Khaleej Times

Militants feel heat of the joint assault

- Haider Al Abadi Iraq’s Prime Minister

mosul/beirut — Western-backed forces edged into the final redoubts of the two capitals of Daesh’s selfdeclar­ed caliphate in Iraq and Syria on Tuesday, hampered by fierce resistance from the militants and the presence of human shields.

Iraqi commanders have predicted final victory in Mosul this week after a grinding eight-month assault on the once two-million-strong city pushed Daesh into a rectangle no more than 300 by 500 metres beside the Tigris river.

In Raqqa, Daesh’s headquarte­rs in northern Syria from where it plotted attacks around the world, US-backed militia were fighting inside the historic Old City after coalition air strikes breached its walls in two places.

Victory over the hardline militants in both cities would mark the effective end of the three-year-old caliphate, although a few towns and large rural areas of Iraq and Syria remain under their control.

But their centres are a maze of narrow alleyways packed with civilians and planted with multiple explosive devices by the militants, who are also using drones and suicide bombings.

“The presence of civilians has affected the troops’ advance a lot,” said a commander in Mosul from the Rapid Response Division, an elite Interior Ministry unit, estimating there were 10,000 civilians, including some brought in as human shields.

Iraqi commanders called in air strikes on targets just 50 metres away from them and fighting got close enough at one point for the militants to throw a hand grenade at the troops.

“The directions from the commander-in-chief of the armed forces are to advance slowly to preserve civilians’ lives and this is what we are doing,” the officer said on Iraqi state TV without being named.

The US-led internatio­nal coalition supporting the Iraqi military and the Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF) fighting Daesh in Raqqa said it had been forced to bomb the Old City’s ancient wall because the militants were controllin­g the existing breaches.

“SDF fighters would have been channelled through these locations and were extremely vulnerable as they were targeted with vehiclebor­ne IEDs (car bombs) and indirect fire as well as direct fire from heavy machinegun­s, rocket-propelled grenades and snipers as they tried to breach the Old City,” it said.

The assault on Raqqa, which began last month, was going to plan, though Daesh’s use of motion sensor-triggered mines and drones that drop bombs had slowed down operations a little, an SDF spokespers­on said by telephone.

SDF fighters had seized an ancient palace, Qasr Al Banat, in the eastern part of the Old City, an SDF statement said.

On Thursday, Iraqi forces retook Mosul’s Grand Al Nuri mosque from where Daesh leader Abu Bakr Al Baghdadi declared the caliphate.

Baghdadi is believed to be hiding near the Iraq-Syrian border, according to US and Iraqi military sources and the number of Daesh militants fighting in Mosul and Raqqa has dwindled from thousands to hundreds.

Iraqi authoritie­s are planning a week of nationwide celebratio­ns to mark the end of the offensive and Prime Minister Haider Al Abadi is expected to visit Mosul to formally declare victory.

Hundreds of thousands of people have fled Mosul and Raqqa, which have been devastated by the fighting, creating the challenges of rebuilding and preventing revenge attacks.

Praise be to God, we managed to liberate (Mosul) and proved the others were wrong, the people of Mosul supported and stood with our security forces against terrorism

 ?? AP ?? Fleeing Iraqi civilians walk past the heavily damaged Al Nuri mosque as smoke rises in the background in the Old City of Mosul. —
AP Fleeing Iraqi civilians walk past the heavily damaged Al Nuri mosque as smoke rises in the background in the Old City of Mosul. —
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