first 24 hours of air strikes, the first direct U.S. foray into Syria two weeks after Obama pledged to hit the group on both sides of the Iraq-Syria border.

However, the intensifying advance on the northern town of Kobani was a reminder of the difficulty Washington faces in defeating Islamist fighters in Syria, where it lacks strong military allies on the ground.

"Those air strikes are not important. We need soldiers on the ground," said Hamed, a refugee who fled into Turkeyfrom the Islamic State advance.

Mazlum Bergaden, a teacher from Kobani who crossed the border on Wednesday with his family, said two of his brothers had been taken captive by Islamic State fighters.

"The situation is very bad. After they kill people, they are burning the villages.... When they capture any village, they behead one person to make everyone else afraid," he said. "They are trying to eradicate our culture, purge our nation."

Fighting between Islamic State militants and Kurds could be seen from across the border in Turkey, where the sounds of sporadic artillery and gunfire echoed around the hills.

FOCUS ON IRAQI BORDER

The initial days of U.S. strikes suggest one aim is to hamper Islamic State's ability to operate across the Iraqi-Syrian frontier. On Wednesday U.S.-led forces hit at least 13 targets in and around Albu Kamal, one of the main border crossings between Iraq and Syria, after striking 22 targets there on Tuesday, said the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, a body which monitors the conflict in Syria.

The U.S. military confirmed it had struck inside Syria northwest of al Qaim, the Iraqi town at the Albu Kamal border crossing. It also struck inside Iraq west of Baghdad and near the Iraqi Kurdish capital Erbil on Wednesday.

An Islamist fighter in the Albu Kamal area reached by phone said there had been at least nine strikes on Wednesday by "crusader forces". Targets included in an industrial area.

Perched on the main Euphrates River valley highway, Albu Kamal controls the route from Islamic State's de facto capital Raqqa in Syria to the frontlines in western Iraq and down the Euphrates to the western and southern outskirts of Baghdad.

Islamic State's ability to move fighters and weapons between Syria and Iraq has provided an important tactical advantage for the group in both countries: fighters sweeping in from Syria helped capture much of northern Iraq in June, and weapons they seized and sent back to Syria helped them in battle there.

France, which has confined its air strikes to Iraq, where the government requested foreign intervention, said it would stay the course despite the killing of hostage Herve Gourdel, a mountain guide captured on vacation in Algeria on Sunday by a group claiming loyalty to Islamic State.

"We will not commit troops on the ground (but) we will stay as long as necessary until the Iraqi army has restored its superiority over Daesh," Prime Minister Manuel Valls told parliament in Paris, using the Arabic acronym for Islamic State.

DAMASCUS: CAMPAIGN GOES "IN RIGHT DIRECTION"

The campaign has blurred the traditional lines of Middle East alliances, pitting a U.S. coalition comprised of countries opposed to Syrian President Bashar al-Assad against fighters that form the most powerful opposition to Assad on the ground.

The attacks have so far encountered no objection, and even signs of approval, from Assad's Syrian government. Syrian state TV led its news broadcast with Wednesday's air strikes on the border with Iraq, saying "the USA and its partners" had launched raids against "the terrorist organization Islamic State"

U.S. officials say they informed both Assad and his main ally Iran in advance of their intention to strike but did not coordinate with them.

Jordan, Bahrain, the United Arab Emirates, Qatar and Saudi Arabia have joined in the strikes. All are ruled by Sunni Muslims and are staunch opponents of Assad, a member of a Shi'ite-derived sect, and his main regional ally, Shi'ite Iran.

But some of Assad's opponents fear the Syrian leader could exploit the U.S. military campaign to rehabilitate himself in the eyes of Western countries, and that strikes against Islamic State could solidify his grip on power.

In perhaps the strongest signal yet that Damascus wants to be seen as fighting the same battle as Washington,Syria's minister for national reconciliation, Ali Haidar, told Reuters: "What has happened so far is proceeding in the right direction in terms of informing the Syrian government and by not targeting Syrian military installations and not targeting civilians."

Damascus was watching the events with caution, Haidar said.

ISLAMIC STATE ADVANCES ON KURDS

Even as Islamic State outposts elsewhere have been struck, the fighters have accelerated their campaign to capture Kobani, a Kurdish city on the border with Turkey. Nearly 140,000 Syrian Kurds have fled into Turkey since last week, the fastest exodus of the entire three-year civil war.

An Islamic State source, speaking to Reuters via online messaging, said the group had taken several villages to the west of Kobani. Footage posted on Youtube appeared to show Islamic State fighters using weapons including artillery as they battled Kurdish forces near Kobani. The Islamists were shown raising the group's black flag after tearing down a Kurdish one.

A Turkish official, speaking on condition of anonymity, said any further advance by Islamic State would trigger a fresh wave of refugees. The official said the advance had been very rapid three days ago but was slowed by the U.S.-led air strikes.

But Ocalan Iso, deputy leader of Kurdish forces defending Kobani, said more Islamic State fighters and tanks had arrived in the area since the coalition began air strikes on the group.

"Kobani is in danger," he said, repeating calls for the coalition to expand its air strikes to Islamic State positions near the town. The Syrian Observatory reported air strikes overnight near Kobani, but the U.S. military, Kurdish and Syrian officials did not confirm strikes in that area.

Iso said Islamic State fighters had advanced to within 8 km (5 miles) of the southern periphery of Kobani - closer than they have been at any stage in the latest offensive.

Dozens of Syrian Kurds who had fled the fighting watched from a hillside on the Turkish side as Kurds battled Islamic State militants in a cluster of villages called Siftek. The Kurds appeared to be firing mortars from the back of a truck into a village where Islamic State had taken up positions.

"There are more and more Islamic State fighters in the last two days, they have brought all their forces here," saidAhmed Hassan, 60, a Syrian Kurd who fled to Turkey with his family.

"They have heavy weapons. We are running away from them. YPG haven't got heavy weapons, that's why we need help," he said referring to the main Kurdish armed group.

The campaign against Islamic State marks the first direct involvement of the United States in Syria's conflict, which started as a peaceful protest movement in 2011 but degenerated into civil war after a government crackdown.

More than 190,000 people have been killed in the fighting and millions have fled their homes. Gun battles, bombings, shelling and air strikes regularly kill over 150 people a day.

(This story changes reference to French intervention in Iraq, from Syria, in paragraph 4)

(Additional reporting by Steve Holland and Louis Charbonneau at the United Nations, Patrick Markey in Tunis, Tom Perry, Sylvia Westall, Mariam Karouny, Laila Bassam, Alexander Dziadosz in Beirut and Suleiman al-Khalidi inAmman; Writing by Peter Graff and Alexander Dziadosz)

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