Orlando Sentinel

U.S. soldiers join Iraqis near front

Special forces take larger role in fight for western Mosul

- By W.J. Hennigan and Nabih Bulos

BAGHDAD — U.S. military advisers are now fighting alongside Iraqi forces near the front lines against Islamic State, a sign of President Donald Trump’s willingnes­s to grant more latitude to American commanders than they’ve had since Iraq’s ground war against the militants was launched more than two years ago.

The Trump administra­tion has not yet granted new authoritie­s, but have loosened the reins for U.S. generals running the war, allowing hundreds of U.S. troops to join advancing Iraqi forces as they embark on their most complex mission to date: liberating Mosul, their second-largest city.

Allowing U.S. forces to head to the leading edge of the battle was almost unthinkabl­e under the Obama administra­tion, which was reluctant to be seen as putting American lives in harm’s way in a foreign war.

In recent weeks, however, about 450 U.S. special operations forces and spotters have embedded with the Iraqis to direct airstrikes against Islamic State positions and advise Iraqi ground commanders on how best to advance on the battlefiel­d as they move to free western Mosul, said Lt. Gen. Stephen Townsend, commander of U.S. forces in Iraq and Syria.

“It is true that we are operating closer and deeper into Iraqi formations,” he told reporters at a military outpost at Baghdad Internatio­nal Airport.

Townsend made the disclosure during Defense Secretary James Mattis’ first visit to the Iraqi capital as Pentagon chief. Mattis plans to submit a more aggressive battle plan to defeat the Islamic State group to the White House by month’s end, and he hinted a willingnes­s to grant more leeway to U.S. officers overseeing the war.

“We’ll accommodat­e any requests from the field commanders,” he said. “Right now, our allies — as you can tell from the casualty lists — are carrying the overwhelmi­ng burden of this fight in their own territory.”

The authority to put U.S. forces near combat lines, rather than back at headquarte­rs, was quietly granted in November under Obama in his last days of office.

It wasn’t clear why Obama granted the authority, but U.S. generals running the fight against Islamic State appear to be embracing newfound freedom under Trump to make full use of it.

Iraqi Prime Minister Haider al-Abadi announced the much-anticipate­d assault early Sunday morning, and by nightfall roughly 5 square miles of the city’s southern outskirts on the western bank of the Tigris River had been recaptured.

Iraqi forces pressed their attack Monday, getting to within striking distance of the city’s southern entrance on the second day of their offensive.

Iraq’s official combat media said units from the Federal Police and its special forces arm, the Emergency Response Division, had wrested control of Albu Seif, the last Islamic Stateheld area before the city.

A second prong of the attack cleared a stretch of the Baghdad-Mosul highway leading into the city, further tightening a weekslong blockade on the western half of Mosul.

Mosul, which is bisected by the Tigris, was seized by a skeleton force of Islamic State militants who swatted away a government force of some 20,000 men during the summer of 2014. It became the extremist group’s Iraqi capital; Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi, the group’s leader, announced the creation of a “caliphate” in a mosque in western Mosul’s Old City.

Since then, security forces have been eager at a chance for redemption. They got it in October, when the government, backed by the U.S.-led coalition, began its campaign, taking the city’s eastern bank after 100 days of fighting so intense that it forced a halt to the campaign.

On Monday afternoon, convoys comprising dozens of Humvees, mine-protected vehicles and constructi­on trucks from the Iraqi Counter-Terrorism Service were gathering near the village of Athbah, 6 miles from the city.

The Counter-Terrorism Service, an elite U.S.-trained group that specialize­s in urban warfare, has led the charge against every Islamic State bastion, including eastern Mosul. It will face a potentiall­y more difficult job in the city’s western districts, home to an estimated 750,000 to 800,000 people packed in a more densely populated area.

 ?? THOMAS WATKINS/GETTY-AFP ?? Secretary of Defense James Mattis made his first visit to Baghdad as Pentagon chief.
THOMAS WATKINS/GETTY-AFP Secretary of Defense James Mattis made his first visit to Baghdad as Pentagon chief.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States