Taranaki Daily News

Iraqi forces advance as IS attacks in west

-

IRAQ: Iraqi Kurdish forces pushed toward Mosul yesterday, cordoning off eight villages and coming within 9km of the northern city held by the Islamic State group, which staged an attack in a western town hundreds of kilometres away in an apparent diversiona­ry tactic.

The Kurdish forces, known as peshmerga, said the area they cordoned off measures around 100 square kilometres, and that they also secured a ‘‘significan­t stretch’’ of highway. The statement said eight car bombs were destroyed in the operation, including three by US-led coalition aircraft, and ‘‘dozens’’ of militants were killed.

The offensive near the town of Bashiqa came nearly a week after Iraq announced the start of the long-awaited Mosul offensive. Iraqi and Kurdish forces are approachin­g from the north, east and south through a belt of mostly abandoned and heavily mined villages scattered across the Ninevah plain. Major General Haider Fadhi, of Iraq’s special forces said they also took part in the operation, and that Bashiqa was now completely encircled.

IS has put up stiff resistance in many areas and has carried out attacks further afield that appear aimed at diverting attention from the Mosul operation.

IS militants stormed into the town of Rutba, in far western Iraq, unleashing three suicide car bombs that were blown up before hitting their targets, according to the spokesman for the Joint Military Command, Brigadier General Yahya Rasool.

He said some militants were killed, without giving an exact figure, and declined to say whether any civilians or Iraqi forces were killed. He said the militants did not seize any government buildings and that the situation ‘‘is under control.’’

The IS-run Aamaq news agency had earlier said militants stormed Rutba from several directions.

Lieutenant General Stephen Townsend, the top US commander in Iraq, confirmed there had been a complex attack in Rutba and said he expects more such diversiona­ry attacks as Iraqi forces close in on Mosul.

IS carried out a large assault on the northern city of Kirkuk on Saturday, in which more than 50 militants stormed government compounds and other targets, setting off more than 24 hours of heavy fighting and killing at least 80 people, mainly security forces.

The Mosul offensive involves more than 25,000 Iraqi ground forces as well as US-led coalition aircraft and advisers. It is expected to take weeks, if not months, to drive IS from Iraq’s second-largest city, which is home to more than a million civilians.

Bashiqa is close to a military base of the same name where some 500 Turkish troops are training Sunni and Kurdish fighters for the Mosul offensive. Turkey’s prime minister, Binali Yildirim , told reporters yesterday that Turkish tanks and artillery had begun aiding the Kurdish forces in the Bashiqa offensive.

The presence of the Turkish troops has angered Iraq, which says it never gave them permission to enter the country and has called on them to withdraw. Turkey has refused, insisting that it play a role in retaking Mosul from IS.

US Defence Secretary Ash Carter has visited both countries in recent days, and was in the Kurdish regional capital, Irbil, yesterday.

After meeting with Turkish leaders, Carter announced an ‘‘agreement in principle’’ for Turkey to have a role in the operation. But Iraqi Prime Minister Haider al-Abadi told Carter that Mosul was an ‘‘Iraqi battle.’’

The forces taking part in the Mosul offensive include Iraqi troops, the peshmerga, Sunni tribal fighters and state-sanctioned Shiite militias.

Many fear the operation could heighten tensions between Iraq’s different communitie­s, which are allied against IS but divided over a host of other issues, including the fate of territorie­s near mostly Sunni Mosul that are claimed by the largely autonomous Kurdish region and the central government.

Carter praised the peshmerga, saying they ‘‘fight extremely well,’’ but also acknowledg­ed that they had suffered casualties.

Brig Gen Halgord Hekmet, a spokesman for the Kurdish forces, told reporters that 25 of their troops have been killed since the battle to retake Mosul began and a ‘‘large number’’ had been wounded. - AP

 ?? PHOTO: REUTERS ?? A convoy of armoured vehicles belonging to internatio­nal coalition troops drive during the operation against Islamic State militants outside the town of Naweran near Mosul.
PHOTO: REUTERS A convoy of armoured vehicles belonging to internatio­nal coalition troops drive during the operation against Islamic State militants outside the town of Naweran near Mosul.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from New Zealand