San Francisco Chronicle

Islamic State is ‘on the run,’ says Pentagon chief

- By Robert Burns Robert Burns is an Associated Press writer.

BAGHDAD — Defense Secretary James Mattis said Tuesday that he is confident that U.S.-backed Iraqi forces will finish off the Islamic State militants clinging to stronghold­s that are shrinking in size and number.

“ISIS is on the run,” Mattis said after meeting with Prime Minister Haider al-Abadi and other Iraqi government leaders. “They have been shown to be unable to stand up to our team in combat.”

Mattis spoke alongside Lt. Gen. Stephen Townsend, the top U.S. commander in Iraq, who is due to finish his tour of duty here in early September.

“The fighting is tough,” Townsend said, “but the momentum is with our partners.”

Earlier, Mattis described the extremists as being trapped in a military vise that will squeeze them on both sides of the Syria-Iraq border.

Mattis had arrived in the Iraqi capital hours after President Trump outlined a fresh approach to the stalemated war in Afghanista­n. Trump also has pledged to take a more aggressive, effective approach against Islamic State in Iraq and Syria, but he has yet to announce a strategy for that conflict that differs greatly from his predecesso­r’s.

The Pentagon chief said the Middle Euphrates River Valley — roughly from the western Iraqi city of al-Qaim to the eastern Syrian city of Der elZour — will be liberated in time, as Islamic State takes hits from both ends of the valley that bisects Iraq and Syria.

“You see, ISIS is now caught in between converging forces,” he said, using an alternativ­e acronym for the militant group that burst into western and northern Iraq in 2014 from Syria and held sway for more than two years. “So ISIS’ days are certainly numbered, but it’s not over yet and it’s not going to be over any time soon.”

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