'They have vicious plans for them': Fears for hundreds of Yazidi 'slave' women captured by ISIS fanatics in Iraq as America wipes out terrorist convoy after launching SECOND round of bombing



GRAPHIC CONTENT WARNING: This story contains images of death that some readers may find disturbing

ISIS captured hundreds of Yazidi women in Mosul, Iraq's second city, hours after U.S. launched air strikes



Two F/A18 fighters dispatched to unleash 500lb laser-guided bombs on Islamic militants outside Kurdish capital Erbil

It is America's first military offensive in Iraq since it pulled out of the country in 2011 after eight years at war

Comes after Obama vowed to 'help' Iraqi forces with airstrikes to prevent 'a potential act of genocide'



Hundreds of thousands of religious minorities have been driven from their homes as ISIS jihadists storm towns



Some 50,000 Yazidis - half of them children - fled to hills after ISIS took Sinjar, the Yazidis' heartland in Iraq



ISIS calls Yazidis devil worshippers because of their beliefs that predate Islam, Christianity and Judaism



Obama said U.S. warplanes had already carried out airdrops of humanitarian aid to Yazidis holed up in Sinjar hills



David Cameron welcomes airstrikes to help Iraqis 'in their hour of desperate need' but rules out British military action



Foreign Office urges British nationals to stay away from Kurdistan as America pounded Islamic State positions

FAA prohibits U.S. airlines from flying over Iraq, British Airways also announces it is suspending flights over country




ISIS militants have made hostages of hundreds of Yazidi women after America waded into the unfolding crisis in Iraq by dropping bombs on the extremists' artillery.

Earlier today President Obama authorised two bombers to sweep up form the Persian Gulf and drop their payloads on jihadist emplacements, in response to their actions against the Yazidi religious minority in the north of the country.

Later the U.S. military conducted two additional air strikes against the extremists near the city of Arbil in northern Iraq, the Pentagon said.

The second wave of air strikes, included a drone strike on a mortar position and an attack by four F/A-18 jets on an Islamic State convoy and mortar position. They made two passes, released eight bombs and "neutralized" the fighters

But now ISIS - which calls itself the Islamic State - has struck the group again by capturing hundreds of women from Mosul, Iraq's second city. Earlier reports indicated that capture Yazidi women were intended to be given to young jihadists as wives.

American aircraft continued attacking targets in Iraq on Friday, the Pentagon said, killing terrorists who were launching attacks from mortars and underway in a convoy.



The savage group - which boasts of crucifying, mutilating and executing those it conquers - is now advancing into the Kurdish northern area of Iraq, which was formerly thought to be safe.



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Gone in a cloud of smoke: A dust cloud rises where the first US bomb struck ISIS artillery being towed by a truck outside Irbil

The airstrike marked the first time US forces have taken direct action against ISIS since it began taking control of huge swathes of the Middle East

It begins: One of the two F/A-18C Hornet fighter jets that bombed the ISIS artillery position prepares for takeoff from the USS George H. W. Bush in the Persian Gulf before the dawn mission this morning

Ready for action: And as soon as the first two jets returned from their successful bombing run on ISIS fighters marching on Erbil this morning, the flight deck of the George H. W. Bush aircraft carrier came alive as more warplanes readied for action

Fighters were today just 25 miles from Erbil, the Kurdish capital, which has been a safe haven in the country throughout the rise of ISIS, and also during the Iraq war to topple Saddam Hussein.

An Iraqi government official confirmed the hostage-taking, and said the women are all younger than 35.

Kamil Amin, the spokesman for Iraq's Human Rights Ministry, said: 'We think that the terrorists by now consider them slaves and they have vicious plans for them. We think that these women are going to be used in demeaning ways by those terrorists to satisfy their animalistic urges in a way that contradicts all the human and Islamic values.'

There are claims that many have been raped and there are fears that they will be sold into slavery by the fanatics. Those trapped on the mountain say they fear they face ‘slaughter’ . They spoke of appalling conditions with no water, food or medicine, and little shelter apart from lone trees, under which groups huddle together, or caves dotted in the barren, bleak mountainside.



‘We are being slaughtered,’ Yazidi MP, Vian Dakhil, said: ‘Our entire religion is being wiped off the face of the earth.’



Another said: ‘We have nothing here except ground to sleep on, there is no food or water, people are hungry, people are crying for help.’



