The United States has sent a Marine Corps artillery battery into Syria to help defeat the Islamic State group in Raqa, the capital of their supposed caliphate, a US official has said.
The official said troops from the 11th Marine Expeditionary Unit had deployed a battery of 155mm Howitzers to an outpost in Syria.
The Marines "are ready to conduct their mission" to support the offensive on Raqa, the official said on Wednesday, confirming a report in the Washington Post.
The move marks a significant step for conventional US forces in Syria.
Currently, the United States has limited its ground troops to about 500 special operations fighters whose job has been to train and assist the SDF, a local Arab-Kurdish alliance fighting IS.
According to the Post, the artillery deployment had been in the works "for some time" and was not part of President Donald Trump's demand for a new plan to increase the pace of the anti-IS war.
The artillery will allow the Marines to help support the SDF offensive, which has been gradually closing in on Raqa since last fall.
The Pentagon this week announced that it had also sent extra troops into Manbij to prevent competing factions fighting each other in the former IS stronghold.
US officials estimate there to be up to 4,000 jihadists in Raqa, a city of about 300,000 residents.