Offering an unusually detailed description of the fighting, Rear Adm John Kirby told reporters that all but "hundreds" of civilians have evacuated the city and that increasing numbers of Islamic State group fighters are flowing in.
"One of the reasons why you're seeing more strikes there is because there is more ISIL there," Kirby said, using a common acronym for the extremist group. Their greater numbers are providing more targets for US bombs, he said yesterday.
Kirby said Kobani remains in danger of falling to the Islamic State fighters, who are intently focused on the city. "These guys want to grab ground. They want territory," he said. "Kobani is a territory they want."
John Allen, the retired Marine general who is President Barack Obama's coordinator of the coalition campaign against the Islamic State group, described the intensification of US airstrikes in Kobani as a humanitarian move.
"There was a need for additional fire support to go in to try to relieve the defenders" and to buy time and space for them to get better organized, Allen said.
Activists and officials in the region said the airstrikes, which have been joined in some cases by coalition partners including Saudi Arabia, have bolstered the Kurdish militiamen fighting pitched battles in the city and making small advances.