One Yazidi official, Mahma Khalil, put the number sheltering on the mountain, which the community considers the holy site where Noah’s ark settled after the biblical flood, as high as 250,000.



‘Please save us! SOS! save us!’ he pleaded, ‘Our people are in the desert. They are exposed to a genocide.’

'We're coming to help': President Obama meets with the National Security Council yesterday in the Situation Room of the White House, hours before his address to the nation in which he vowed to help the thousands of Iraqi civilians being driven from their homes and slaughtered by the Islamic State extremists running rampant through the country. That help came in the form of targeted airstrikes on key ISIS positions today

Drama: The two American warplanes dropped 500lb laser-guided bombs on an Islamic State artillery position Near Irbil in a bid to halt the ISIS horde sweeping the country and save thousands of innocent lives

The stranded Yazidi population was the catalyst for American intervention in the form of air strikes. The first wave Hornets took off this morning from the USS George H. W. Bush in the Persian Gulf before unleashing their 500lb laser-guided bombs on a unit of Islamic State fighters near Erbil, where U.S. troops are stationed as well as the American consulate.



In an unusual move, news of America's first military offensive in Iraq since it pulled out of the country in 2011 after eight years at war was announced by Rear Admiral John Kirby through his Twitter account.



'US military aircraft conduct strike on ISIL artillery. Artillery was used against Kurdish forces defending Erbil, near US personnel,' he tweeted.

The assault follows Barack Obama's dramatic call to arms last night in which he authorised airstrikes to defend hundreds of thousands of non-Muslims being hunted down and slaughtered by Islamic State jihadists, declaring: 'America is coming to help.'

And as the crisis in Iraq entered a new phase of international involvement, Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel warned the U.S. has enough intelligence to clearly single out and hit Islamic militants if they threaten U.S. interests or the thousands of refugees who fled to a mountaintop.



Asked if the Islamic State group could successfully hide among civilians to evade strikes, Hagel said: 'It's pretty clear who they are, and they would be pretty identifiable where our airstrikes could be effective.'

It is understood that ISIS was using stolen artillery, abandoned by retreating Iraqi soldiers, to shell Kurdish forces defending the regional capital of Kurdistan.

Peshmerga Kurdistan forces are now waiting for more strikes by the US fighter jets before launching a full-scale counter attack against the ISIS assault.

The chaos engulfing Iraq has escalated rapidly in the past 24 hours, with a re-energised Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant storming towns in the north, executing villagers and chasing thousands from their homes into the mountains.

Already dozens of Yazidis - whom ISIS have denounced as devil-worshippers because of their ancient beliefs which predate both Christianity and Islam - have been murdered since the extremist fighters overran the town of Sinjar yesterday.



Up to 50,000 terrified Yazidis - half of them children - have sought refuge from the bloodshed in the barren mountain range to the north of their hometown as their hunters close in.



But there they face an impossible dilemma - try to get to the Turkish border and risk being captured and killed by insurgents, or remain on Mount Sinjar without food or water in the searing heat, hoping aid will somehow get through.



Many have already died of hunger and thirst as they struggle to survive on just the food they could carry in temperatures exceeding 42C.



Photographs have emerged of Yazidi men carrying the limp bodies of dozens of young children either too exhausted to continue or killed by ISIS militants, who in turn have posted pictures online of themselves posing next to dead Yazidi men.

The dead men's wives were reportedly kept as trophies to be gifted to unmarried jihadist fighters.

Last night, in a televised late-night statement from the White House, Mr Obama said American warplanes had already carried out airdrops of food and water to the Iraqi Yazidis hiding in the mountains.

Innocent: Yazidi Iraqis on Mount Sinjar carry the limp bodies of children as they flee their ISIS hunters. Up to 50,000 terrified Yazidis - half of them children - have sought refuge from the bloodshed in the barren mountain range to the north of their hometown. But there they face an impossible dilemma - try to make it to the Turkish border and risk being captured and killed by insurgents, or remain on the mountain without food or water in the searing heat in the hope that aid will somehow get through

Ruthless: An ISIS fighter poses next to a dead Yazidi. ISIS have denounced the Yazidis as devil-worshipers on account of their ancient set of beliefs and have issued them with an ultimatum to convert to Islam, pay a religious fine, flee their homes or face death



'Today America is coming to help,' he declared, adding: 'The United States cannot and should not intervene every time there’s a crisis in the world. 'So let me be clear about why we must act, and act now: when we face a situation like we do on that mountain -- with innocent people facing the prospect of violence on a horrific scale, when we have a mandate to help... and when we have the unique capabilities to help avert a massacre, then I believe the United States of America cannot turn a blind eye.' However, news of the strikes was not met with universal approval.

