Orlando Sentinel

Iraqis unearth tunnels, bomb factory near Mosul

- By Qassim Abdul-Zahra and Joseph Krauss

KHAZER, Iraq — Iraqi forces explored a network of tunnels and uncovered a bomb-making facility Thursday in a village near Mosul that was recently retaken from the Islamic State group, offering a glimpse of the challenge soldiers will face as they move closer to the city.

Ten days into the offensive, the special forces are at least 4 miles east of the city and have faced stiff resistance, with militants firing mortars and machine guns, and sending armored suicide truck bombs trundling across the arid plains.

Once inside the sparsely populated villages that ring Mosul, Iraqi forces must contend with booby traps and snipers. The fortificat­ions are expected to grow even more daunting once they enter Iraq’s secondlarg­est city.

The Islamic State, also known as ISIS, captured Mosul in a matter of days in 2014, and have had more than two years to build up its defenses and root out any internal opposition. The operation to retake the northern city is expected to take weeks, if not months.

Iraqi forces approachin­g Mosul from the south, meanwhile, are 20 miles from the city, and the special forces to the east said they will not push ahead until the other forces are able to tighten the noose.

Iraqi army Maj. Gen. Najim al-Jabori said forces south of Mosul retook the town of Staff al-Tut in the Tigris River valley on Wednesday, and said local tribal and militia forces have been deployed to protect the gains while his troops regroup for their next advance.

Special forces Brig. Gen. Haider Fadhil insisted things were on track. “The operation has not been stopped and is proceeding as planned,” he said.

During cleanup operations in the area of Tob Zawa, his men found a tire shop that had been converted into a factory for making roadside bombs and attaching armor to vehicles.

They also found a tunnel equipped with fans and lights that ran from beneath a mosque out to a road. Iraqi forces have found extensive tunneling networks in areas retaken from ISIS, which the militants used to elude U.S.-led coalition warplanes.

Many fear ISIS may resort to more brutal tactics as the forces converge on the city, which is home to more than 1 million people.

The U.N.’s public health agency said it has trained 90 Iraqi medics in “mass casualty management,” with a special focus on chemical attacks.

The extremist group is believed to have crude chemical weapons capabiliti­es, and Iraqi forces say they are prepared to encounter them on the battlefiel­d.

The World Health Organizati­on said that of the 700,000 people expected to flee Mosul, some 200,000 will require emergency health services, including more than 90,000 children needing vaccinatio­ns and 8,000 pregnant women.

The Internatio­nal Organizati­on for Migration said around 9,000 people have fled. It’s a relatively small number, but until now, the battles have taken place in small farming communitie­s that were mostly abandoned.

The United Nations’ refugee agency is shipping tents, blankets and other aid from the United Arab Emirates to northern Iraq to help those affected by the military campaign.

Soliman Mohamed Daud, a senior UNHCR supply officer, said that 7,000 units of the relief aid will be sent to northern Iraq.

The Mosul offensive is the largest Iraqi military operation since the 2003 U.S.-led invasion, and involves more than 25,000 Iraqi soldiers, federal police, Kurdish forces, Sunni tribal fighters and statesanct­ioned Shiite militias.

It marks the first time that Iraq’s largely autonomous Kurdish region has allowed federal forces to operate in its territory since the overthrow of Saddam Hussein, but the two sides remain divided over the boundaries of the Kurdish region and the sharing of the country’s oil wealth.

 ?? ALI ABDUL HASSAN/AP ?? An Iraqi counterter­rorism soldier inspects an Islamic State tunnel Thursday in Bartella, 12 miles east of Mosul.
ALI ABDUL HASSAN/AP An Iraqi counterter­rorism soldier inspects an Islamic State tunnel Thursday in Bartella, 12 miles east of Mosul.

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