US military admits wayward supply drop

A bundle of ammunition and weapons dropped over the Syrian border town of Kobane likely ended up in jihadists' hands, the US military says.

Smoke rises during a clash between Syrian Kurdish fighters and IS.

Sniper and mortar fire from jihadists are preventing civilians from evacuating the town of Kobane. (AAP)

The US military has admitted that a bundle of ammunition and weapons dropped over the Syrian border town of Kobane drifted off course and likely ended up in the hands of Islamic State jihadists instead of Kurdish forces.

Officials said on Wednesday they had no reason to doubt the authenticity of a video posted online on Tuesday showing a masked gunman displaying a parachute and wooden crates full of grenades and rockets.

After an airdrop of weapons and medical supplies to Kurdish fighters in Kobane early on Monday, the US military had acknowledged that one of 28 bundles had missed and had to be destroyed in an air strike.

But Pentagon spokesman Colonel Steven Warren on Wednesday said "a second bundle also went astray and probably fell into enemy hands".

Warren said dropping supplies from the air was "extraordinarily complex" and it was "very common" for wind to blow a bundle off its intended target.

"We still know that the vast majority of the resupply bundles that we dropped went to friendly forces and were received by friendly forces," he said.

"There is always going to be some margin of error in these types of operations. We routinely overload these aircraft because we know some bundles may go astray."

He said that the items that likely fell into IS hands were "not enough equipment to give the enemy any type of advantage".

Washington has expanded its support to the Kurdish fighters in Kobane in the past week, ramping up air strikes and air dropping supplies from three C-130 cargo aircraft.

Kobane has become a high-stakes symbolic battle for both sides, with the IS group pouring in resources to try to seize the predominantly Kurdish town, which lies near the Turkish border.


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