‘We will liberate our people,’ Iraqi counterterrorism general says
Troops use siege and stealth against Islamic State in Mosul
MOSUL (Reuters) – Iraqi forces are using siege and stealth tactics to drive Islamic State insurgents out of Mosul’s Old City and minimize harm to civilians trapped in the cramped historic neighborhood, an Iraqi general said.
Explosions from two car bombs were heard nearby as Lt.-Gen. Abdul Ghani al-Assadi spoke at his command post on Monday. Thick columns of smoke rose and bursts of heavy gunfire crackled on Tuesday from areas under jihadist control.
“Most houses in the Old City are very old and its streets and alleyways are very narrow,” Assadi, a commander of Iraqi counterterrorism units in Mosul, told Reuters. “So to avoid civilian losses we are using siege, but that does not mean we will not enter the Old City.”
Assadi said his units don’t engage enemy forces in positions where the terrorists are holding civilians as human shields.
“Using very careful methods and considerations, we will liberate our people from Daesh,” he said. Government forces have surrounded the insurgents in the northwestern quarter including the Old City, home to the Grand al-Nuri Mosque, where their leader, Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi, declared a caliphate over parts of Iraq and Syria.
The ultra hard-line Sunni fighters are fighting back using booby traps, suicide motorcycle attacks, sniper and mortar fire and sometimes shells filled with toxic gas.
With food and water becoming scarcer in parts of Mosul still under ISIS control, up to half a million people are believed to be trapped there, including 400,000 in the Old City alone, according to a United Nations estimate.
Lise Grande, the UN Humanitarian Coordinator for Iraq, told Reuters last week that fighting in the Old City could lead to “a humanitarian catastrophe, perhaps the worst” in the three-year war to evict Islamic State from Iraq.
International aid organizations have estimated the civilian and military death toll at several thousand since the US-backed offensive by government forces to retake Mosul began in October. More than 330,000 people have been displaced so far, according to the International Organization for Migration.
“Humanitarian partners are preparing contingency plans for a number of different displacement scenarios in western Mosul, including for a possible mass outflow of 350,000-450,000 civilians,” the UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs said in a report on Tuesday.
Mosul, the largest city in northern Iraq, was captured by Islamic State in mid-2014, but government forces have retaken most of it, including the half east of the Tigris River.
The Iraqi military gained additional ground on Tuesday, dislodging the jihadists from Hay al-Tanak, one of Mosul’s largest districts by area, on the western edge of the city.
Assadi said the battle should end “very soon, God willing,” but gave no time frame. “This is a guerrilla war, not a conventional one, so we cannot estimate how long it will take. Daesh is fighting house-to-house,” he said.
The Iraqi military estimates that 200 to 300 Islamic State fighters remain in Mosul, mostly foreigners, compared with about 6,000 when the offensive started.
About 500 insurgents were killed last week, a counterterrorism officer said on Tuesday, without giving casualties among government forces.
The jihadists “don’t let themselves get captured,” said Assadi. “They came to die and the majority of them are now in hell.”