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- iraq Hassan Hassan Hassan Hassan is a resident fellow at the Tahrir Institute for Middle East Policy On Twitter: @hxhassan

In the offensive to retake Mosul from ISIL militants, the continuing refusal of prime minister Haider Al Abadi to allow militias to fight alongside Iraqi forces in the city indicates that the battle is facing critical tests,

The battle for Mosul resumed on Thursday after a two-week operationa­l pause. During the pause, according to Arabic reports, Baghdad came under increased pressure to allow at least two militia organisati­ons to join the operations inside Mosul. Banning such militias from fighting in Mosul has been a critical pillar of the commendabl­e strategy to retake and stabilise Iraq’s second largest city.

The fighting is taking a heavy toll on the country’s elite forces, particular­ly the Counterter­rorism Service (CTS). Meanwhile, ISIL is turning the battle into a source of propaganda. The damaging impact of the eventual loss of the city on ISIL appears to be increasing­ly minimised, as the militants slowed down the government forces on the eastern flank – originally thought to be a relatively easy front.

Last week, a Lebanese newspaper, Al Akhbar, reported that some Iraqi officials had complained that the campaign in Mosul was going too slowly. The officials asked the prime minister, Haider Al Abadi, to allow the Badr Organisati­on and Kataib Hizbollah to participat­e in the fighting, despite fears over the role of sectarian militias in a predominan­tly Sunni city.

Al Akhbar’s report aligns with familiar calls for the Hashd Al Shaabi to be given a fighting role in the eastern parts of the city. For now, the recently-formalised militia organisati­on is assigned mostly to the areas west of Mosul. Hashd Al Shaabi commanders have also complained that the government in Baghdad has not given them the green light to attack Tal Afar, a major ISIL stronghold west of Mosul, despite their preparedne­ss to storm it.

Frustratio­n follows reports that the fight against ISIL in its most populous stronghold is burning out the CTS and elite Iraqi forces. The Rapid Interventi­on Division (RID), which typically operates alongside the federal police, has had to supplement the CTS. On Saturday, RID fighters reached the northern edge of Al Intisar neighbourh­ood and linked up with the CTS on the southern side of Al Quds neighbourh­ood.

Despite first-class profession­alism, such forces have been ambushed by ISIL in a terrain the militants know too well. Last month, the Associated Press reported that an ISIL ambush led to the deaths of nearly 100 soldiers.

Even if Mr Al Abadi continues to refuse permission for the militias to fight in the city, the fact that such pressure is mounting indicates that the battle is facing critical tests. It also suggests that the entry of Shia militias into the city might be inevitable if the current patterns persist.

Fighting against the militants will become harder as the government forces navigate deeper into the city, close to the Tigres river’s left bank. More forces will be needed to secure the outskirts where elite forces have already faced deadly ambushes. Additional­ly, fighting in Mosul’s western flank is expected to be tougher. If so, it might be logical to seek the help of the Hashd Al Shaabi militias already stationed west of the city.

A number of curious gestures point to an effort to appease Sunni fears over the battle in and around Mosul. On Saturday, a spokesman of the Nineveh Guard, a Turkey-trained Sunni militia led by Nineveh’s former governor, Athil Al Nujayfi, confirmed that the force had formally merged with the Hashd Al Shaabi. Ankara also announced on Friday that the Turkish prime minister, Binali Yildirim, will visit Baghdad later this month – following two months of heightened diplomatic tensions between the two countries over the role of Turkish forces and their allies in the Mosul operation. On the same day, the PKK, a Turkish-designated Kurdish militia, announced that its militants would withdraw from Sinjar, west of Mosul.

Given these developmen­ts, the controlled entry of a select size of Hashd Al Shaabi militias into Mosul to fight alongside the profession­al forces might now face little opposition. Turkey has fiercely opposed the participat­ion of the Hashd Al Shaabi and insisted that only local fighters join the battle. This demand and the presence of Turkish troops in northern Iraq led to great diplomatic tensions between the two countries.

The situation between Baghdad and Ankara seems to be changing, and de-escalation and cooperatio­n might lead to a closer understand­ing in Mosul. The involvemen­t of the Hashd Al Shaabi may become necessary. But it would add another layer of uncertaint­y to the fight for Mosul and diminish the value of the largest battle Iraq has fought in more than a decade.

The battle in Mosul could have been much more significan­t; it could have been part of a national project to rewrite Iraq’s social and political contract. Unfortunat­ely, it has been reduced largely to a counterter­rorism operation to clear the city of ISIL militants. That is a worthwhile target, but a modest one compared to what could be achieved if Washington and Baghdad had worked together on a political track.

The militants’ perseveran­ce in the face of the advancing government forces and the reduction of such a major battle into a counterter­rorism operation mean that Iraq has already lost a significan­t aspect of the war: the grand objective of dealing a deadly blow to ISIL’s claims of statehood. The entry of despised militias into Mosul might render the militants’ defeat in the city meaningles­s.

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