Orlando Sentinel

Iraqi forces push into Mosul, strike Syria

- By Qassim Abdul-Zahra, Sarah El Deeb and Andrea Rosa

MOSUL AIRPORT, Iraq — As Iraqi ground troops pushed into western Mosul on Friday, the country’s air force struck Islamic State group targets inside Syria for the first time in response to recent bombings in Baghdad claimed by the militants.

Meanwhile, at least 60 people were killed in militant attacks near a key northern Syrian town captured only a day earlier from the extremists by Turkish forces and their Syrian opposition allies.

Iraqi Prime Minister Haider al-Abadi announced the Iraqi airstrikes in Syria in a statement, saying the border towns of Boukamal and Husseibah were targeted in response to recent bombings in Baghdad linked to Islamic State operatives there.

Iraqi forces, closely supported by the U.S.-led internatio­nal coalition, pushed into the first neighborho­od of western Mosul and took full control of the city’s internatio­nal airport and a sprawling military base on the southweste­rn edge of the city, according to Iraqi officials.

The territoria­l gains were the most significan­t yet in the battle, now in its sixth day.

As Iraqi warplanes struck Islamic State, also called ISIS, across the border, militants in northern Syria staged a suicide car bomb attack outside a security office operated by the Syrian opposition in a village 5 miles north of al-Bab, killing at least 60 people. The town had been controlled by ISIS since late 2013, but the militants finally retreated Thursday after more than two months of intense fighting.

Most of those killed in the village of Sousian were civilians awaiting permits and an escort to return to al-Bab, a Syrian military commander in the city told the Associated Press. At least six fighters were among those killed in the attack, according to Turkey’s prime minister.

Hours after the first explosion in Sousian, another car bomb attack was reported in the village, killing at least eight people, according to activist groups. There were no further details on the attack, and the Aleppo Media Center later took down the report.

An additional explosion was reported south of alBab, where two Turkish soldiers were killed when an explosive device went off as they were removing land mines, Turkey’s military said. The Britain-based Syrian Observator­y for Human Rights corroborat­ed the report, saying the explosives detonated near Tadif, an ISIS-controlled town south of al-Bab. Turkish Prime Minister Binali Yildirim, however, called the explosion a “suicide attack.”

It was not immediatel­y possible to reconcile the accounts.

In Mosul, meanwhile, Iraqi forces pushed into the Mamun neighborho­od and engaged in intense clashes with Islamic militants, according to an Iraqi officer on the ground, who spoke on condition of anonymity in line with regulation­s.

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