The attack came as the United Nations said
that fighting with IS in northern Iraq could displace another 30,000
people, adding to millions who have already fled their homes.
And in Baghdad, throngs of Shiite pilgrims
braved the threat of bombings by IS, which have killed dozens of people
in recent days, to take part in a major annual religious commemoration.
The sailor from the special operations force
was at least the third coalition member killed by enemy fire in Iraq
since IS overran swathes of the country in 2014.
President Barack Obama hailed the 2011
withdrawal of American troops from Iraq as a major accomplishment of his
presidency, but US forces have been drawn back into combat in the
country against IS.
Pentagon spokesman Peter Cook said the death
occurred during an IS attack on a peshmerga position north of Iraq's
militant-held second city Mosul.
A US defence official said the US SEAL's death
was the result of "an orchestrated attack". A coalition military
official said the American was killed by "direct fire" after "enemy
forces penetrated" the peshmerga line.
FIREFIGHT WITH IS
The SEAL was a member of a "small team" that
was present at a peshmerga encampment behind the original front line
during the IS attack, which involved explosives-rigged vehicles,
bulldozers and infantry, the official said.
"They fought, but they're a small number and
they're not supposed to be in direct contact," and they departed by
American helicopter after the SEAL was shot, according to the official.
Kurdish forces are deployed in Nineveh province, whose capital Mosul is IS's main hub in the country.
IS attacked the peshmerga in multiple areas of
northern Iraq on Tuesday in an attempt to "thwart the plan to liberate
Mosul," said Jabbar Yawar, the secretary general of the autonomous
Kurdish region's peshmerga ministry.
Iraq's Joint Operations Command said IS overran the Tal Asquf area and that the group employed suicide bombers.
Tal Asquf is a small Christian town whose
population fled in 2014. According to the Kurdistan Region Security
Council, the town was "completely cleared" of IS fighters later Tuesday.
Romeo Hekari, who heads a Christian unit fighting IS under peshmerga command, also said Tal Asquf was back under full control.
The United States announced last month that it
was deploying additional forces to Iraq, bringing the official total to
more than 4,000.
BOOTS ON THE GROUND
The coalition is carrying out daily air
strikes against IS, and while most American forces on the ground in Iraq
play advisory and support roles, Washington has also deployed special
forces to carry out raids against IS, and US Marines to provide
artillery support.
Two US military personnel have already been
killed by the militants in Iraq - an American Marine by rocket fire in
March and a special forces soldier who died of wounds received during a
raid last October.
Obama repeatedly pledged that there would be
no "boots on the ground" to combat IS, but the administration has since
sought to define the term as meaning something other than American
forces being on the ground and in combat.
"They are wearing boots, and they are on the
ground, but that ... doesn't mean that they are in large-scale ground
combat," State Department spokesman John Kirby recently told
journalists.
As Kurdish forces and the militants clashed on
Tuesday, the United Nations expressed concern that "as many as 30,000
newly displaced individuals" could arrive in Makhmur southeast of Mosul,
fleeing fighting in the area.
In Baghdad, tens of thousands of pilgrims
converged on a shrine to mourn the death of Imam Musa Kadhim, the
seventh of 12 imams revered in Shiite Islam, who was killed in 799 AD.
A shrine official said that "millions" had
taken part in commemorations in recent days, despite IS-claimed bombings
targeting the pilgrims that have killed at least 37 people in the past
week.
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