Global Times

Iraqi forces seize Mosul airport from IS

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Iraqi forces on Thursday entered Mosul airport, which lies on the southern edge of the city, for the first time since the Islamic State group overran the region in 2014.

Backed by jets, gunships and drones, forces blitzed their way across open areas south of Mosul and entered the airport compound, apparently meeting limited resistance but strafing the area for suspected snipers.

The interior ministry’s Rapid Response units, followed by federal police forces, entered the airport compound from the southwest after pushing north from the village of Al- Buseif.

“We have entered the airport and engineerin­g units are clearing the roads,” Hisham Abdul Kadhem, commander of the Rapid Response’s Scorpion Regiment, told AFP inside the airport.

Attack helicopter­s fired rockets at an old sugar factory that stands next to the perimeter wall, sending a cloud of ash floating across the area.

On the road leading to the southern end of the airport, the body of an IS fighter lay next to a motorbike.

While there was no evidence of fierce resistance from within the airport, Iraqi forces continued to rain fire on the area, including on the sugar factory which they suspected still sheltered IS snipers.

Little was left standing inside the perimeter and what used to be the runway was littered with dirt and rubble.

The regional command said elite forces from the Counter-Terrorism Service were simultaneo­usly attacking the neighborin­g Ghazlani military base, where some of them were stationed before IS seized Mosul.

Control of the base and airport would set government forces up to enter Mosul neighborho­ods on the west bank of the Tigris, a month after declaring full control of the east bank.

The US- led coalition has played a key role in supporting Iraqi forces with air strikes and advisers on the ground, and on Thursday US forces were seen on the front lines.

The American troops are not supposed to be doing the actual fighting but in recent weeks have got so close to the front that they have come under attack, coalition spokesman Colonel John Dorrian said.

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