Story highlights The U.N. declares its highest level of emergency

U.S. military assessment determines far fewer Yazidis trapped than feared

100 Yazidi women and children are being held captive, ISIS commander tells CNN

''I can confirm those women and children have entered Mosul,'' ISIS commander says

A mass evacuation of Yazidis hiding from extremist fighters on Iraq's Sinjar Mountains is unlikely following an assessment by the U.S. State Department and military that found far fewer people trapped than previously feared.

Once believed to be in the tens of thousands, the number of Yazidis in the mountains is "now in the low thousands," Brett McGurk, a deputy assistant secretary of state, told CNN on Wednesday.

The news broke the same day a senior commander with the Islamic State, formerly known as the Islamic State in Iraq and Syria, claimed ISIS fighters abducted more than 100 Yazidi women and children from Sinjar.

The ISIS commander, who has knowledge of the events that unfolded, said the fighters killed a large number of men when they took over the town more than a week ago.

"At that time, they took Yazidi women and children, and I can confirm those women and children have entered Mosul," the commander said by telephone. "...The Islamic State is taking this opportunity to call them to Islam."

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Photos: Iraqi refugees fleeing ISIS Photos: Iraqi refugees fleeing ISIS Iraqi refugees fleeing ISIS – A Yazidi family from Sinjar cleans a spot for themselves in a derelict building that houses more than a thousand other refugees on Thursday, August 14, in Zakho, Iraq. Hide Caption 1 of 17 Photos: Iraqi refugees fleeing ISIS Iraqi refugees fleeing ISIS – A woman and child sit in the makeshift housing on Thursday. Hide Caption 2 of 17 Photos: Iraqi refugees fleeing ISIS Iraqi refugees fleeing ISIS – A Yazidi woman holds her baby while crossing Peshkhabour bridge from Syria back into Kurdish-controlled Iraq on Tuesday, August 12. Hide Caption 3 of 17 Photos: Iraqi refugees fleeing ISIS Iraqi refugees fleeing ISIS – Entire families carry nothing but the clothes on their back. Some are barefoot. And not everyone who set out on the arduous journey survived. Hide Caption 4 of 17 Photos: Iraqi refugees fleeing ISIS Iraqi refugees fleeing ISIS – The militant group ISIS, which now calls itself the Islamic State, executes civilians who don't adhere to its version of Sunni Islam. Hide Caption 5 of 17 Photos: Iraqi refugees fleeing ISIS Iraqi refugees fleeing ISIS – Yazidis fled into the barren and windswept Sinjar Mountains more than a week ago after ISIS captured their town. Hide Caption 6 of 17 Photos: Iraqi refugees fleeing ISIS Iraqi refugees fleeing ISIS – Descendants of Kurds and followers of an ancient pre-Islamic religion, Yazidis are one of Iraq's smallest minorities, and have been persecuted for centuries, but they have a strong sense of community. Hide Caption 7 of 17 Photos: Iraqi refugees fleeing ISIS Iraqi refugees fleeing ISIS – According to some accounts, Syrian Kurds also helped people use parts of northeastern Syria under their control to reach Kurdish areas of northern Iraq. Hide Caption 8 of 17 Photos: Iraqi refugees fleeing ISIS Iraqi refugees fleeing ISIS – A young refugee carries a disabled man across the bridge. Hide Caption 9 of 17 Photos: Iraqi refugees fleeing ISIS Iraqi refugees fleeing ISIS – Thousands trudge across a river to seek humanitarian aid in Syria. Hide Caption 10 of 17 Photos: Iraqi refugees fleeing ISIS Iraqi refugees fleeing ISIS – A number of those who made the treacherous trek off the mountain told CNN that PKK fighters control parts of the mountain, and they fed and protected them from ISIS. Hide Caption 11 of 17 Photos: Iraqi refugees fleeing ISIS Iraqi refugees fleeing ISIS – A Kurdish border guard watches while people cross. Hide Caption 12 of 17 Photos: Iraqi refugees fleeing ISIS Iraqi refugees fleeing ISIS – A senior Kurdish official estimated that as many as 70,000 people remain trapped on Mount Sinjar, and that at least 100 have died so far from dehydration and the heat. CNN could not independently confirm those estimates. Hide Caption 13 of 17 Photos: Iraqi refugees fleeing ISIS Iraqi refugees fleeing ISIS – A man weeps after been reunited with his family. Hide Caption 14 of 17 Photos: Iraqi refugees fleeing ISIS Iraqi refugees fleeing ISIS – A Kurdish Peshmerga stands in front of the bridge. Hide Caption 15 of 17 Photos: Iraqi refugees fleeing ISIS Iraqi refugees fleeing ISIS – Children rest after arriving back into Kurdish-controlled Iraq. Hide Caption 16 of 17 Photos: Iraqi refugees fleeing ISIS Iraqi refugees fleeing ISIS – A little girl was seen crossing the bridge by herself. The United States is sending more troops to northern Iraq, a move that U.S. officials told CNN is necessary to help in the rescue of tens of thousands of Yazidis trapped in the mountains. Hide Caption 17 of 17

