WASHINGTON –
U.S. Apache helicopters have entered the fight in Iraq
against the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant, Defense Secretary Ash Carter
told reporters yesterday.
"Commanders have used the Apache capability that we
positioned there and that [President Barack Obama] authorized them to use some
months ago," Carter said as he traveled to Brussels for meetings with his
fellow NATO defense ministers.
An ISIL target in Iraq was destroyed in an Apache strike,
Carter said, noting this is the "first time that it's been called into
action, and effectively" in the ISIL fight.
U.S. and Iraqi commanders decided the aircraft "could
be effective in helping those forces that are positioning themselves for the
two-forked envelopment of Mosul," Carter said.
"That's what it was used for -- to help them along
their way," he added.
The June 12 strike was in support of Iraqi security forces
operating in the Tigris River Valley, a Defense Department spokesman said,
adding that the strike was vetted and approved through the same process the
coalition uses for all strikes.
"The Apache strike destroyed [an ISIL] vehicle-borne
improvised explosive device near Qayyarah, Iraq," the spokesman said.