Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

U.S. lists 81 sites of Mosul bombs

Unexploded devices litter city

- LOLITA C. BALDOR THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

A top American military commander has declassifi­ed 81 locations of unexploded bombs dropped by the U.S.led coalition in the battle to oust Islamic State militants from Mosul, Iraq.

Officials are considerin­g similar disclosure­s for other areas in a step to help aid groups and contractor­s clear explosives from war-ravaged Iraqi cities.

Lt. Gen. Stephen Townsend said in a recent memo that he was providing a list of geographic coordinate­s “for the sake of public safety.”

The list, he said, includes the type of munition and the latitude and longitude of the expected location “so that duly authorized experts may more easily locate, render safe, and dispose of possible coalition unexploded ordnance.”

Townsend told a group of reporters in Baghdad last month that he would seek a way for the military to help groups find bombs that didn’t detonate after they were dropped as part of coalition airstrikes in Mosul.

The military does not normally release that list of classified data although there are ongoing internatio­nal and U.S. programs, with millions of dollars in aid, that work to clean up explosives around the world, including minefields.

The coalition’s unexploded bombs are part of a wider problem in Mosul.

The bulk of the explosives remaining around the city were hidden by Islamic State fighters to be triggered by the slightest movement, even picking up a seemingly innocent child’s toy, lifting a vacuum cleaner, or opening an oven door.

The effort could continue wreaking destructio­n on Iraq’s second-largest city even though the Islamic State was defeated there after a nine-month battle.

U.S. Embassy officials and contractor­s hired to root out the hidden explosives have described the extent of the problem as unpreceden­ted, saying the militants littered the city with booby traps that will likely take years, if not decades, to uncover and clear.

Officials with the State Department’s convention­al weapons destructio­n program said that right now they are focusing on areas in Iraq that have been liberated from Islamic State insurgents.

But there are ongoing discussion­s with the military about getting similar data for unexploded bombs in Ramadi, Fallujah, Tikrit and other locations.

Townsend’s decision came days before he turned over command of the Iraq and Syria wars to Lt. Gen. Paul Funk after spending about a year in the war zone.

Sol Black, the State Department’s program manager, said Townsend’s action was “one of the fastest turnaround­s” for that type of request that he’d seen. He said the data are being shared with Iraqi authoritie­s and will feed into mapping software that tracks the explosive remnants of war.

Officials are still waiting for the full survey to be completed in Mosul before they have an accurate estimate of how many explosives remain.

It is, said Black, “one of the most heavily contaminat­ed places that we’ve seen.” As an example, he said, Janus Global Operations, a contractin­g company hired to find and remove hidden explosive devices and unexploded bombs from Iraqi cities, found 137 explosives in one water pipeline in Bashiqa, northeast of Mosul.

The priorities, said Black and Stan Brown, director for the State Department’s Office of Weapons Removal and Abatement, include clearing explosives from hospitals, water pump lines, power stations and the electrical grid, sanitation systems and schools.

They said a number of girls’ schools were bombed and destroyed by the Islamic State, so those sites are likely to hold a number of explosives.

As much as 90 percent of west Mosul’s old city was reduced to ruins, destroyed by the Islamic State militants who occupied it for nearly three years and by the campaign of airstrikes and ground combat needed to retake the city.

It has been littered with hidden explosives that officials say became far more innovative and sophistica­ted as time went on.

The explosives can be as simple as basic pressure plates in roads or doorways or as sophistica­ted as small devices similar to ones that turn on a refrigerat­or light when the door is opened.

They’re tucked into dresser drawers or smoke detectors, or buried under large piles of rubble that were pushed aside as Iraqi forces cleared roads to move through the city.

Looking ahead, Black said, an advance team is now on the ground in Tal Afar, which also has been liberated from the Islamic State. Team members are working with Iraqis to identify what areas or facilities need to be cleared first.

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