"Near Mosul, six strikes…destroyed 11 mortar systems, three ISIS [Daesh] headquarters, three ISIS-held buildings, two anti-air artillery systems, two tactical vehicles, two supply caches, a front-end loader, a fighting position, a weapons facility, a VBIED and an IED," the release stated on Tuesday.
The strikes also engaged two Daesh tactical units, damaged nine supply routes and suppressed 14 mortar teams and a tactical unit.
On Sunday, Iraqi Prime Minister Haider Abadi announced the beginning of operations to liberate the western part of Mosul from the Daesh. Iraqi troops backed by the coalition freed the eastern part of the city in January after a four-month operation.
The coalition carried out three additional strikes in Iraq on Monday, engaging two Daesh tactical units and destroying buildings, a staging area, weapons cache, VBIED, two VBIED facilities, a tactical vehicle and a drone near Bayji, Kisik and Tal Afar.
The strikes engaged Islamic State tactical units, destroyed buildings, fighting positions, a VBIED, weapons facility, oil wellheads and tanker trucks and damaged a bridge and a building.
The US-led coalition of 68 nations is conducting airstrikes against the Islamic State in Syria and Iraq. The strikes Iraq are conducted in support of the Iraqi government, but those in Syria are not authorized by the government of President Bashar Assad or the UN Security Council.
The Islamic State, also known as Daesh in Arabic, is outlawed in the United States, Russia and numerous other countries.