As Iraqi forces backed by US support engage Isis across multiple battlefronts in Iraq, Defence Secretary Ashton Carter announced that American Apache helicopter gunships had been used in combat for the first time since President Barack Obama authorised their use in April.
Speaking to reporters during a flight to a meeting of Nato ministers in Brussels, Carter declined to go into details about the operation but said the strikes were in support of Iraqi forces battling Isis (Islamic State) outside Mosul.
Several Apaches were involved in the attack, but only one fired, striking a vehicle, according to a senior defence official. The AH-64 Apache is an Army helicopter and often flies in pairs.
The use of the Apaches comes as Iraqi forces are making modest gains into Fallujah, one of the first major urban areas seized by Isis two years ago. Around Mosul, Iraqi forces are slowly putting pressure on the city from the south and northeast.
In 2015, the Pentagon had offered the use of Apache gunships to Iraqi forces attempting to retake the city of Ramadi. At the time, Iraqi Prime Minister Haider al-Abadi turned down the offer, and Iraqi forces were able to retake the city without them.Armed with a 30mm cannon, 7cm rockets and the ability to carry a payload of Hellfire missiles, the Apache is an aircraft well suited to provide close air support for troops on the ground. Used extensively in Iraq prior to the US withdrawal in 2011 and the rise of Isis, Apache gunships were last used in the country in 2014 to help beleaguered Kurdish units fighting for the Mosul Dam.
In April, however, after meeting Carter, Abadi approved their use to help retake Mosul. In conjunction with Abadi's approval of the Apaches, Carter also announced the deployment of 200 additional US troops to help advise their Iraqi counterparts, in addition to more rocket artillery. Currently there are roughly 5000 US troops stationed in Iraq.
Significantly larger than Ramadi, Mosul fell to Isis in June 2014, forcing the retreat of thousands of Iraqi soldiers and the subsequent disintegration of a number of Iraqi Army units.
Since then, the city has turned into Isis' largest stronghold in Iraq and is believed to be well fortified. Obama has anticipated that the conditions will be set to retake Mosul by the end of the year, and Pentagon officials have been eager to to show that Iraqi ground forces are making strides to make that assessment a reality.