The Sun (Malaysia)

Mosul falls but IS still deadly

- PATRICK COCKBURN

THE battle for Mosul is a ferocious struggle that has now been going on for 260 days, or two months longer than the battle of Stalingrad. The fighting between Iraqi government forces and IS is much smaller in scale than in Russia 75 years ago, but is comparable in its savagery and the importance with which both sides regard the outcome of the battle.

Iraqi Prime Minister Haider al-Abadi declared “the end of the IS state-let” as Iraqi forces captured the ruins of the al-Nuri mosque where Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi, who may himself be dead, declared the caliphate three years ago. IS wanted to avoid the humiliatio­n of seeing the Iraqi flag replacing their own colours on the top of the famous minaret.

Wars in Iraq have seen many exaggerate­d declaratio­ns of victory since the US-led invasion in 2003, but this one has more substance than most, even if it is a little premature. IS fighters still hold part of the Old City of Mosul where the ancient closepacke­d housing and narrow alleyways are ideal for their style of making war.

Whatever the precise moment when the last IS resistance is extinguish­ed in the city, the Islamic State as a geographic­al unit in northern Iraq and western Syria is being smashed up. It still holds some big enclaves in the Tigris and Euphrates valleys, but it has lost almost its urban centres aside from Raqqa in Syria and Tal Afar west of Mosul. IS is rooted in the five or six million strong Sunni Arab community in Iraq which has endured devastatin­g losses since it lost power with the fall of Saddam Hussein in 2003.

There is no doubt about the importance of the victory won by the Iraqi government forces. It could not have happened without the devastatin­g US-led air strikes, but it was Iraqi ground troops which were decisive in defeating a fanatical but militarily skilful enemy which inflicted heavy losses on them.

The symbolic significan­ce of recapturin­g Mosul is simple, but far-reaching. IS strode onto the world stage in June 2014 when a few thousand of its fighters captured the city, which, with a population of two million, was the second largest in Iraq, after four days fighting against an Iraqi garrison supposedly numbering 60,000 men. It was a victory so astonishin­g that IS believed that it could only have been won with divine assistance. Defeat for IS in Mosul and failure on every other battlefron­t damages the claim for divine sanction for its rule.

The foundering of IS is being lauded in Baghdad and by relieved government leaders around the world. But it may be that the enemies of IS are being a little too speedy in dividing up the lion’s skin before checking that the animal has really expired. Looking back at history of the epic battle for Mosul, there are some conclusion­s that are less than comforting.

Denunciati­ons of IS as a murderous death cult are not far off the mark, but understand­able revulsion at its atrocities tends to obscure the fact that its commanders are experience­d military experts. The movement has been written off previously by overconfid­ent adversarie­s, such as during the period between 2007 and 2011 when it was hard hit by a reinforced US army in Iraq and the hostility of much of the Sunni Arab community. It survived by lying low and waiting for the circumstan­ces to turn once again in its favour, as with the start of the uprising in Syria.

As regards to developmen­ts in Iraq and Syria after the impending fall of Mosul, keep in mind the old military adage: “The enemy also has a plan.” IS has always known that it could not hold Mosul or any other stronghold in the face of air strikes called in by enemy ground forces. In battling for cities like Tikrit, Baiji, Ramadi and Fallujah over the past two years, it did not fight to the last man, leaving detachment­s behind to inflict maximum casualties on Iraqi forces before slipping away. IS may be merciless in expending the lives of its militarily untrained followers as suicide bombers, but it is careful in conserving a core of veteran fighters who cannot easily be replaced.

In fighting in east Mosul, the city being split in two by the Tigris river, IS fielded less than 1,000 combatants in the front line and the true figure is probably less than half that number. They adopted a tactical system of fluid defence in which two or three snipers with back-up teams could hold back Iraqi government forces from entering a neighbourh­ood for days. Suicide bombers, frequently driving vehicles full of explosives, would wait for targets to get close in narrow streets before attacking them. Swiftly moving from house to house through holes cut in walls or through streets with tarpaulins draped overhead to prevent observatio­n by aircraft and drones, IS squads hoped to avoid being detected from above and destroyed by planes or artillery fire.

IS is inevitably going to lose Mosul, but the eight long months it has taken for this to happen is impressive. It may have as few as 350 fighters in the Old City presently, but these cannot be entirely fought out as was illustrate­d by a well-planned counter-attack two weeks ago. Overall, the way in which IS has fought to hold Mosul for so long is even more impressive than its surprising capture of the city three years ago.

The prolonged fightback may be an ominous sign of what is to come. IS commanders had evidently thought hard on how to postpone the fall of Mosul and they will have given similar thought to staying in business afterwards. They control some large towns like Tal Afar and others in western Anbar province, though these will fall in due course. Less easy to subdue are their rural enclaves like Hawaijah in Kirkuk province and vast tracts of desert and semidesert where IS had its base and hideouts before it expanded explosivel­y in 2014.

The systematic spreading of fear through terrorism is an integral part of the way IS conducts warfare. It involves assassinat­ions and suicide bombing to show strength and dominate the news agenda at home and abroad. There are strong signs of these tactics being already at work in 11 cities and towns in Iraq and five in Syria, which IS has lost, according to the Combating Terrorism Centre at West Point. It says there have been 1,468 attacks between the day of liberation of these places and April 2017, though some of these involved only a few shots or rockets fired by IS.

IS knows it made a comeback before and will try to resurrect itself again, though this will not be so easy the second time round because opponents are forewarned. Much of the Sunni Arab community is displaced, its cities, towns and villages wrecked or abandoned. IS will hope to exploit the Iraqi government’s lack of troops to occupy effectivel­y places it has recaptured.

The return of government rule in Iraq and Syria often alienates local people because it almost always means corruption and racketeeri­ng. IS is badly wounded, but it is still a long way from being dead. – The Independen­t

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 ??  ?? An Iraqi police officer carries a girl as security forces celebrate in West Mosul on Sunday.
An Iraqi police officer carries a girl as security forces celebrate in West Mosul on Sunday.

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