Minggu, 02 Oktober 2016

The battle in Iraq that could turn the tide against Islamic State: The fight for Mosul is about to begin - Los Angeles Times

With its drab two-tone walls, neon lighting and plastic chairs, it looks more like a lecture hall than a war room. But instead of students, officers from Iraq's security forces study a bank of flat-screen TVs showing feeds from drones flying hundreds of miles away.

On one side, amid a jumble of equipment, sit a row of U.S. servicemen. They tap occasional directions to the drones on their laptops while eating lunch, Iraqi-style ribs with rice, from Styrofoam boxes. One computer, left alone for a minute, loops a video of penguins frolicking on an ice floe.

The languid atmosphere in the Joint Operations Center, here on the historic plains of northern Iraq, is deceptive. For months, they have been preparing for what could be a turning point in the fight against Islamic State and its 2-year-old, self-proclaimed caliphate in Syria and Iraq: the campaign to retake Mosul.

Expected to commence in the coming weeks, the battle for the city of 1.2 million people, Iraq's second-largest, is expected to send up to 1 million people fleeing for safety and help determine the future of America's bid to contain the spread of violent Muslim extremism in the Middle East.

"Where is the existential threat to Iraq?" Maj. Gen. Gary J. Volesky, commander of the U.S.-led coalition's ground forces in the country, said recently as final preparations were getting underway. "The decisive point for the fight in Iraq is Mosul."

It was more than two years ago that Islamic State blazed through Mosul, capturing a city that was then home to up to 2.5 million people — part of a blitz that soon put the militant group in control of a third of Iraq and Syria.

Iraq's army, which had collapsed in the path of the jihadis, has been waging a slow fight to recover. Backed by the warplanes of the U.S.-led coalition and tens of thousands of paramilitary fighters — some of them supported by Iran — Iraqi troops this year have wrested control of some of Islamic State's major bastions, shrinking the group's territory by a quarter of what it controlled in 2015, according to a July report by IHS Conflict Monitor.

Yet nothing they have done so far compares with the upcoming battle for Mosul, a crossroads of commerce and culture for thousands of years that is the jewel in Islamic State's crown. Its size alone has made the task of overrunning it a daunting one.

The Iraqi army will have to throw everything it has into the campaign, military commanders say, but there is now a conviction that there is no more time to wait. 

"The momentum is with the Iraqis, and they know it," said Col. Brett Sylvia, head of the U.S. Task Force Strike in Iraq.

"Previous commanders would say to their troops, 'This year we're going to Mosul,' and they didn't go. When we came, they told us we weren't going to Mosul. But we will."

On a wall map of northern Iraq in Sylvia's briefing room, someone had drawn concentric circles with a felt-tip pen, with Q-West as the center; they indicated the range of weapons now stationed at the base.

Iraqi troops have already begun massing there. Last week, as scores of soldiers and militiamen began an attack on the Islamic State-held city of Sharqat, clumps of army recruits trudged on the nearby highway, pleading for a ride to the air base.

The coalition is ramping up its presence as well, with the addition of 600 more U.S. troops, the Pentagon announced Wednesday. Meanwhile, large convoys of coalition trucks and armored vehicles shuttle between Q-West and Camp Swift, a base in Makhmour, a roughly 90-minute drive from the northern Iraqi town of Irbil.

In the meantime, most indications point to a zero hour sometime in the middle of this month. Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan, speaking to U.S.-based Turkish community members on Sept. 25, gave Oct. 19 as the kickoff date.

References

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