What's new

Iraq's war against IS terrorism | Updates and Discussions

Reuters / Wednesday, January 11, 2017
Members of the Iraqi rapid response forces fire missile toward Islamic State militants during a battle between Iraqi forces and Islamic State militants in Somer district of eastern Mosul, Iraq. REUTERS/Alaa Al-Marjani
r
 
. . .
MIDEast_6_1-1-640x426.jpg


An Iraqi army T-72 tank heads to the frontline during a battle against Daesh (the so-called IS) group near the Fourth Bridge over the Tigris River connecting eastern and western Mosul, Wednesday. — AFP
http://saudigazette.com.sa/world/mena/mosul-liberated-3-months-top-commander/

IRBIL — A top Iraqi commander told The Associated Press that the operation to retake the city of Mosul from Daesh (the so-called IS) group could be complete in three months or less.

“It’s possible” that Mosul will be liberated in in that time frame, Lt. Gen. Talib Shaghati said in an interview with the AP on Tuesday evening. However, he warned it is difficult to give an accurate estimate of how long the operation will take because it is not a conventional fight.

“There are many variables,” he said, describing the combat as “guerrilla warfare.”

The massive offensive involving some 30,000 Iraqi forces was launched in October and Iraqi leaders originally pledged the city would be retaken before 2017. However as the fight enters its fourth month, only about a third of the city is under government control.

Iraqi forces — largely led by special forces — have slowly advanced across Mosul’s east. Fierce Daesh counterattacks have killed and injured hundreds of Iraqi troops and inflicted considerable damage to Iraqi military equipment. Repeatedly, after what appeared to be swift progress on the ground, Iraqi forces have been pushed back by Daesh counterattacks overnight.

However, Shaghati said the counterattacks — specifically car bombings — have slowed. He estimated his forces are seeing less than half the number of Daesh car bomb attacks on the front than they were faced with when the operation first began.

The US-led coalition bombed the bridges spanning the Tigris river connecting Mosul’s east and west in November in an effort to stop the flow of car bombs to Iraqi frontline positions in the eastern half of the city.

Shaghati, the top commander of Iraq’s special forces and the Commander of Iraq’s Joint Military Operation said that while many forces are participating in the Mosul fight, Iraq’s special forces are the only troops with the skills to fight Daesh militants.

“The forces who have the skills to fight guerrilla warfare is only the CTS,” he said using an alternative acronym for Iraq’s special forces who are also called the counter-terrorism forces. “They have flexibility and can act quickly,” he said.

For the Mosul operation to continue, Shaghati said Iraqi forces need to continue to receive support and equipment from the US-led coalition. Since the Mosul operation began, the coalition says its planes have launched thousands of airstrikes in and around Iraq’s second largest city.

Although Shaghati said he believes that the beginning of the Mosul operation marked the end of Daesh in Iraq, the country will likely struggle with terrorist threats long after Daesh is defeated in Mosul.

When asked if he expected levels of support to change when US President-elect Donald Trump takes office this month, he said: “We believe that the support of our American friends is continuing and ongoing.”

Meanwhile, Sabah Al-Noman, spokesman for the Counter-Terrorism Service (CTS), told AFP that Iraqi forces have retaken at least 80 percent of east Mosul.

“I think you can say that we have retaken 80 to 85 percent” of the eastern side of Mosul, Al-Noman, said. — Agencies
 
. . .
Good news.

It seems that Mosul will be fully liberated by spring.

The key question will be what will be next and how to solve land disputes between Baghdad and Barzanistan.
 
.
http://www.hindustantimes.com/world...mb-in-mosul/story-1P1ayp7vqPoLKlKaG6A0tJ.html
iraq-mosul_9ed978b6-dc1b-11e6-a538-54bd197a5a1b.jpg



Iraqi forces battling the Islamic State group in Mosul on Monday retook an area where the jihadists levelled one of the city’s most well-known shrines in 2014, officials said.

“We retook control of Nabi Yunus area... raised the Iraqi flag above the tomb,” Sabah al-Noman, spokesman for the Counter-Terrorism Service spearheading the Mosul offensive, told AFP.

He said two other neighbourhoods in eastern Mosul were also retaken from IS on Monday.

The Nabi Yunus shrine -- which was built on the reputed burial site of a prophet known in the Koran as Yunus and in the Bible as Jonah -- was a popular pilgrimage site.

In July 2014, weeks after overrunning Mosul and much of Iraq’s Sunni Arab heartland, IS militants rigged the shrine and blew it up, sparking global outrage.


IS destroyed several other key landmarks in Mosul and elsewhere it considered as part of heretical rituals and practices.

Staff Lieutenant General Abdulghani al-Assadi, a top commander in the CTS, said “about 90 percent” of east Mosul was now under government control.

Commanders have said it would only take a few more days to flush out the last jihadists remaining on the east bank of the Tigris River than splits the city in two.

The destruction of all bridges over the river in air strikes has made it difficult for IS fighters in east Mosul to resupply or escape to the west bank, which they still fully control.

The western side of Mosul, which is home to the old city and some of the jihadists’ traditional bastions, was always tipped as likely to offer the most resistance.
 
.
Almost all of Eastern Mosul is taken, CTS (isof) have completed their task in Eastern Mosul, only the regular army has to take some northern parts assigned to them. The mosque where baghdadi gave his speech has been taken as well.

2nd phase with a change in strategy turned out to be very successful, compared to the first phase which went slowly. There's a shortage in tanks however.
 
. . .
French SF embedded with isof in Mosul doing mostly intel gathering tasks. They are a few kilometers distanced from the frontlines as mentioned in the video @4:20.

