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		Iraq gears up for late-year push to 
		retake Mosul from Islamic State 
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		 [September 09, 2016] 
		By Stephen Kalin 
 QAYYARA AIRBASE, Iraq (Reuters) - The 
		U.S.-led war on Islamic State has depleted the group's funds, leadership 
		and foreign fighters, but the biggest battle yet is expected later this 
		year in Iraq's northern city of Mosul, where Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi 
		declared his "caliphate" two years ago.
 
 The jihadist insurgents have lost more than half the territory they 
		seized in Iraq and nearly as much in neighboring Syria, but still manage 
		to control their twin capitals of Mosul and Raqqa, symbols of the state 
		they sought to build at the heart of the Middle East.
 
 Military and humanitarian preparations are now in full swing to retake 
		Mosul, the largest city under the ultra-hardline group's control. 
		American troops are establishing a logistics hub to the south, while the 
		United Nations warns of the world's most complex humanitarian operation 
		this year.
 
 Iraq's recapture over the summer of Qayyara airbase and surrounding 
		areas along the Tigris river 60 km (nearly 40 miles) south of Mosul have 
		set the stage for a big push on the city, which commanders say could 
		start by late October.
 
 Whether Islamic State makes a final stand in Mosul or slips away to 
		fight another day remains in question, but Baghdad expects a fierce 
		battle and the international coalition backing it is preparing for one.
 
		
		 
		The densely populated river valley may hold obstacles for the military, 
		though Islamic State appears to be putting up relatively little 
		resistance, possibly to conserve fighters for a showdown in Mosul where 
		their forces are estimated at between 3,000 and 9,000.
 Hardcore fighters have likely slipped out already through the desert and 
		into Syria, while many top leaders and foreign fighters have been killed 
		in targeted air strikes, according to Major General Najm al-Jabouri, the 
		Mosul operation's commander.
 
 He told Reuters that victory by year's end would be easy, in keeping 
		with pledges by Prime Minister Haider al-Abadi.
 
 "We will go to Mosul, they will go to Tel Afar. We will go to Tel Afar, 
		they will go to Baaj," said Jabouri, referring to IS-controlled 
		districts 70 km (44 miles) and 140 km (87 miles)west of Mosul, 
		respectively, which can be used to reach Syria.
 
 "We will go to Baaj, maybe. It depends on the situation in Syria. They 
		can get to Syria but the situation there is not like before. It is not a 
		safe haven for them now."
 
 TURNING TIDE
 
 Lieutenant General Vincent Stewart, Director of the U.S. Defense 
		Intelligence Agency, said on Thursday he expected the Mosul operation 
		could unfold in the next two or three months but that it would be long 
		and difficult.
 
 "Urban warfighting is not easy and this is a large city that has had at 
		least two years to prepare to defend its position ... It's going to be a 
		multi-dimensional fight," Stewart said at a national security summit in 
		Washington.
 
 The war against jihadist insurgents in the Middle East has ebbed and 
		flowed but there is a palpable sense in the region that the tide has 
		turned against Islamic State.
 
 In the past year and a half, the group has lost swathes of territory and 
		strategic outposts. In Iraq it was driven out of Tikrit and Sinjar in 
		the north, the oil refinery town of Baiji, and finally Ramadi and 
		Falluja in western Anbar province, the heart of the insurgency following 
		the U.S.-led invasion in 2003 that toppled Saddam Hussein.
 
		 
		In northern Syria, U.S.-allied Kurdish militia of the People's 
		Protection Units (YPG) have taken vital territory and border crossings 
		below the frontier with Turkey after capturing Kobani and later taking 
		Tel Abyad, a key supply line for the jihadist capital Raqqa further 
		south. The YPG has expanded its territory west of the Euphrates, seizing 
		Manbij last month.
 Meanwhile Turkey, backing Syrian rebels, this month cleared Islamic 
		State from its southern border by seizing some 20 villages while Libyan 
		government forces are close to flushing IS insurgents from holdouts in 
		Sirte.
 
 Amid those territorial losses, Islamic State has claimed credit for a 
		surge in global attacks this year beyond its main Middle East theater. 
		European countries remain on alert for additional strikes based on 
		undisclosed information.
 
