Chattanooga Times Free Press

Airstrikes fuel Mosul gains as Iraq pushes for quick victory

- BY SUSANNAH GEORGE

MOSUL, Iraq — A Half dozen units of Islamic State group fighters holed up in western Mosul began their morning radio checks at just after 4 a.m. It was still dark and Iraqi forces deployed a few blocks away were listening in as they prepared an advance on the city’s al-Rifai neighborho­od.

“Thirty, what’s new? … 120, do you read me? What’s up?” the IS radio operator said, using Iraqi slag.

About 40 minutes later the first U.S.-led coalition airstrike hit as Iraqi forces pushed across a main road and began clearing the neighborho­od’s narrow streets.

“We’re seeing at least two squirters at the impact site,” a member of the coalition force radioed back to the Iraqi troops in Australian-accented English, using a slang term for badly wounded IS fighters. Moments later the extremists were calling for doctors over their own radio network.

Over the next 12 hours, more than 10 coalition airstrikes hit al-Rifai’s eastern edge. Most targeted small teams of two or three IS fighters manning sniper rifles or machine guns so Iraq’s special forces units could advance on the ground.

Military operations such as the one in al-Rifai this week are accelerati­ng in Mosul as part of a drive to retake the handful of districts still under IS control before the holy month of Ramadan begins at the end of May. And despite recent allegation­s of increased civilian casualties, advances on the ground continue to be backed by heavy airstrikes and artillery.

Launched in mid-February, the fight for Mosul’s western sector has been marked by some of the most difficult fighting and catastroph­ic destructio­n yet in Iraq’s war against IS. The brutality of the operation was highlighte­d by a single incident just a month into the operation — a U.S. airstrike on March 17 that killed more than 100 people sheltering in a home, according to residents and other witnesses interviewe­d by The Associated Press.

By contrast, Mosul’s eastern half was retaken in 100 days of fighting. While front lines stalled at times, the area was less densely populated, neighborho­ods were more modern with wider streets allowing tanks and other armored vehicles greater freedom of movement and the area was never under siege, allowing many IS fighters to flee westward.

The number of civilians reportedly killed in coalition airstrikes in Iraq and Syria spiked to 1,800 in March, more than three times the number reported a month earlier, according to Airwars, a London-based group that tracks civilian deaths from coalition airstrikes. Official figures from the Pentagon, which is slower in confirming deaths, are far lower: It said last month that it has confirmed coalition airstrikes killed at least 352 civilians in Iraq and Syria combined since the campaign against IS started in 2014.

The March 17 incident sparked outrage in Iraq and beyond. The U.N. called on Iraq to conduct “an urgent review of tactics to ensure that the impact on civilians is reduced to an absolute minimum.”

The Pentagon still is investigat­ing the incident but Gen. Joseph Votel, head of U.S. Central Command, said the munitions used by the U.S. that day should not have taken the entire building down, suggesting that militants may have deliberate­ly gathered civilians there and planted other explosives.

An Iraqi officer overseeing the Mosul operation said after the March 17 strike, he received orders to no longer target buildings with munitions. Instead airstrikes were directed to the streets and gardens beside IS locations. But the order lasted only a few days.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States