Retired four-star General Barry McCaffrey hit out at Obama for not going far enough with the bombardment. 'We dropped three aircraft loads of water and food to 50,000 people in the mountains,' he told MSNBC. 'Now we're striking ISIS artillery units. It looks to me as if a lot of this is internal U.S. politics to show we're doing something.' He went on: 'I mean, if you're going to use military power, you have to write down your objective and then use decisive force to achieve your objective. So I'm a little dismayed at what we're up to here.' His comments were later echoed by House Speaker John Boehner, an Ohio Republican, who heaped scorn on the White House, railing: 'The president’s authorization of airstrikes is appropriate, but like many Americans, I am dismayed by the ongoing absence of a strategy for countering the grave threat ISIS poses to the region.

Response: On the ground, a Kurdish armoured vehicle rushes towards the site of the U.S. air strike to meet ISIS Rolling tanks: Peshmerga fighters are pictured yesterday patrolling their territory in an operation against the ISIS fighters Close quarters: Kurdish infantry take cover ahead of the bombing raid ordered by President Obama today Power and responsibility: Barack Obama cut a lonely figure as he liased on the phone with King Abdullah II of Jordan in the Oval Office of the White House. Some 6,000 miles away, U.S. warplanes were carrying out his orders to bomb ISIS positions in a bid to 'prevent a potential act of genocide'

'Vital national interests are at stake, yet the White House has remained disengaged despite warnings from Iraqi leaders, Congress, and even members of its own administration. Such parochial thinking only emboldens the enemy and squanders the sacrifices Americans have made.'



ISIS fighters have beaten back the Kurdish peshmerga fighters - Iraq's most formidable fighting force - who have thus far fought tirelessly to defend their northern heartland, but are becoming stretched thin across several fronts.

In what will be seen as a major coup for the extremist force, they also seized the Mosul Dam - Iraq's largest - which places them in control of enormous power and water resources and access to the river that runs through the heart of Baghdad.



Panic even began to tear through the Kurdish capital of Erbil, long considered a safe haven, where civilians today flooded the airport in a futile attempt to buy tickets to the Iraqi capital.

And as shockwaves from the crisis reverberated around the world, oil companies began closing fields and evacuating staff from Kurdistan in a move that has caused shares to plummet.

WHO ARE THE YAZIDIS?

There are about 700,000 Yazidis in the world, living chiefly in northern Iraq and on Mount Sinjar.

They are ethnically Kurdish but adhere to a religion founded some 6,000 years ago by an Ummayyad sheikh. The religion, while it predates Christianity and Islam, incorporates elements of each, as well as Zoroastrianism, an ancient belief founded by an Iranian philosopher in around 6BC. The Yazidis live in small communities mainly scattered through northwest Iraq, north west Syria and south east Turkey, although members are also found in Georgia and Armenia. Accounts of their population vary, with estimates ranging from 50,000 to a million, and their number has fallen considerably over the past 100 years. Despite this, they have a well-organised society, following a chief sheikh as their religious leader and an emir, or prince, as the secular head. The religion is centred around worship of the fallen archangel Melek Tawwus, or Peacock Angel.

But unlike Satan's fall from grace, Melek Tawwus was readmitted into Heaven by God and represents humanity's potential for both good and evil. For this reason, the Yazidis have unfairly garnered a reputation as devil-worshippers among certain faiths, and have faced centuries of alienation, oppression and attempted extermination. Yazidis - who do not believe in hell or evil - deny they are. Many Yazidi traditions are shrouded in such secrecy that most have never been witnessed by outsiders. Yazidis regard marriage outside their faith as a sin punishable by ostracism or even death to restore lost honour. Most Yazidis, even young people, choose to live in their isolated communities, though they often face extreme poverty. The Yazidis have been targeted before, and claim to have been subjected to 72 genocides during the Ottoman rule of the 18th and 19th centuries. In 2007 a series of massive truck bombs in northern Iraq killed nearly 500 villagers from the group in August 2007. Now, forced to flee after the Islamic State group gave them an ultimatum to convert to Islam, pay a religious fine, flee or face death, the plight of these secretive people is under the world's spotlight.

