Nelson Mail

Iraq claims win in war with Isis

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LEBANON: After three years of combat, Iraq’s prime minister declared victory yesterday over Islamic State, saying government forces have driven the militants from their last footholds in the country.

Addressing a conference in Baghdad, Prime Minister Haider Abadi said Iraqi troops were now in full control of the desert regions along the border with Syria.

‘‘Our enemy wanted to destroy our civilisati­on, but we have won through our unity and our determinat­ion,’’ Abadi said.

The announceme­nt came two days after the Russian military said it had accomplish­ed its mission of helping President Bashar al-Assad defeat Islamic State in neighbouri­ng Syria, although fighting continues in pockets near the Iraqi border.

The US-led coalition, which provided air support and other military aid to Abadi’s government, congratula­ted the Iraqis on their ‘‘significan­t victory.’’

But the militants have recovered from previous setbacks, and commanders warn that they remain capable of inflicting deadly attacks, in Iraq and around the world. Security experts believe Islamic State will likely revert to a more convention­al guerilla-style insurgency.

The victory also comes at enormous cost. The coalition acknowledg­es that its forces have killed at least 800 civilians in Iraq and Syria since it launched its campaign against Islamic State in 2014. Monitoring groups put the toll much higher, at least 5961, according to the London-based group Airwars.

The fighting ravaged major cities, and more than 3 million Iraqis remain displaced.

Islamic State stunned the world when its fighters stormed across the border from Syria and took control of Iraq’s second-largest city, Mosul, in 2014.

At the height of its power, the group’s’ self-styled caliphate, or Islamic state, spanned about a third of both countries. But the militants have been losing territory quickly this year in the face of multiple assaults.

Iraqi forces, backed by US air power, recaptured Mosul in July after a nine-month campaign. Raqqa, the group’s de facto capital in Syria, fell to a US-backed alliance of Kurdish and Arab militias in September.

Since then, fighting has been concentrat­ed in cities and towns along the Euphrates River and desert areas straddling the porous Syria-Iraq border.

The whereabout­s of the militants’ leader, Abu Bakr Baghdadi, remains unknown. In September, Islamic State released a purported audio recording of Baghdadi in which he urged followers around the world to intensify attacks.

‘‘Now the Americans, the Russians and the Europeans are living in terror in their countries, fearing the strikes of the mujahedeen,’’ he said. ‘‘Do not let the crusaders and apostates enjoy a good life or a pleasant living in the middle of their countries, while your brothers are experienci­ng bombardmen­t, killing and destructio­n.’’ - Los Angeles Times

 ?? PHOTO: AP ?? Iraq Prime Minister Haider al-Abadi during a press conference, in Baghdad.
PHOTO: AP Iraq Prime Minister Haider al-Abadi during a press conference, in Baghdad.

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