Daily Times (Primos, PA)

Iraqi troops in mop-up operations in Mosul after key gains

- By Felipe Dana

MOSUL, IRAQ » Iraqi troops were clearing up a key neighborho­od in Mosul on Friday, commanders said, a day after making significan­t gains against Islamic State militants in the city and after the country’s prime minister declared an end to the extremist group’s self-proclaimed caliphate.

Lt. Gen. Abdul Wahab al-Saadi and Lt. Col. Salam Hussein told The Associated Press that their forces were moving into territory previously held by IS in the Old City after capturing the hugely symbolic alNuri Mosque on Thursday, following a dawn push into the Mosul neighborho­od.

Al-Saadi said his forces were also continuing to push forward from the Old City and on Friday reached within 700 meters (766 yards) of the Tigris River, which divides Mosul roughly into an eastern and western half.

The mosque and its famed 12th century minaret were blown up by IS last week — an indication, the Iraqi government said, of the militants’ imminent loss of Mosul, Iraq’s secondlarg­est city.

Later Thursday, Prime Minister Haider al-Abadi announced that the full liberation of the city is near and that Iraq’s “brave forces will bring victory.”

The operation to retake Mosul, closely backed by the U.S.-led coalition, was launched in October, with the Iraqi government initially pledging the city would be liberated in 2016.

But instead, it has been a long and deadly fight — eight months on, IS holds less than two square kilometers (0.8 square miles) of the city. Clashes have displaced more than 850,000 people, according to the Internatio­nal Organizati­on for Migration.

The Old City, with its tightly packed houses and narrow alleys, has seen some of the most difficult urban combat. Damaged and destroyed houses dot the areas retaken by Iraqi forces and the stench of rotting bodies rises from beneath collapsed buildings.

While the Islamic State group has not confirmed any Mosul losses, its media arm, the Aamaq news agency, carried reports of fierce fighting Friday on the city’s outskirts and in the neighborho­ods of Bab Jadid, al-Mashahda and Bab al-Beidh, claiming IS fighters killed more than 50 Iraqi soldiers there.

Though IS claims are often exaggerate­d, the fact that the reports made no mention of the Old City was significan­t and could be interprete­d as indirect confirmati­on of losses there.

Another IS media outlet, the weekly al-Nabaa, on Thursday cited an unnamed commander of the militants as saying that the battle for Mosul is a fight “either to achieve victory or die as a martyr.”

Some 300 IS fighters are thought to remain holed up inside the last Mosul districts, along with an estimated 50,000 civilians, according to the United Nations.

Iranian President Hassan Rouhani tweeted on Friday his congratula­tions to the city’s residents and all the Iraqi people on the “breeze of freedom in Mosul after three years of occupation, violence and killing.”

The al-Nuri Mosque, taken Thursday, was a symbolic win — the site is where IS leader Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi made his only public appearance in July 2014, declaring the self-styled Islamic “caliphate” encompassi­ng territorie­s thenheld by IS in Syria and Iraq.

But IS destroyed the mosque and its iconic leaning minaret last week, Iraqi and coalition officials said. IS blamed a U.S. airstrike for the blasts, a claim rejected by a spokesman for the U.S.-led coalition who said coalition planes “did not conduct strikes in that area at that time.”

Al-Baghdadi’s fate remains unknown. Earlier this month, Moscow announced that he may have been killed in a Russian airstrike in late May on the outskirts of the Syrian city of Raqqa, which is being encircled by an array of antiIS forces. Russian officials stressed, however, that the informatio­n was still “being verified through various channels.”

 ?? FELIPE DANA - THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? An Iraqi Special Forces soldier takes position near the destroyed al-Hadba minaret as they fight Islamic State militants in the Old City of Mosul, Iraq, Friday.
FELIPE DANA - THE ASSOCIATED PRESS An Iraqi Special Forces soldier takes position near the destroyed al-Hadba minaret as they fight Islamic State militants in the Old City of Mosul, Iraq, Friday.

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