Meanwhile , Pope Francis begged world leaders to help end the crisis, after Iraq's largest Christian town was sacked sending tens of thousands of Iraqi Christians fleeing for their lives.



Yesterday ISIS captured Qaraqush and several others near Mosul following the withdrawal of Kurdish peshmerga fighters.

The Vatican said in a statement: 'His Holiness addresses an urgent appeal to the international community to take action to end the humanitarian tragedy now underway, to act to protect those affected or threatened by violence and to provide aid, especially for the most urgent needs of the many who have been forced to flee and who depend on the solidarity of others.'

While Iraq's Christian population has declined steeply since the end of the Iraq War, there are still some 450,000 - 1.2 per cent of the country - living there.

The rush of people expelled from their homes or fleeing violence has exacerbated Iraq's already-dire humanitarian crisis, with some 200,000 Iraqis joining the 1.5 million people already displaced from violence this year.



Yesterday, the al-Qaida breakaway Islamic State posted a statement online confirming it had captured the Mosul Dam and vowed to continue 'the march in all directions,' as it expands its self-styled caliphate.



The group said it has seized a total of 17 Iraqi cities, towns and targets - including Qaraqush and Sinjar. Their statement could not be independently verified, but it was posted on a website frequently used by militants.



Today's attack reflects the deepest American engagement in Iraq since US troops withdrew in late 2011 after nearly a decade of war.

Mr Obama, who made last night's remarks in a steady and sombre tone, has staked much of his legacy as president on ending what he has called the 'dumb war' in Iraq.

The president said the humanitarian airdrops were made at the request of the Iraqi government.

'We thank Barack Obama,' said Khalid Jamal Alber, from the religious affairs ministry in the semi-autonomous Kurdish government in northern Iraq.



In Baghdad, the Ministry of the Displaced also welcomed the aid drops. The ministry's spokesman, Satar Nawrouz, said the drops came 'just in time.'



Mindful of the public's aversion to another lengthy war, Mr Obama acknowledged that the prospect of a new round of US military action would be a cause for concern among many Americans.

He vowed anew not to put American combat troops back on the ground in Iraq and said there was no US military solution to the crisis.

'As commander in chief, I will not allow the United States to be dragged into fighting another war in Iraq,' Mr Obama said.

Even so, he outlined a rationale for airstrikes if the Islamic State militants advance on American troops in the northern city of Erbil and the US consulate there in the Kurdish region of Iraq.

The troops were sent to Iraq earlier this year as part of the White House response to the extremist group's swift movement across the border with Syria and into Iraq.

'When the lives of American citizens are at risk, we will take action,' Mr Obama said. 'That's my responsibility as commander in chief.'

He said he had also authorised the use of targeted military strikes if necessary to help the Iraqi security forces protect civilians.

The president spoke following a day of urgent discussions with his national security team.

He addressed the nation only after the American military aircraft delivering food and water to the Iraqis had safely left the drop site in northern Iraq.

The Pentagon said the airdrops were performed by one C-17 and two C-130 cargo aircraft that together delivered a total of 72 bundles of food and water.

They were escorted by two F/A-18 fighters from an undisclosed air base in the region.

The planes delivered 5,300 gallons of fresh drinking water and 8,000 pre-packaged meals and were over the drop area for less than 15 minutes at a low altitude.

The president cast the mission to assist the Yazidis as part of the American mandate to assist around the world when the US has the unique capabilities to help avert a massacre.

In those cases, Mr Obama said, 'we can act carefully and responsibly to prevent a potential act of genocide'.

Officials said the US was prepared to undertake additional humanitarian airdrops if necessary, though they did not say how quickly those missions could occur.

With the spectre of further U.S. airstrikes on ISIS positions looming over the coming days, The Federal Aviation Administration became the first aviation body to prohibit airlines and other commercial carriers from flying over Iraq.

Other airlines quickly followed suit, including British Airways (BA), Virgin Atlantic, Air France and Dubai-based Emirates.

A spokesman for BA said it was: 'temporarily suspending our flights over Iraq'.



In London, the Foreign Office urged British nationals to stay away from Kurdistan as American bombers pounded Islamic State positions.

Earlier today, David Cameron welcomed US President Obama's decision to authorise airstrikes, saying the world must help religious minorities in Iraq who are under threat from the militants 'in their hour of desperate need' - but ruled out any British military intervention.

