Islamic State
fighters targeted Iraqi troops with car bombs and ambushes in Mosul, stalling
an army advance in their north Iraq stronghold, but faced attack on a new front
on Sunday when U.S.-backed rebels launched a campaign for the Syrian city of
Raqqa.
The jihadists
have lost control of seven eastern districts of Mosul to Iraqi special forces
who broke through their lines last Monday. Officials say the militants are now
sheltering among civilians in those neighborhoods and targeting soldiers in what one called the world's "toughest urban warfare".
sheltering among civilians in those neighborhoods and targeting soldiers in what one called the world's "toughest urban warfare".
Mosul, the
largest Islamic State-controlled city in either Iraq or Syria, has been held by
the jihadist fighters since they drove the army out of northern Iraq in June
2014.
The three-week
Mosul campaign has brought together a force of around 100,000 soldiers,
security forces, Shi'ite militias and Kurdish fighters, backed by a U.S.-led
coalition, to crush the Sunni jihadists.
Across the
border, U.S.-backed Syrian fighters announced on Sunday the start of their own
campaign, called Euphrates Anger, to recapture Islamic State's Syrian bastion
of Raqqa.
The Syria
Democratic Forces (SDF) is an alliance of Kurdish and Arab armed groups which
has seized large swathes of territory along the Syria-Turkey border from Islamic
State and pushed to within 30 km (20 miles) of Raqqa.
But the
prominence within SDF ranks of the Kurdish People's Protection Units, or YPG,
has raised questions over its suitability as a force to capture the
predominantly Arab city.
Turkey, which
has battled Kurdish separatists for three decades, regards the YPG as anathema
and Western officials have said the Raqqa operation should be fought mainly by
Arab forces.
Washington
says the battle for Raqqa will "overlap" with the assault on Mosul,
in part because of concerns that any delay would allow Islamic State to use it
as a base to launch attacks on targets abroad.
France also
wants a coordinated campaign against Islamic State in Iraq and Syria.
"Mosul-Raqqa can't be disassociated because Islamic State and the
territories it occupies span that area," Defence Minister Jean-Yves Le
Drian said.
TWIN
OFFENSIVES
Twin
offensives on Raqqa and Mosul could bring to an end the self-styled caliphate
declared by Islamic State leader Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi from the pulpit of a
Mosul mosque in 2014.
.
Baghdadi,
however, has told his followers there can be no retreat in a "total
war" with their enemies, and the militants in Mosul have been waging a
fierce and brutal defense.
They have
deployed waves of suicide car bombs, as well as mortar attacks, roadside bombs
and sniper fire against the advancing troops, and officers say they have also
left behind fighters among residents of districts taken over by the army.
"That's
why we are carrying out the toughest urban warfare that any force in the world
could undertake," said Sabah al-Numani, spokesman for Iraq's elite Counter
Terrorism Service (CTS).
"Sometimes
they climb to the rooftops of houses where civilians are still living and they
hold them hostage and open fire on our forces, because they know we will not
use air strikes against targets that have civilians."
Militants also
targeted the troops with car bombs, sometimes waving white flags as they
approached, he said.
Major General
Maan al-Sadi, a CTS commander, told state television Islamic State fighters had
launched more than 100 car bombs against his forces in the east, which is just
one of several fronts in the Mosul offensive.
A top Kurdish
security official said Islamic State had also deployed drones strapped with
explosives, and long-range artillery shells filled with chlorine and mustard
gas.
It could
resort to even more devastating weapons including a network of booby traps that
can blow up whole neighborhoods, Masrour Barzani, head of the Kurdistan
Regional Government's Security Council, told Reuters.
FORCES
SURROUNDED
Late on
Friday, a CTS unit came under attack from the rear after advancing into east
Mosul, said a colonel in the Ninth Armoured Division which is also taking part
in operations there.
Islamic State
militants emerged from houses behind them and isolated the convoy, preventing
reinforcements from reaching them. Surrounded and low on ammunition, they had
to shelter in houses before they finally got out on Saturday.
The Islamic
State news agency Amaq released footage on Sunday of captured or destroyed
military vehicles, including the burnt wreckage of a Humvee it said was taken
in the eastern district of Aden. Fighters shouted "Allahu Akbar (God is
Greatest)" and unloaded ammunition and communications equipment.
Amaq also said
Islamic State was behind two bomb attacks on Sunday in Tikrit and Samarra,
cities to the south of Mosul, which killed 21 people. Officials said the
attacks, carried out by suicide bombers driving ambulances packed with
explosives, targeted a checkpoint and a car park for Shi'ite pilgrims.
While the army
and special forces have been pushing into Mosul from the east, Kurdish
peshmerga fighters are holding territory to the northeast, and mainly Shi'ite
militias have sought to seal off the desert routes to Syria to the west.
Security
forces have also advanced from the south, entering the last town before Mosul
on Saturday and reaching within 4 km (2.5 miles) of Mosul airport on the city's
southwest edge, a senior commander said.
The United
Nations has warned of a possible exodus of hundreds of thousands of refugees
from a city which is still home to up to 1.5 million people. So far 34,000 have
been displaced, the International Organization for Migration said.
Many of those
still in Mosul feel trapped, including those in districts which the army says
it has entered.
"We still
can't go out of our houses.... mortars are falling continuously on the
quarter," a resident of the Quds neighborhood on the eastern edge of the
city told Reuters by telephone.
Although there
was no fighting in his own district, for the first time in five days, he said
he could hear clashes in the two neighborhoods immediately to the north and
south.
In the
northern Malayeen district a witness said Islamic State fighters had set fire
to a collection of mobile homes, once used by Iraqi security forces, apparently
to create a smokescreen against air strikes.
"I can
see flames rising up, near the main street," he said. "Daesh (Islamic
State) don't let the fire engines get to the fire to extinguish it".
Several
witnesses, on both sides of the Tigris River which splits Mosul's eastern and
western halves, said they heard bursts of celebratory gunfire after the
militants claimed falsely they had made sweeping counter-attacks against the
army.
"We heard
a voice from the mosque - outside prayer time - of a man shouting: 'Allahu
Akbar...brave soldiers of the caliphate have regained control of Bartella and
Qayyara," said one resident, referring to two forward bases used by Iraqi
forces.
"We know
they are lying," he said. "The truth is hidden from no one."
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