The National - News

ISIL’s ‘caliphate’ has died in dust of Mosul, says Iraqi PM

Pro-government forces control area around Al Nouri

- Florian Neuhof Foreign Correspond­ent

ISIL’s self- declared state has come to an end, Iraqi prime minister Haider Al Abadi said yesterday, after troops took control of the area around Mosul’s Al Nouri mosque, where the terrorist group’s leader proclaimed its “caliphate” three years ago.

“We are seeing the end of the fake Daesh state,” Mr Al Abadi said on his Twitter account.

Iraqi forces advancing into the Old City, the last area of Mosul that has not been cleared of the insurgents, had reported reaching within metres of the mosque at daybreak yesterday.

The advance by elite counterter­rorism units known as the Iraqi Special Operations Forces is the latest incrementa­l gain in a battle that began in October last year, when the operation to liberate Iraq’s second-largest city was launched. ISIL blew up the mosque and its famous leaning minaret on June 21 as troops drew close after launching an offensive into the Old City three days earlier. Although now little more than a pile of rubble next to the base of the minaret, Al Nouri is still a coveted prize replete with symbolism.

ISIL chief Abu Bakr Al Baghdadi strode through the mosque to declare the rebirth of the caliphate, defunct since the end of the Ottoman Empire, from its pulpit in July 2014.

The insurgents had taken Mosul, routing tens of thousands of security personnel and capturing vast amounts of weapons and materiel.

The extremists’ self-proclaimed state at that time stretched across swaths of Iraq and Syria, and con- tinued to advance on Baghdad.

Iraq’s disintegra­ting regular army was unable to stem the tide, but eventually elite units, Shiite militia groups and air strikes by the US-led coalition halted the insurgents’ advance.

With the steady support of the coalition, the Iraqi military was rebuilt, while Iran continued its support of the militias, and ISIL’s gains were gradually rolled back over three years.

While ISIL is in its death throes in Mosul, declaratio­ns of a final victory are premature.

The insurgents still hold about half of the maze of narrow alleyways and sturdy stone buildings that make up the Old City.

Several hundred of the group’s fighters are thought to still be manning a defence, and thousands of civilians are trapped there, unable to escape until Iraqi forces reach them.

ISIL gunmen shoot at families trying to cross the front lines, intent on keeping the civilians as human shields against attacks from the air and the ground.

The tactic has not prevented an intensive bombardmen­t of the Old City to destroy ISIL’s defensive positions and set off explosive booby traps.

Pushing into the densely packed and devastated historic core from three sides, Iraqi troops often advance over rubble covering the corpses of militants and civilians.

ISIL has also managed to infiltrate liberated areas. As many as 50 militants launched an attack in the Tanak and Yarmouk neighbourh­oods in west Mosul on Monday, drawing several ISOF units away from the Old City before Iraqi forces killed the extremists.

Sleeper cells also still pose a problem in east Mosul, which was fully liberated in January.

ISIL continues to have a presence in the deserts of Anbar province in western Iraq. It holds a pocket of land around the town of Hawija, and its militants are holding out in the town of Tel Afar, north of Mosul.

Throughout the three years of war, ISIL has been able to launch attacks in towns and cities under government control, with Baghdad suffering from repeated bombings.

In Syria, the battle to wrest control of Raqqa, ISIL’s self-de- clared capital, is far from over, and ISIL still holds sizeable territory around Deir Ezzor. Vanquishin­g ISIL in Mosul will, neverthele­ss, be a significan­t victory for the Iraqis.

It marks the end of the “caliphate” in Iraq, and proves that the insurgents no longer pose an existentia­l threat to the Iraqi military.

The focus will soon shift to eliminatin­g the last pockets of ISIL resistance elsewhere, and to containing the group as an insurgent and terrorist menace.

The focus will soon shift to eliminatin­g the last pockets of ISIL resistance elsewhere

 ?? Pictures Ahmad Al Rubaye/ AFP and Erik de Castro/ Reuters ?? Counter terrorism troops in Mosul surround the ruins of the Grand Al Nuri Mosque.
Pictures Ahmad Al Rubaye/ AFP and Erik de Castro/ Reuters Counter terrorism troops in Mosul surround the ruins of the Grand Al Nuri Mosque.
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 ?? Felipe Dana / AP Photo ?? An Iraqi special forces vehicle drives through the Old City during fighting against ISIL militants in Mosul yesterday.
Felipe Dana / AP Photo An Iraqi special forces vehicle drives through the Old City during fighting against ISIL militants in Mosul yesterday.

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