BAGHDAD: Iraqi forces fought for a strategic university and launched air strikes in militant-held Tikrit, while United States has confirmed on Friday that its drone was flying over Baghdad.
Iraq's top cleric meanwhile urged the country's leaders to unite, after Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki conceded political measures are needed to defeat the militant-led offensive that overrun major parts of five provinces.
In further fallout from the crisis, the president of Iraq's autonomous Kurdish region declared there was no going back on Kurdish self-rule in disputed territory, including ethnically divided northern oil city Kirkuk, now defended against the militants by Kurdish fighters.
International agencies also raised alarm bells over the humanitarian consequences of the fighting, with up to 10,000 people having fled a northern town in recent days and 1.2 million displaced by unrest in Iraq this year.
A senior American official said that the US military was flying "a few" armed drones over Baghdad to defend American troops and diplomats in the city if necessary.
But officials said the drones would not be used for offensive strikes against the militant offensive, led by Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL) but involving other groups as well.
Iraqi forces swooped into Tikrit University by helicopter on Thursday, and a police major said that there were periodic clashes there on Friday.
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