France: ‘major’ anti-ISIL air strikes taking place in Iraq

Defence minister, Jean-Yves Le Drian, said French planes based in the UAE and more recently in Jordan had carried out '120 to 130 missions' since the start of the coalition offensive.

Iraqi Prime Minister Haider Al Abadi, left, and France's President Francois Hollande, right, shake hands after a joint media conference at the Elysee Palace in Paris, Wednesday, December 3, 2014. France have launched a major air assault on ISIL militants in Iraq. Michel Euler / AP Photo
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PARIS // France said Friday its fighter jets were conducting a “major” raid in Iraq as part of the US-led coalition offensive against ISIL, days after members said the strikes were having effect.

“At the moment, a major raid is taking place,” the defence minister, Jean-Yves Le Drian, told BFMTV, refusing to detail the targets or the number of jets involved.

He said French planes based in the UAE and more recently in Jordan had carried out “120 to 130 missions” since the start of the coalition offensive.

These include intelligence gathering missions. Compared to the United States, France has carried out only a handful of strikes on the militants.

The coalition of around 60 mainly Western and Arab states was formed several months after ISIL swept across northern Iraq, seizing swathes of territory and proclaiming a caliphate in parts of the country and neighbouring Syria.

Paris has so far refused to join the United States in its air war against ISIL in Syria, but on Wednesday, President Francois Hollande said France was ready to step up its actions against the militants in Iraq.

The same day, a meeting in Brussels of countries in the coalition concluded that ISIL’s advance was finally being stopped thanks to the strikes — a claim reiterated Friday by Le Drian.

“But this halt does not mean that the war is over,” he warned.

In an interview this week with French weekly Paris Match, however, Syrian President Bashar Al Assad differed, saying the strikes were having no effect.

Mr Le Drian hit out at Assad’s comments.

“It’s vile for someone who has the deaths of 200,000 of his countrymen and women on his conscience to give lessons,” he said.

* Agence France-Presse