World

British bombers hit ISIS oilfields in Syria for 2nd time

British bombers made their second round of strikes on Islamic State targets in Syria late on Friday, again hitting oilfields, British Secretary of State for Defence Michael Fallon said on Saturday.

Parliament approved expanding anti-ISIS airstrikes to Syria on Thursday

British Secretary of State for Defence Michael Fallon speaks to British Royal Air Force personnel during a visit to RAF Akrotiri in southern Cyprus on Saturday. Fallon says British bombers made their second round of strikes on ISIS targets in Syria on Friday. (Darren Staples/Reuters)

British bombers made their second round of strikes on Islamic State targets in Syria late on Friday, again hitting oilfields, British Secretary of State for Defence Michael Fallon said on Saturday.

"Last night we saw the Typhoons in action for the first time, successfully hitting an oilfield, oil well heads in eastern Syria out in the Omar field," Fallon told Sky News.

British lawmakers approved the bombing of Islamic State targets in Syria on Thursday. Hours after that approval, British bombers struck the oilfields that the government says are being used to fund attacks on the West.

Previously, the British contingent of the U.S.-led anti-ISIS mission participated in strikes on Iraq but not Syria.

The Typhoon fighter bombers had only arrived at Britain's airbase in Akrotiri, Cyprus on Thursday, bolstering its strike force of Tornado warplanes. Fallon was speaking during a visit to the British airbase in Cyprus.