Instead, he said he had asked officials to look into what assistance the UK can provide.

In a statement on Friday morning, Mr Cameron said: 'I am extremely concerned by the appalling situation in Iraq and the desperate situation facing hundreds of thousands of Iraqis. And I utterly condemn the barbaric attacks being waged by Isil terrorists across the region.



'I am especially concerned for the minority Yazidi community now trapped on Mount Sinjar, where they have fled for their lives.

Battle ready: Peshmerga Kurds show of their readiness to fight ISIS on streets of Kurdish capital Erbil last night. But their apparent confidence belied growing fears in the city, long considered a safe haven, where civilians began flooding the airport in a futile attempt to buy tickets to Baghdad

Stretched: The Kurdish peshmerga fighters, Iraq's most formidable fighting force, have thus far fought tirelessly to defend their northern heartland, but are becoming stretched thin across several fronts

'They fear slaughter if they descend back down the slopes but face starvation and dehydration if they remain on the mountain. The world must help them in their hour of desperate need.

'I welcome president Obama's decision to accept the Iraqi government's request for help and to conduct targeted US airstrikes, if necessary, to help Iraqi forces as they fight back against ISIS terrorists to free the civilians trapped on Mount Sinjar.

'And I fully agree with the president that we should stand up for the values we believe in - the right to freedom and dignity, whatever your religious beliefs.'



A Downing Street spokeswoman said the UK was 'not planning a military intervention'.



But Mr Cameron added: 'I have tasked officials to urgently establish what more we can do to provide help to those affected, including those in grave need of food, water and shelter in the Sinjar area.'

U.S. administration officials said they believe unilateral US strikes would be consistent with international law in part because the Iraqi government has asked for Washington to take military action.

They also said Mr Obama had the constitutional authority to act on his own in order to protect American citizens.

READY TO STRIKE: HOW THE UNITED STATES IS ARMED TO THE TEETH IN THE MIDDLE EAST AFTER MOVING SHIPS, JETS AND TROOPS WITHIN STRIKING DISTANCE - AND BRITAIN HAS ITS BASE IN THE MED TO DROP AID FROM

Surrounded: The U.S. has spent recent months moving its ships, jets and troops within striking distance with today's attack on ISIS coming from the Persian Gulf By MARTIN ROBINSON

The strike on ISIS today came after U.S. forces spent the last two months moving ships, jets and troops within striking distance. After President Obama gave the go ahead last night two F/A18 fighters flew off from an American 'supercarrier' in the Persian Gulf to fire 500lb laser-guided bombs on a group of Islamic militants outside Kurdish capital Erbil. The jets were on the USS George H.W. Bush, which was ordered to travel 1,000 miles from the Arabian Sea to the Persian Gulf seven weeks ago.

It joined the U.S. Navy's Fifth Fleet - two aircraft carriers - the USS Carl Vinson and USS Abraham Lincoln - and several nuclear submarines armed with Tomahawk missiles.

Each carrier typically carries 64 aircraft, including the F/A-18 Super Hornet fighter jets, EA-6B Prowler electronic warfare aircraft, E-2 Hawkeye surveillance planes and SH-60/MH-60 Seahawk helicopters.

Unmanned attacker: The United States has its MQ-9 'Reaper' drones that can deliver Hellfire missiles more than 1,100 miles away, or drop 500-pound bombs itself There are also five other U.S. ships believed to be in the Arabian Sea of needed.

Obama's operational choices are limited to launches from bases outside Iraq's borders.

Among them are Al-Udeid Air Base in Qatar, which already houses command and logistics hubs for U.S. Central Command and was ground zero for air sorties over Afghanistan and Iraq since the early days of the George W. Bush administration.

Al-Udeid is still used for some air missions over Afghanistan and houses long-range B1-bombers.

Closer to Iraq's northern provinces is an American air base in Incirlik, Turkey, which the U.S. shares with Britain's Royal Air Force and the Turkish Air Force. After 2011, that facility inherited much of the airborne surveillance hardware – including drones – that the U.S. once launched from bases inside Iraq.

In addition, the U.S. commands a detachment of F-16 fighters in Jordan, where it has 2,000 troops based, according to a Pentagon official.

The superpower also has a massive arsenal of MQ-18 Predator and MQ-9 Reaper drones, capable of delivering Hellfire missiles more than 1,100 miles away.