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While CNN cannot independently confirm the claim, it follows reports by survivors who describe ISIS fighters grabbing families and separating the men from the women and children.

The plight of the Yazidis, coupled with the ISIS assault against Iraq's semiautonomous Kurdish region, prompted the United States to begin targeted airstrikes over the past several days.

The aim, according to President Barack Obama, is to help protect U.S. personnel in the area and to destroy ISIS positions around the mountains to ease the threat to minority groups.

The United States deployed 129 military advisers to get a firsthand look at the humanitarian crisis unfolding as ISIS fighters threaten Iraq's ethnic and religious minorities: Yazidis, Christians and Kurds.

As part of that effort, a group of about 20 U.S. State Department and military personnel spent 24 hours in the mountains to assess the numbers and conditions, Pentagon spokesman Rear Adm. John Kirby said.

"The Yazidis who remain are in better condition than previously believed and continue to have access to the food and water that we have dropped," he said, citing the success of humanitarian airdrops and airstrikes against ISIS.

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The problem, though, is far from over.

The United Nations on Wednesday announced its highest level of emergency for a humanitarian crisis, saying the number of people on the run from ISIS is of grave concern.

It estimates more than 400,000 people have been driven from their homes since June, when ISIS swept across the border from Syria into Iraq.

The group has waged a brutal campaign while seizing large swaths of northern and western Iraq, aiming to establish a caliphate -- an Islamic state -- that stretches from Syria to Iraq.

Of those displaced, more than 200,000 have poured into Dohuk province in recent weeks, where refugee camps have swelled since ISIS began its assault against Yazidis, Christians and Kurds.

By declaring what it calls a "Level 3 Emergency," the United Nations says it will trigger more resources to help.

Obama this week ordered the military advisers to the Kurdish capital of Irbil to assess the humanitarian crisis.

The advisers, made up of Marines and special operations forces, join hundreds of other American advisers already in the country advising Iraqi troops in their fight against ISIS, an offshoot of al Qaeda in Iraq.

The group has waged a brutal campaign while seizing large areas of territory this year in Iraq, aiming to establish a caliphate.

Adding to the crisis is Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki's refusal to step down after Haider al-Abadi was nominated to replace him.

In a televised address on Wednesday, he called the move to appoint al-Abadi as prime minister a constitutional violation.

Al-Maliki's political party won a majority during parliamentary elections in April, but not a super majority. Even so, al-Maliki has maintained that because his party won a majority, the next Prime Minister should come from his party.

He has filed a lawsuit in federal court to stop the formation of a new government, and he has said he wouldn't step down until the court has ruled.

"We need to protect the federal court and its decisions; no one has any ground to go against this court," al-Maliki said, while not specifically mentioning the name of Prime Minister-designate al-Abadi or any other leaders.