US-backed rebels advanced on a key Islamic State group supply line between Syria and Iraq overnight, seizing a small airbase near the border, a monitor said on Wednesday.
The New Syrian Army said the operation -- launched on Tuesday -- is aimed at the severing the supply line through the Albu Kamal crossing that links areas under IS control in eastern Syria and Iraq's Anbar province.
The rebels said the operation was coordinated with Iraqi forces that were advancing on the crossing from the other side of the border.
IS seized the crossing in mid-2014, when it overran swathes of territory on both sides of the border and declared a self-styled "caliphate".
The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said the NSA had advanced to within five kilometres (three miles) of Albu Kamal from both the northwest and southwest.
As NSA forces edged closer, IS beheaded five young men in the town it said were working with the US-backed group, the Britain-based monitoring group said.
"The NSA and supporting forces captured Al-Hamdan airport, five kilometres northwest of Albu Kamal with air support from the coalition," said Observatory chief Rami Abdel Rahman.
He had no immediate word on casualties in the fighting.
NSA fighters were trained in Jordan by US and British troops.
They already captured the Al-Tanaf border crossing between Syria and Iraq earlier this year.
IS is facing growing pressure from US-backed offensives in both Syria and Iraq.
In northern Syria, the Syrian Democratic Forces alliance of Kurdish and Arab fighters has edged into the IS stronghold of Manbij with coalition air support.
In Iraq, authorities declared at the weekend that they were in full control of the city of Fallujah, west of Baghdad, long an emblematic bastion for IS.

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