(CNN)The
French military has carried out its first airstrikes against ISIS in
Syria, according to a statement from the office of France's presidency.
The country had announced earlier this month that it would expand its aerial campaign against ISIS in Iraq -- which it began a year ago -- to include the militant group's positions in Syria.
The
French president's office said that the strikes in Syria, which began
Sunday, were based on intelligence gathered from air surveillance
operations conducted over Syria during the past two weeks.
"Our
country confirms its firm commitment to the fight against the terrorist
threat Daesh," the statement said, using the Arabic acronym for ISIS.
"We will strike whenever our national security is at stake."
President
Francois Hollande, speaking on the sidelines of the U.N. General
Assembly in New York, described the camp as a "threat to our country."
"We reached our goal and the whole training camp was destroyed," Hollande said.
Six
aircraft were used in the mission, which was led by the French but
closely coordinated with the U.S.-led coalition, he said.
Despite
the "horrible acts" committed by ISIS, Hollande placed the blame for
the Syrian crisis on the country's long time strongman Bashar al-Assad.
"Bashar
al Assad is the main person at fault, although Daesh commits horrible
acts," Hollande said. "The future of Syria cannot happen with Bashar al
Assad."
String of terrorist attacks
France has been the site of a number of terrorist attacks this year.
Islamic extremists killed 17 people in a quick succession of attacks in Paris in January, including the shooting deaths of staff members in the offices of the satirical magazine Charlie Hebdo.
In June, authorities said a man in southeastern France decapitated his boss, displayed the severed head with Islamist banners and also set off an explosion in a factory. And last month, three American men brought down a suspected terrorist gunman who tried to open fire on a train bound for France.
But
France has also linked the refugee crisis Europe is facing in part to
ISIS, saying it would strike the group for driving thousands of
civilians out of Syria. "We're not going to receive 4 to 5 million
Syrians, so the problem has to be dealt with at source," French Prime Minister Manuel Valls told CNN's Christiane Amanpour.
France has been in talks with Russia about a political solution in Syria.
"Russia
supports the regime of Bashar (al) Assad. But it also wants to find a
political solution. And anyway, there will not be any political solution
without a dialogue with all of the parties who directly or indirectly
are involved with Syria," Valls said.
France also planned to hold talks about Syria with Iranian President Hassan Rouhani.
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