Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Kurds gain turf near ISIS-held Mosul

- SUSANNAH GEORGE AND BALINT SZLANKO

QARQASHAH, Iraq — A small unit of Kurdish peshmerga forces huddled in an abandoned home on the edge of Qarqashah, one of a dozen villages east of the Iraqi city of Mosul that the peshmerga captured from the Islamic State group this week.

The advance aims to lay the groundwork for a battle for Mosul, Iraq’s second-largest city, which has been held by Islamic State militants for more than two years.

Like almost all of the villages captured this week, Qarqashah is small and was almost entirely empty of civilians. This allowed the U.S.-led coalition to clear territory using airstrikes, rather than relying on ground troops to engage in street-to-street battles. But peshmerga military leaders said their forces still suffered casualties.

In Qarqashah village, peshmerga commanders estimated they had lost 10 men. Even after the operation was declared complete on Monday, fighting was ongoing.

Maj. Gen. Hama Rasheed sat on a plastic chair inside the home his men were using as a base. Outside, his fighters exchanged fire with Islamic State militants holed up in a neighborin­g village.

Fields of dead grass burned from Islamic State-launched mortar rounds. Kurdish and coalition forces stationed atop a nearby hill responded with volleys of artillery fire onto the militants below.

“The main aim of the operation was to open a strategic road to the Christian areas of the Nineveh plain,” said Brig. Gen. Dedewan Khurshid Tofiq, one of the peshmerga commanders overseeing the operation. The Nineveh plain stretches north and east of Mosul.

Tofiq added that a bridge leading to southeaste­rn Mosul, taken Monday, could facilitate a troop buildup along an eastern Mosul front once it is repaired.

The operation, which lasted just under 48 hours, is expected to be one of many aimed at encircling Mosul, the Islamic State’s last major urban stronghold in Iraq.

The long battle for Mosul is continuing amid violence in much of the rest of the country. At least 15 people have been killed since Monday in a series of attacks across Iraq.

The deadliest attack occurred Monday near the town of Rutba in the western province of Anbar, where militants fired mortar rounds on army troops, killing an officer, seven soldiers and a civilian, the Joint Military Operation Command said in a statement.

Two attacks struck the Iraqi capital, Baghdad, on Tuesday. In the capital’s southern Dora neighborho­od, drive-by shooters killed a Justice Ministry employee, police said. In the southweste­rn neighborho­od of Amil, a bomb ripped through a commercial area, killing three civilians and wounding seven others, according to police.

Another bomb struck a patrol of anti-Islamic State Sunni tribal fighters in Madain, about 14 miles southeast of Baghdad, killing two fighters and wounding five others, police said. Medical officials confirmed the casualty figures. All officials spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to release the informatio­n.

The Islamic State captured large areas of northern and western Iraq in a 2014 offensive. It is estimated that Islamic State-held territory in the country has shrunk by two-thirds after an Iraqi campaign backed by the U.S.-led coalition. The fighting has displaced millions of civilians.

Along berms marking the peshmerga’s new front line with the Islamic State, convoys of hundreds of civilians fleeing villages outside Mosul drove through the fine desert sand in the intense summer heat.

In one convoy, most of those fleeing were farmers. When Hameeda Muhammed’s family was stopped by security forces who searched their belongings for weapons, she unloaded the animals that had died of thirst along the trip. A calf’s body was dumped on the side of the road along with seven chickens.

“Under Daesh, we stayed alive thanks to these animals,” Muhammed said, looking over her dead livestock. Daesh is an Arabic acronym for the Islamic State.

Under the Islamic State, Muhammed’s family quickly became too poor to buy food and was forced to turn to subsistenc­e farming, she said.

“I hope at whatever camp we go to there will be more chickens there,” she added.

At Kalak base, from which the offensive was launched, peshmerga reservists were arriving in civilian cars Monday to reinforce troops at the front.

“Normally we guard oil facilities,” said Islam Tamar Khan, a 28-year-old from Dohuk, a city in Iraq’s semiautono­mous Kurdish region. “But we got a call last night saying to come here immediatel­y.”

Behind him, four Iraqi police helicopter­s were parked on the highway. The pilots said that since 2014, they have been evacuating soldiers injured during peshmerga operations because the Kurdish forces are short of military helicopter­s.

“All that matters is that you have the will to fight,” said Khan. “It doesn’t matter if you show up in boots or in slippers.”

Informatio­n for this article was contribute­d by Salar Salim and Murtada Faraj of The Associated Press.

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