iraqi Forces Storm Mosul Airport, Military Base
SOUTH OF MOSUL: US-backed Iraqi security forces
closing in on the ISIS-held western half of Mosul launched a major offensive on
the city's airport and fought their way into a nearby military base on
Thursday.
Federal police and an elite interior ministry unit known as Rapid Response
stormed the airport and engaged in gun battles with the ISIS fighters, who used
suicide car bombs to try to stem the advance, according to a Reuters
correspondent south of Mosul airport.
Police officers told Reuters that the police and Rapid Response forces had
taken control of large parts of the airport.
Other officers said the militants deployed bomb-carrying
drones to attack the Iraqi Counter Terrorism Forces advancing from the
southwestern side of the city.
"We are attacking Daesh (the ISIS) from multiple fronts to distract them
and prevent them from regrouping. It's the best way to knock them down
quickly," said federal police captain Amir Abdul Kareem, whose units are
fighting near Ghozlani military base.
After ousting the militant group from eastern Mosul last month, Iraqi forces
have sought to capture the airport to use it as a launchpad for an onslaught
into the west of the city.
The campaign involves a 100,000-strong force of Iraqi troops, Kurdish fighters
and Shi'ite militias and has made rapid advances since the start of the year,
aided by new tactics and improved coordination.
Losing Mosul could spell the end of the Iraqi side of terrorists' self-styled
caliphate in Iraq and Syria, which the ISIS leader, Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi,
declared from the city after sweeping through vast areas of Iraq in 2014.
US special forces in armoured vehicles on Thursday positioned near Mosul
airport looked on as Iraqi troops advanced and a helicopter strafed suspected
the ISIS positions.
Counter-terrorism service (CTS) troops fought their way inside the nearby
Ghozlani base, which includes barracks and training grounds close to the
Baghdad-Mosul highway, a CTS spokesman told Reuters.
The airport and the base, captured by the ISIS fighters when they overran Mosul
in June 2014, have been heavily damaged by US-led air strikes intended to wear
down the militants ahead of the offensive, a senior Iraqi official said.
The US military commander in Iraq has said he believes US-backed forces will
retake both of the ISIS' urban bastions, the other is the Syrian city of Raqqa,
within the next six months, which would end the jihadists' ambitions to rule
and govern significant territory.
Iraqi commanders expect the battle to be more difficult than in the east of
Mosul, however, in part because tanks and armored vehicles cannot pass through
narrow alleyways that crisscross the city's ancient western districts.
Terrorists have developed a network of passageways and tunnels to enable them
to hide and fight among civilians, melt away after hit-and-run operations and
track government troop movements, according to inhabitants.
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