The National - News

‘Noose’ tightens around ISIL in Tal Afar as liberation breaks group’s hold in northern Iraq

- MINA ALDROUBI

Iraqi forces have “completely surrounded” ISIL militants in the northern city of Tal Afar after advances yesterday.

“ISIL fighters are completely besieged from all sides and their resources have been frozen in Tal Afar as coalition forces continue to support Iraqi ground troops,” the US-led coalition spokesman Col Ryan Dillon said at a press conference with Gen Yahya Rasool, spokesman for the Iraqi military.

Located about 60 kilometres from the city of Mosul and the borders with Turkey and Syria, Tal Afar has been under ISIL’s control since mid-2014 and is one of the last remaining urban areas still held by the extremist group in Iraq.

The offensive to retake Tal Afar began this month, weeks after ISIL was driven out of Mosul, with air strikes on militant positions.

Maj Gen Rupert Jones, the coalition’s British deputy commander, said Iraqi forces were off to a “really positive start” and “closing the noose” around the militants.

“The key is that they have broken into the city,” he said, and described the Tal Afar offensive as “the toughest urban battle since the Second World War”.

The liberation of Tal Afar and Nineveh province will “essentiall­y end ISIL’s military presence in northern Iraq”, he said.

“ISIL are losing on all fronts and our partners have irresistib­le momentum,” Maj Gen Jones said. “They are losing on the battlefiel­d, they are losing financiall­y, the flow of foreign fighters has slowed to a trickle. Their narrative has been significan­tly discredite­d,” he said.

The coalition estimates that about 2,000 ISIL fighters remain in Tal Afar, about 2,500 in the Syrian city of Raqqa, where the militants are under attack by US-backed Syrian militias, and between 5,000 and 10,000 in the Middle Euphrates River Valley region that cuts across Syria.

An Iraqi military commander told Associated Press on Wednesday that Iraqi forces had captured two neighbourh­oods in Tal Afar, Al Kifah Al Janoubi on the south-west edge of the city and Al Kifah Al Shamali on its north-west periphery.

Victory in the town, where the majority of the population – Shiite and Sunni – is ethnically Turkmen, would mean the loss of one of the most strategica­lly important stronghold­s for ISIL.

Along with Tal Afar, ISIL still controls the town of Hawija in Kirkuk province, as well as the towns of Qaim, Rawa and Ana near the Syrian border in the western province of Anbar.

 ??  ?? Iraqi forces move into eastern Tal Afar, the main remaining stronghold of ISIL
Iraqi forces move into eastern Tal Afar, the main remaining stronghold of ISIL

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