Iraqi forces push into first districts of
western Mosul
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[February 24, 2017]
By Stephen Kalin and Isabel Coles
SOUTH OF MOSUL, Iraq (Reuters) -
U.S.-backed Iraqi security forces advanced deeper into the western half
of Mosul on Friday one day after launching attacks on several fronts
toward Islamic State's last main stronghold in the city.
Troops had recaptured Mosul airport on Thursday, an important prize in
the battle to end the jihadists' control of territory in Iraq.
Counter-terrorism forces managed on Friday to fully control the Ghozlani
army base, pushing deeper toward the southwestern districts of Tal
al-Rumman and al-Mamoun, a military spokesman said.
Federal police and an elite Interior Ministry unit known as Rapid
Response are clearing the airport of roadside bombs and booby traps left
by Islamic State militants who retreated from their positions there on
Thursday.
Iraqi government forces plan to repair the airport and use it as a base
from which to drive the militants from Mosul's western districts, where
about 750,000 people are believed to be trapped.
Government forces pushed the insurgents out of eastern Mosul last month
but the IS still holds the western sector of the city, divided by the
Tigris river.
"Our forces are fighting Daesh terrorists in Tal al-Rumman and
al-Mamoun. We will eliminate them soon and take control over the two
districts," Counter Terrorism Services (CTS) spokesman Sabah al-Numan
said.
Islamic State militants used suicide car bomb attacks and drones
carrying small bombs to disrupt the CTS units from further advancing.
"There is a resistance there. The drones are particularly annoying
today," Major General Sami al-Aridi, a senior CTS commander, told
Reuters in the southwestern front of Mosul.
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A boy carries his belongings as he escapes fight between Iraqi
forces and Islamic State fighters south of Mosul, Iraq February 24,
2017. REUTERS/Goran Tomasevic
Rapid response forces are trying to advance beyond the airport to
breach Islamic State defenses around districts on the southern edge
of Mosul.
"We are now fighting Daesh at the southern edge of the city. We are
trying to breach trenches and high berm they used as defensive
line," Colonel Falah al-Wabdan told Reuters.
Losing Mosul could spell the end of the Iraqi section of the
militants' self-styled caliphate spanning Iraq and Syria.
Iraqi commanders expect the battle in western Mosul to be more
difficult than the east, however, in part because tanks and armored
vehicles cannot pass through narrow alleyways that crisscross the
city's ancient western districts.
(Reporting by Stephen Kalin and Isabel Coles, Writing by Ahmed
Rasheed; Editing by Angus MacSwan)
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