Millennium Post

Iraqi forces yet to seal off Mosul as battle enters second month

Over 57,000 people have been displaced because of the fighting, says a UN estimate

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BAGHDAD: The Us-backed offensive to crush the Islamic State (IS) group in its last major stronghold in Iraq entered the second month on Thursday as forces, arrayed against the hardline Sunni group, finally sought to seal off Mosul from all sides.

The militants have been steadily retreating from areas around Mosul into the city since the battle started on October 17, with air and ground support from a Us-led coalition.

An elite army unit, the Counter Terrorism Service, breached the city’s eastern limits for the first time two weeks ago. Other army units are yet to enter from the northern and the southern sides.

Another breakthrou­gh came on Wednesday, when Iranian-backed militia announced the capture of an airbase west of Mosul – a part of their campaign to choke off the route between the Syrian and Iraqi parts of the caliphate IS had declared in 2014.

The capture of the Tal Afar base also offers the mainly Shi’ite forces a launchpad for operations against the IS targets in Syria and highlights the potential for the Mosul operation to reshape strategic power across northern Iraq.

To the east of Mosul, Kurdish peshmerga forces are also capturing territory well outside the traditiona­l borders of their autonomous region.

The offensive to retake Mosul, the largest city under the IS control in Iraq and Syria, is turning into the biggest battle in Iraq’s turbulent history since the Us-led invasion that toppled the Saddam Hussein government in 2003.

Iraqi authoritie­s have declined to give a timeline for the recapture of the entire city, but it is likely to last for months.

The militants have launched waves of counter-attacks against the advancing forces, tying them down in lethal urban combat in narrow streets

still full of residents.

The city’s capture is seen as crucial towards dismantlin­g the caliphate, and IS leader Abu Bakr al-baghdadi, believed to have withdrawn to a remote area near the Syrian border, has told his fighters there can be no retreat. Iraqi military estimates put the number of IS fighters in the city at 5,000 to 6,000. Facing them is a 100,000-strong coalition of Iraqi government forces, Kurdish fighters and Shi’ite paramilita­ry units.

MILITANTS PROVE RESILIENT

Iraqi authoritie­s have not published a casualty toll for the

campaign overall – either for security forces, civilians or IS fighters. The warring sides claim to have inflicted thousands of casualties in enemy ranks. Nearly 57,000 people have been displaced because of the fighting, moving from villages and towns around the city to government-held areas, according to UN estimates.

The figure does not include the thousands of people rounded up in villages around Mosul and forced to accompany IS fighters to cover their retreat towards the city.

In some cases, men of fighting age were separated from those groups and summarily killed, according to residents

and rights groups. The Human Rights Watch said on Thursday more than 300 former police officers were expected to have been killed last month and buried in a mass grave near the town of Hammam al-alil, south of Mosul.

Government forces are still fighting in a dozen of about 50 neighborho­ods on the eastern part of Mosul, which is divided by the Tigris river that runs through its centre.

The militants are dug in among the civilians as a defense tactic to hamper airstrikes, moving around the city through tunnels, driving suicide car bombs into advancing troops and hitting them with sniper and mortar fire.

The resilience of IS’S defenses has forced a greater involvemen­t from the coalition made up mainly of western nations, including Britain, France, Italy, Canada and Australia.

CANADIANS IN COMBAT

Canadian military trainers, operating with the Kurdish fighters, have clashed several dozen times with IS militants over the last month, defence officials said in Ottawa on Wednesday. On three occasions, the troops were forced to use anti-armor rockets to destroy suspected car bombs, said Major-general Michael Rouleau, commander of Canada’s special forces.

The United States has also deployed Apache helicopter­s to support Iraqi troops engaged in urban warfare in eastern Mosul. The forces taking part in the fighting have different and sometime conflictin­g agendas that could complicate the continuati­on of the battle or the stabilizat­ion of the region of Mosul after the IS’S defeat.

NINEVEH IS MOSAIC

The Nineveh region, surroundin­g Mosul, is a mosaic of ethnic and religious communitie­s –Arabs, Turkmen, Kurds, Yazidis, Christians, Sunnis and Shi’ites – though Sunni Arabs comprise the overwhelmi­ng majority.

The autonomous Kurdistan Regional Government (KRG) suggested on Wednesday it would try to expand the area it rules in northern Iraq to include surroundin­g villages and towns captured by Kurdish fighters from the IS, andbut it said the agreement did not cover territory taken by peshmerga fighters from Islamic State forces between 2014 and the start of the Mosul campaign last month, which includes the contested region of Kirkuk.

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