The Reaper drones can also deliver 500-pound bombs. Washington military expert Mark Gunzinger, a former Department of Defense official, told the Army Times: ‘Since we don’t have a large footprint in country and we don’t have a lot of combat aircraft in country I think anything more than small strikes and raids, if it’s a more concerted effort, will rely heavily on longer-range capabilities.

‘This could be a very different kind of an air campaign than we’ve done in the past, depending on the size and duration.’

The United States has around 800 personnel on the ground in Iraq - but not enough to launch an attack.

In late June it was announced that the U.S. was sending another 300 troops to Iraq to beef up security at its embassy and around Baghdad. It does have 10,000 troops in Kuwait and stores m illions of rounds of small arms fire, thousands of rounds of tank ammunition, helicopter-fired rockets, machine guns, grenades, flares, sniper rifles, M16s and M4 rifles. Britain also has a RAF base in Cyprus, less than 100 miles from from Syria and 650 miles from Baghdad. RAF Akrotiri was built in the mid 1950s and first used in the Suez crisis.

More recently the base was used as a supply post during the Iraq wars and also used to support the attacks on Libya in 2011.

Before intervention in Syria was voted down by the Commons, this is where the strikes would have come from. Now it could be used for air drops to the Yazidi tribe who are trapped in the mountains of Iraq or the British could share American bases.





Safe for now: Displaced people, who fled from the violence in the province of Nineveh, arrive at Sulaimaniya province in Kurdistan

Long journey: Children sleep in the back of a truck which took them from the fighting to the safety of Kurdistan

Not enough: Villagers say food delivered by the Iraqi army by helicopters is insufficient and people are beginning to die of starvation and thirst in the extreme heat

Dying: It is reported that dozens of people, mostly children, have died of hunger and thirst since ISIS fighters surrounded Mount Sinjar

Fleeing: Officials said, tens of thousands of Iraqis, mainly Yazidi and Christian families, living in Iraq's Sinjar district bordering Syria were desperately trying to escape the country for fear of massacres by the militants

Safe for now: Iraqi Christians who fled the violence in the village of Qaraqush, about 30 kilometres east of the northern province of Nineveh, rest upon their arrival at the Saint-Joseph church in the Kurdish city of Arbil, in Iraq's autonomous Kurdistan region

Scared: ISIS hordes have been particularly ruthless in their treatment of Iraqi Christians. Thousands have fled since ISIS seized Qaraqush, Iraq's largest Christian town, and several others near Mosul following the withdrawal of Kurdish peshmerga fighters, inhabitants said

He similarly authorised strikes in Syria last summer after chemical weapons were deployed, but those attacks were never carried out, in part because of domestic political concerns and also because an international agreement to strip Syria of its stockpiles of the deadly gases.

The president has also faced persistent calls to take military action in Syria on humanitarian grounds, given that more than 170,000 people have been killed there.

Critics, including some Republicans in Congress, have argued that Mr Obama's cautious approach to Syria has allowed the Islamic State group to flourish there, growing strong enough to move across the border with Iraq and make swift gains.

Shockwaves: David Cameron (left) welcomed U.S. intervention in Iraq but ruled out British military involvement while Pope Francis begged world leaders to step in



Isis fighters reportedly gained control of this dam in Mosul, giving them power over the main water supply to Baghdad

Fight back: Soldiers of the Kurdish Peshmerga forces and Shiite volunteers take position during fighting with ISIS fighters, in Amerly town, northeastern Baghdad. The Kurds, who suffered horrifically under Saddam Hussein, have exploited the recent crisis to grant themselves greater autonomy

Brave: But the Kurds have nonetheless fought tirelessly against the ISIS hordes in a desperate bid to protect their heartland and other religious denominations under threat

Back to Iraq? The announcements reflected the deepest American engagement in Iraq since US troops withdrew in late 2011 after nearly a decade of war

In light of the militants' advances, Mr Obama sent about 800 US forces to Iraq earlier this year, with those troops largely split between joint operation centres in Baghdad and Erbil.

More than half are providing security for the embassy and US personnel. American service members also are involved in improving US intelligence, providing security cooperation and conducting assessments of Iraqi capabilities.

Officials said there were no plans to evacuate those Americans from Iraq but that the US was conducting enhanced intelligence flights over Erbil with both manned and unmanned aircrafts in order to monitor the deteriorating conditions.