Mosul military base and airport runway fall as Iraqi forces advance
Clashes with IS militants ‘fierce’
IRAQI FORCES have fought their way into a sprawling military base outside Mosul and onto the grounds of the city’s airport, taking control of the runway amid fierce exchanges with “Islamic State” militants.
The two-pronged advance, backed by the US-led international coalition, is part of a major assault that started earlier this week to drive IS from the western half of Mosul, Iraq’s second-largest city.
The Iraqi federal police units, backed by regular army forces, entered the airport yesterday morning, according to two police officials who said heavy clashes were under way hours later with IS militants holed up inside several airport buildings.
The officials said troops from the US-led coalition were with the advancing forces, though they did not specify the nationalities of the foreign forces.
Lebanon-based private broadcaster Al-Mayadeen aired live footage from the Mosul airport perimeter, showing a military helicopter flying overheard and firing at IS positions as gunfire rattled.
By early afternoon, federal police commander Major General Raid Shakir Jawdat told the Iraqi state TV that his troops have control of “more than half ” of the airport complex.
Separately, Iraqi special forces entered the Ghazlani military base next to the airport on the southern edge of the city, the spokesman for the Joint Military Operation Command said.
Brigadier General Yahya Rasool said heavy clashes were taking place inside the base.
On Sunday, after weeks of preparations, Iraqi forces officially launched the operation to take Mosul’s western half, with the Iraqi regular army and federal police forces taking part in the initial push. Since then, the military says they have retaken nearly 50 square miles south of the city.
Yesterday marked the first time the Iraqi special forces, which played a key role in securing the eastern half of the city, joined the fight for western Mosul.
“The counter-terrorism forces will be an additional force, which will expedite the liberation of Mosul’s western side,” Brig Gen Rasool said.
Also yesterday, another counter-terrorism unit captured a key village south-west of Mosul from where IS snipers and shelling had been slowing the government offensive, he added.
In January, Iraqi authorities declared the eastern half of Mosul “fully liberated” from IS. The battle for western Mosul, the extremist group’s last major urban bastion in Iraq, is expected to be the most daunting yet.
The streets are older and narrower in the western section of the city, stretching west from the Tigris River that divides Mosul into the eastern and western half.
The dense urban environment will probably force Iraqi soldiers to leave the relative safety of their armoured vehicles.
We have control of more than half of the airport complex Major General Raid Shakir Jawdat