Islamic State mortars, snipers take toll
on Iraqi forces in Mosul
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[March 10, 2017]
By John Davison
MOSUL, Iraq (Reuters) - At a field clinic
near the front line in Mosul, an Iraqi Federal Police officer lay in
discomfort on a stretcher, a drip in his arm and bandage plastered over
his chest from where shrapnel from a mortar shell had pierced his
sternum.
The blast which wounded the 23-year-old, Jaafar Kareem, and two
comrades, was in an area where rapid advances against Islamic State
earlier in the week have slowed as the militants aim mortar and sniper
fire at Iraqi troops.
At least 10 shells had landed there that morning, before hitting their
target, Kareem said.
"There have been a lot of our guys wounded today in the same area," he
said, turning his head gingerly to watch an officer on the next
stretcher being treated for a leg injury.
The makeshift clinic, an abandoned house manned by American volunteers
and Iraqi military medics, was on Thursday regularly treating members of
Iraq's security forces rushed back from the front line in ambulances or
armored vehicles.
"We've already had around 20 people come in for treatment (on Thursday)
- about 70 percent civilian, but it's been more military (casualties) up
until today," said Kathy Bequary, director of NYC Medics, the
organization running the clinic.
Casualties her team have witnessed recently range from superficial
wounds to the occasional patient dead on arrival, including one soldier
with eight bullet wounds to his torso, she said.
As Iraqi forces fight Islamic State militants deeper into western Mosul,
they face increasingly stiff resistance, with the jihadists using mortar
and sniper fire to try to hold off a U.S.-backed offensive to drive them
out of their last major stronghold in the country.
The fight has taken its toll of dead and wounded on Iraqi soldiers,
special forces and police units. The military has not published the
number of its own casualties.
Islamic State's tactics, which include taking cover among the civilian
population, have also slowed advances in some areas, the closer the
battle gets to the more crowded city center.
The area where Kareem and his comrades were hit was no more than a few
hundred meters from the front line, in an area housing the Nineveh
provincial government headquarters, a territorial gain trumpeted by the
Iraqi military on Tuesday.
Iraqi forces have indeed made progress there. A wide main road leading
to the governorate building was firmly under Federal Police control on
Thursday, a Reuters correspondent visiting with elite interior ministry
units said.
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A sniper team from Iraq's Federal Police prepare their position in
Albu Saif, which was recently retaken by Iraqi military forces,
south of Mosul. REUTERS/Zohra Bensemra
STATIC FRONT LINE
Armored vehicles drove past destruction left by fighting in the
former provincial government hub: a collapsed police headquarters
dynamited by militants as they retreated, and a large, faded
advertisement panel for "Iraqi Airways - Mosul booking office."
But the front line had been static since early in the week, members
of the Rapid Response units said.
Troops on foot had to dash between the more exposed streets for fear
of sniper fire.
The whoosh of an incoming mortar shell sent them scrambling for
cover against the wall of a building. It landed close enough to feel
shockwaves from the blast.
"It's been a little difficult, recently," Ali Sattar, a 20-year-old
in the Rapid Response said.
"We've not really advanced for three days now. Two of our teams went
further forward, on a sort of recce mission, and raised the Iraqi
flag on top of a tall hotel that (Islamic State) snipers have been
using, then came back."
Federal Police units were now in control of the Mosul museum, a
little further forward, but any new advances were being made
difficult by snipers who had taken up positions in the Assyria
Hotel, less than 200 meters (yards) away, he said.
"The flag will probably be taken down again by the militants," he
said, half joking.
Back at the clinic, the wounded Kareem looked weary.
"The battles have been hard," he sighed.
(Reporting by John Davison; Editing by Michael Perry)
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