 Nonetheless, the U.S. military has said Iraq is on track to retake Mosul 
		later this year. Over the past two weeks, convoys of sophisticated 
		engineering vehicles have been seen approaching Qayyara airbase, which 
		Islamic State wrecked before withdrawing in July.
 
 Repairing it to help supply the 20,000 to 30,000 Iraqi troops expected 
		to be used in the campaign could take another two months. Until then, 
		forces trained by the U.S.-led coalition are amassing further afield.
 
 Mosul fell to Islamic State in June 2014 when Iraqi security forces, 
		riddled with corruption and sectarianism despite billions of dollars in 
		U.S. aid, dropped their weapons and fled from the insurgents.
 
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			U.S. soldiers gather in the town of Gwer, northern Iraq August 31, 
			2016. REUTERS/Azad Lashkari /File Photo 
            
			 
			KURDISH AND SHI'ITE FORCES
 Kurdish peshmerga forces, entrenched east, north and northwest of 
			Mosul since 2014, will help tighten the noose around the city but 
			might not enter central districts to avoid aggravating political 
			sensitivities.
 
 After retaking 11 villages southeast of Mosul last month, they are 
			now eyeing eastern Christian and Shabak villages long abandoned by 
			minority communities the group seeks to eliminate.
 
 The peshmerga's role is complicated by tensions with the central 
			government, which claims territory the Kurds have taken from IS and 
			effectively annexed to their autonomous region. The Kurds say 
			Baghdad is not forthcoming about its military strategy for Mosul or 
			its plans to manage it after the battle.
 
 "If we do not prepare the politics of it, we may not succeed in the 
			military plan or we may succeed in the military plan but lose the 
			political plan and that would be disastrous," Falah Mustafa Bakir, 
			the head of Kurdistan's Foreign Relations Department, told Reuters 
			last week.
 
 The participation of the Hashid Shaabi, a government umbrella for 
			mostly Shi'ite militias, is also unresolved. Powerful commanders 
			have pledged to take part, despite fears among Mosul's Sunni leaders 
			and residents of rights abuses.
 
 Prime Minister Abadi said this week the demands of the battle would 
			dictate the disposition of forces but that no decision had been made 
			to bar the Hashid.
 
 Confrontation that inflames sectarian tensions between Shi'ite-led 
			government forces and the Sunni jihadists of Islamic State risks 
			turning Mosul into a "bloodbath", according to a Western diplomat in 
			Baghdad.
 
			
			 
			HUMANITARIAN CRISIS
 The Mosul operation has also triggered large-scale humanitarian 
			planning, with the U.N. predicting up to one million people could 
			flee the city in all directions.
 
 The Kurds expect half of those leaving will head toward their 
			territory, which already struggles to accommodate more than one 
			million displaced people.
 
 Regional authorities, fearing a new wave will exacerbate demographic 
			and security concerns, aim to settle new arrivals in camps outside 
			of main cities.
 
 In the best-case scenario, though, there is only enough land and 
			funding for about 450,000 people, according to a senior U.N. 
			official, raising the prospect of housing others in unused buildings 
			or abandoned villages.
 
 "If there is mass displacement, there could be shantytowns in the 
			disputed border areas because the plan for camps doesn't accommodate 
			them all," said Tom Robinson, director of Rise Foundation, which 
			analyses Iraq's humanitarian crisis.
 
 Aid workers say the authorities are limiting the construction of new 
			camps to discourage displacement. In fact, the military is urging 
			residents to shelter in place as it advances, but that will only be 
			feasible if fighting doesn't lay waste to homes and infrastructure 
			as it has before.
 
 Jabouri, the top Iraqi commander, dismissed concerns that such a 
			scheme jeopardises civilians' safety, saying: "What does it mean if 
			some areas receive mortars? That's not the end of the world. We are 
			in Iraq, not in Switzerland."
 
 (Additional reporting by Yara Bayoumy in Washington; Writing by 
			Stephen Kalin; Editing by Samia Nakhoul, Janet McBride and James 
			Dalgleish)
 
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