 
. . .
Clashes across the Tigris as battle for west Mosul looms
ad96f077-175b-4573-a5b8-ea4c23fa8376_16x9_788x442.jpg

The target, which was being used to dig earth berms to fortify ISIS positions, exploded into a blaze that sent white smoke into the sky. (AFP)​

Reuters, Mosul
Friday, 27 January 2017

An Iraqi soldier stared patiently through a high-powered scope until he spotted a bulldozer across the Tigris River. He alerted his elite unit, which fired a missile with a boom so loud it blew a metal door behind the soldiers off its hinges.

The target, which was being used to dig earth berms to fortify ISIS positions, exploded into a blaze that sent white smoke into the sky.

Militants could be seen gathering at the bulldozer as it burned. Some arrived on foot, others in a pickup truck or on a motorcycle, seemingly unfazed by the prospect of another rocket landing.

“The terrorist driving that bulldozer is burning. He is cooked,” said Mostafa Majeed, the soldier manning the scope.

In three months of Iraq's biggest military operation since the fall of Saddam Hussein in 2003, government forces have seized most of east Mosul.

But they have yet to cross the Tigris, leaving the western half of the city still firmly in the hands of the extremists, who declared their caliphate here two and a half years ago.

Now, the troops are firing across the river to harass the militants and disrupt their fortifications, in preparation for the next phase of the campaign: the fight for the other side.

“The idea is to keep making life tough for them from our position, to kill them and prevent them from escaping as other forces surround them from other directions,” Major Mohamed Ali told Reuters.

The methodical advance of Iraqi forces is a sharp contrast to 2014, when the army collapsed and fled in the face of a force of only an estimated 800 ISIS militants that swept into Mosul and swiftly seized a third of Iraq.

The soldiers appear disciplined as they position themselves on rooftops behind green sandbags, painstakingly watching the militants' every move through binoculars and scopes, hoping to get a clear shot with sniper rifles.

To get a closer look, the men send up a computer-operated white drone aircraft, propelling it over Islamic State territory for more accurate intelligence.

ISIS militants are gathered at their stronghold of Abu Seif village below steep hills and Mosul Airport, just beyond the Tigris.

The group is expected to put up fierce resistance when the next phase of the offensive kicks off, possibly within days.

If the militants lose Mosul, that would probably mark the end of their self-proclaimed caliphate that has ruled over millions of people in Iraq and Syria. Iraqi authorities and their US allies still expect the fighters to wage an insurgency in Iraq and inspire attacks against the West.

Militants could be seen, through a scope, monitoring the rapid reaction force from the other side of the river.

“They watch us, we watch them,” said Majeed as he spotted a vehicle on the move.

Although there are plenty of rockets like the one that took out the bulldozer, the Iraqi forces say they use the heavy weapons only against important targets or when there is a substantial gathering of extremists in one spot.

“If it is fewer than nine terrorists we hold fire,” said one soldier.

Snipers are used more freely. One hid a few hundred feet from the east bank of the Tigris and opened fire every ten minutes or so.

Hours after the rocket demolished the bulldozer, ISIS retaliated, firing a series of mortars towards the rapid reaction force.

One crashed a few streets away. Another landed closer. A third hit the river about 200 meters away.

Last Update: Friday, 27 January 2017 KSA 17:42 - GMT 14:42

https://english.alarabiya.net/en/Ne...he-Tigris-as-battle-for-west-Mosul-looms.html


Iraqi troops push into IS-held villages north of Mosul

Iraq_28184.jpg-f1be9.jpg

Civilians flee their villages because of fighting between Iraqi security forces and Islamic State militants, on the outskirts of Mosul, Iraq, Thursday, Jan. 26, 2017. (Khalid Mohammed/Associated Press)​

By Mstyslav Chernov | AP January 26

MOSUL, Iraq — The Iraqi army, buoyed by their victory this month in liberating the eastern half of Mosul from Islamic State militants, is now pushing into IS-held villages north of the city, an Iraqi officer overseeing the operation said Thursday.

Lt. Col. Diya Lafta said troops from his 9th Division began advancing toward two villages just north of Mosul in the morning and “after a few hours they were liberated” from IS militants.

By afternoon, the village of Shereikhan had been largely freed of IS but fighting continued in the villages beyond, according to Associated Press reporters at the scene.


Thursday’s military operation forced hundreds of civilians to flee. Families escaping the clashes on foot clogged the road leading into Mosul as a cloud of smoke from an IS suicide bombing rose above the horizon.

According to one fleeing resident, who asked to only be identified by his nickname Abu Sajjad for fears for his own safety, said IS fighters still firmly controll a number of other villages along Mosul’s northern edge.


The push came after Prime Minister Haider al-Abadi earlier this week declared Mosul’s eastern half to be completely free of IS.

Iraqi forces launched the massive operation to retake Mosul in October. A U.S.-led coalition and Iraq’s own air force have been carrying out airstrikes in support of the military offensive but the troops’ advance has been painstakingly slow, in part to spare the lives of civilians trapped by the fighting and also because of heavy IS resistance.

In a statement Tuesday, al-Abadi hailed the “unmatched heroism of all security forces factions” and public support for the operation.

IS still firmly controls Mosul’s west, where the next phase of the fighting is expected to be much more difficult. The U.N. estimates that some 750,000 civilians are trapped in Mosul’s western sector under IS rule.

Mosul — Iraq’s second-largest city and the Islamic State group’s last urban stronghold in the country — fell to IS in the summer of 2014, when the militant group captures large swaths of northern and western Iraq.

https://www.washingtonpost.com/worl...efe8eff0835_story.html?utm_term=.b7a4d1dcde93
 
.

Pakistan Affairs Latest Posts

Back
Top Bottom