The Jerusalem Post

Iraqi forces hold off Islamic State attack, seize road out of Mosul

City’s museum ‘empty of all artifacts’ after jihadist rampage

- • By ISABEL COLES and AHMED RASHEED

MOSUL/SULAIMANIY­A (Reuters) – Iraqi forces repelled an overnight Islamic State counteratt­ack near Mosul’s main government buildings and took full control on Wednesday of the last major road leading west to the terrorist-held town of Tal Afar.

Inside the city troops battled the Sunni Islamists, who hid among the remaining civilian population and deployed snipers and suicide car bombs to defend their last major Iraq stronghold.

The US-backed campaign to crush the insurgents saw Iraqi forces recapture the eastern side of the city in January, and launch their assault on the western half last month.

Fighting is expected to get tougher as Iraqi troops get push further into the more densely populated areas, including Mosul’s Old City.

Islamic State leader Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi declared the group’s self styled-caliphate, which has spanned areas of northern Iraq and eastern Syria, from the Nuri Mosque in Mosul’s old city in June 2014.

Terrorists used car bombs in their nighttime counteratt­ack around the governorat­e building, Maj.-Gen. Ali Kadhem al-Lami of the Federal Police’s Fifth Division told a Reuters correspond­ent near the site. “Today we’re clearing the area which was liberated,” he said.

Military officials had said that Rapid Response troops, an elite Interior Ministry division, recaptured the provincial government headquarte­rs on Tuesday, as well as the central bank branch and the museum where Islamists filmed themselves destroying priceless statues in 2015.

“The museum is completely empty of all artifacts. They were stolen, possibly smuggled,” Lami said. Reuters was not yet able to access the museum to verify.

Lami said most of the fighters that had fought around the governorat­e building were local but there were some foreigners.

“An order was issued for foreign fighters with families to withdraw with them. Those who do not have a family should stay and fight, whether foreign or local,” he said.

The few families remaining in the nearby Dawasa district said the Islamists had set some of their homes on fire as security forces advanced and that the gunmen had fought among themselves.

Later on Wednesday, the Iraqi military said the army and Shi’ite paramilita­ry forces had taken full control of the last major road leading west out of Mosul toward the town of Tal Afar, state TV reported.

The 9th Armored Division and two Shi’ite fighting groups had “isolated the right bank [western side of Mosul] from Tal Afar,” it said.

The road links Mosul to Tal Afar, another Islamic State stronghold 60 km. to the west, and then to the Syrian border.

Shi’ite militias that are part of the Mosul campaign began to close in on Tal Afar late last year, after the offensive was launched, and said they linked up with Kurdish fighters nearby to encircle the jihadists.

A 100,000-strong force of Iraqi military units, Shi’ite forces and Kurdish fighters, backed by a US-led coalition, have fought since October in the intensive Mosul campaign.

Losing Mosul would deal a fatal blow to the Iraqi part of Islamic State’s self-styled caliphate.

Iraq’s Prime Minister Haider al-Abadi said Iraq would continue hitting Islamic State targets in Syria, as well as in neighborin­g countries if they give their approval.

Abadi on February 24 announced the first Iraqi air strike on Syrian territory, targeting Islamic State positions in retaliatio­n for bomb attacks in Baghdad.

“I respect the sovereignt­y of states, and I have secured the approval of Syria to strike positions [on its territory],” Abadi told a conference in the Iraqi Kurdish city of Sulaimaniy­a on Wednesday.

“I will not hesitate to strike the positions of the terrorists in the neighborin­g countries. We will keep on fighting them,” he said.

The jihadist group has lost most cities it captured in northern and western Iraq in 2014 and 2015.

In Syria, it still holds Raqqa city as its main stronghold, as well as most of Deir al-Zor province, but is losing ground to an array of separate enemies, including US-backed forces and the Russian-backed Syrian Army.

The group has carried out bombings in Iraqi and Syrian cities as its caliphate has shrunk.

 ?? (Zohra Bensemra/Reuters) ?? IRAQIS FLEE their homes as government forces battle with Islamic State terrorists in western Mosul yesterday.
(Zohra Bensemra/Reuters) IRAQIS FLEE their homes as government forces battle with Islamic State terrorists in western Mosul yesterday.

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