Iraq Aims to Drive Daesh from West Mosul within One Month: CTS


TEHRAN (Tasnim) – Iraqi forces aim to dislodge Daesh (ISIL or ISIS) militants from west Mosul within a month, despite grueling urban combat in densely populated terrain, the head of the elite Counter Terrorism Service (CTS) said on Thursday.

As Iraqi forces advance deeper into west Mosul, they are facing increasingly stiff resistance from Daesh (ISIL or ISIS) terrorists using suicide car bombs and snipers to defend their last major stronghold in Iraq.

Their operation to retake the eastern bank of the city, launched in mid-October, took more than three months. The offensive to recapture west Mosul got underway less than three weeks ago.

"Despite the tough fighting... we are moving ahead in persistence to finish the battle for the western side within a month," Lieutenant General Talib Shaghati told Reuters at a conference in Sulaimaniya.

The few thousand militants still fighting in west Mosul are overwhelmingly outnumbered by a 100,000-strong array of Iraqi forces, but their ruthless tactics east of the Tigris river late last year enabled them to hold out much longer than the government's initial predictions.

Mosul is by far the largest city which Daesh has held in its cross-border, self-declared caliphate in Iraq and Syria. It has been losing ground in both countries, with three separate forces advancing on its Syrian stronghold of Raqqa.

In Mosul, CTS forces recaptured the Moalimin and Silo districts on Thursday, according to the commander of the campaign Lieutenant General Abdul Ameer Rasheed Yarallah.

Inside the city, CTS are fighting alongside the Federal Police and the elite interior ministry Rapid Response force, which earlier this week recaptured the provincial government headquarters and the Mosul museum.

A federal police colonel said on Thursday there were skirmishes close to the museum, where the militants filmed themselves destroying priceless statues and sculptures in 2015.

"The frontline is just beyond it," said Lieutenant Colonel Hammeed Habib of the Rapid Response forces. "There are snipers stationed in tall hotel buildings on a road beyond that line".

The Iraqi army's ninth division and Hashd al-Shaabi forces said on Wednesday they had cut the main road between the city and the Daesh stronghold of Tal Afar to the west, tightening a noose around the city.

The terrorist group has lost most of the cities it captured in northern and western Iraq in 2014 and 2015. In Syria, it still holds Raqqa city as its stronghold, as well as some parts of Deir ez-Zor province.