US gen sees ‘progress’ by Iraqi forces against DAESH
Packed morgue reveals Mosul conflict toll
ERBIL, Iraq, April 12, (RTRS): Iraqi forces are making progress in their offensive to expel Islamic State from Mosul but face a “very complicated” urban battle as the militants hide in mosques, homes and hospitals, a US general told Reuters on Wednesday.
Government forces have retaken much of Iraq’s second-largest city since January but have been trying since then to dislodge the Sunni Muslim militants from the densely populated Old City in western Mosul, their last Iraqi stronghold.
“Iraqi security forces continue to progress as they liberate the western side of Mosul,” US Army Major General Joseph Martin, head of ground forces for the US-led coalition fighting Islamic State, said by telephone.
He declined to say whether the militants would be defeated rather within weeks or months, saying: “It’s hard to tell because the terrain changes literally every day.”
Martin said Iraqi forces had surrounded Islamic State positions but it was not always possible to move vehicles into all parts of the Old City with its narrow streets.
“Some days like yesterday (there was) significant amount of progress, other days there is not much progress but progress nevertheless,” he said.
Iraqi officers have said snipers have slowed them down in western Mosul in the biggest ground operation in Iraq since the 2003 US-led invasion that toppled Saddam Hussein.
“It’s very complicated,” Martin said. “The terrain literally changes from neighbourhood to neighbourhood ... the nature of the enemy, how the population reacts.”
He also said coalition forces continued to provide air support for Iraqi forces despite an explosion that followed an air strike that was believed to have killed scores of civilians on March 17.
The US military has said a US-led coalition strike had hit an Islamic State-held area where residents and officials say as many as 200 civilians may have been killed.
“Nothing has changed in terms of air support. It’s been consistent,” he said.
He declined to discuss any involvement of the coalition in the explosion but said Islamic State was “very creative in exploiting the human element” by using hospitals, schools, churches, homes and mosques as hideouts or weapons caches.
Some 400,000 people are believed to have been trapped in western Mosul with UN camps filling up with people fleeing the violence.
Daily suicide attacks and roadside bombs, along with snipers and mortars, have been the most lethal Islamic State tactics in resisting the 100,000-strong Iraqi force.
“It’s clear that their (Islamic State) competence, their cohesion and their effectiveness continues to wane over time,” he said.
But he said the militants would fight to the end and there were no signs they would run out of ammunition anytime soon after preparing for the battle for two and half years.
“Don’t underestimate the ammunition,” he said. “But the outcome is very, very clear. They are going lose and the Iraqis will win.”
Meanwhile, the stench hits you long before you reach the morgue where the latest casualties of war between Islamic State militants and Iraqi forces are kept.
Doctor Mansour Maarouf dons a surgical mask as he approaches the morgue refrigerator and pauses before pulling open the door to an icy blast. “In the name of God,” he says out of respect for the dead.
Inside, around two dozen corpses lie on the floor: some in body bags, several wrapped in blankets and a few so torn to pieces they come in sacks.
Nearly all of them are victims of the ongoing battle to dislodge Islamic State militants from Mosul, around 60 km further north. On the deadliest day so far, 21 bodies arrived at the hospital in the town of Qayyara.
The morgue gives a sense of the heavy toll the conflict is taking on civilians, but also highlights the practical challenges of dealing with the dead when infrastructure is ruined and administration has collapsed.
Staff at the hospital, which is run by aid group Women’s Alliance Health International (WAHA), purchased the cable connecting the morgue fridge to the power supply themselves, and space is limited.
“They (the Iraqi health ministry) have promised to provide us with shelves to increase the capacity,” said the doctor.
Until recently, the only place in the province authorized to issue death certificates was the department of forensic medicine in west Mosul, which remains under Islamic State control.