Beirut: US-backed Kurdish-led fighters have seized ground from Daesh in Syria, a monitor said on Tuesday, as the terrorists come under attack in their Fallujah bastion in neighbouring Iraq.

The Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF), who control a swathe of territory along the Turkish border, launched a push south towards the Daesh stronghold of Raqqa last week, capturing a string of villages in the north of Raqqa province.

“The SDF has captured 12 villages ... northwest of Raqqa in the past 36 hours,” Syrian Observatory for Human Rights chief Rami Abdul Rahman said.

Abdul Rahman said that the villages lie 80km or more from Raqqa itself, but the terrorists’ de facto Syria capital was not the immediate goal.

He said the target of the offensive was the town of Tabqa and its adjacent dam on the Euphrates River, which lie some 40km upstream.

Daesh lost 18 fighters in the fighting on Monday, taking its losses since the start of offensive on May 24 to 79, he said.

Among those killed were 24 child fighters from Daesh’s ‘Cubs of the Caliphate’ recruitment programme.

The Observatory had no immediate word on SDF losses or any civilian deaths.

The United States has ignored angry protests from its Nato ally Turkey to back the SDF, an alliance of Kurdish and Arab fighters it regards as the most effective force on the ground against Daesh in Syria.

It has deployed more than 200 special forces personnel to work alongside it.

Ankara regards the alliance’s most powerful component — the Kurdish People’s Protection Units (YPG) — as a branch of the rebel Kurdistan Worker’s Party (PKK), which has waged a three-decade insurgency against the Turkish army.

Foreign Minister Mevlut Cavusoglu said on Sunday that Ankara was ready to join forces with Washington for a special operation inside Syria on the condition it did not involve the YPG.