The Signal

Mosul fight deadliest in a city since WW II

Iraqi government forces fighting block by block against ISIS

- Jim Michaels @jimmichael­s

U.S.-backed Iraqi forces battling the Islamic State to liberate Mosul are suffering heavy casualties in the deadliest urban combat since World War II, according to top U.S. commanders for the Middle East.

Gen. Joseph Votel, the head of U.S. Central Command, said Wednesday that 774 Iraqi troops were killed and 4,600 wounded since the Mosul offensive began in October.

Tens of thousands of Iraqi troops are battling several thousand Islamic State militants holed up in their last major stronghold in Iraq.

The casualty statistics, released for the first time, highlight the difficulty of fighting in a densely populated city where the militants have had several years to build up complex defenses.

“This is the most significan­t urban combat to take place since World War II,” Lt. Gen. Stephen Townsend, the top coalition commander, said this week. “It is tough and brutal.”

The willingnes­s of Iraqi armed forces to press ahead with the offensive despite heavy casualties is a remarkable turnaround after they collapsed nearly three years ago when the Islamic State invaded the country.

The militants swept into Iraq from Syria, capturing Mosul, in June 2014 in a devastatin­g defeat for the armed forces. The militants seized U.S.-supplied arms and ammunition, while Iraq’s military melted away almost without firing a shot.

“Now they are a profession­al force,” said Army Col. Joseph Scrocca, a U.S. military spokesman. “The Iraqi security forces are putting themselves in the line of fire in order to protect civilians.”

The dangerous urban combat has also exposed civilians to greater risk. The U.S. military said it is investigat­ing a March 17 incident in which dozens of civilians were killed in western Mosul.

The U.S. military acknowledg­ed an airstrike targeted the area, but officials also suspect that militants may have herded “human shields” into the building and might have stored munitions in the structure or rigged it to blow up. Townsend said the coalition used a small munition that was not designed to collapse an entire building.

The Pentagon said the air campaign exercises unpreceden­ted caution to avoid civilian casualties, though avoiding deaths of citizens in a crowded city is difficult.

“As we move into the urban environmen­t, it is going to become more and more difficult to apply extraordin­arily high standards for things we are doing, although we will try,” Votel told the House Armed Services Committee.

City fighting also places enormous challenges on ground forces. Fighting in urban terrain generally favors the defenders, who can place snipers in windows and hide down narrow alleys.

Much of the fighting falls to individual soldiers, who have to clear the city block by block. Iraq’s elite counterter­rorism troops have been engaged heavily in the battle for Mosul.

Votel said 490 Iraqi forces were killed and 3,000 were wounded in the first phase of the offensive to liberate the eastern half of the city, which lasted about 100 days. An additional 284 were killed and 1,600 wounded since the Iraqis began five weeks ago to retake western Mosul.

The U.S. military has deployed about 450 advisers to work with Iraqi forces in Mosul and is sending another 200 troops to the area, as Iraq increases its forces in the offensive. The Pentagon said the advisers are generally not near the front lines but work in headquarte­rs behind the front lines.

“Now they are a profession­al force.”

Army Col. Joseph

Scrocca, on Iraq’s government forces

 ?? GETTY IMAGES ?? Gen. Joseph Votel of the U.S. Central Command testfies before the Senate Armed Services Committee on March 9.
GETTY IMAGES Gen. Joseph Votel of the U.S. Central Command testfies before the Senate Armed Services Committee on March 9.

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