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Battle rages for last stronghold

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Published Date: 14 November 2008
IT'S NOT a pretty sight: sagging skeletons of two-and three-story buildings under a threatening grey sky. Abandoned shops with corrugated iron fronts riddled by bullet holes. And amid the rubbish heaps and pools of stagnant rainwater, a roadside bomb set to explode.
Five years after the invasion and following a significant drop in violence nationwide over the past year, the battle for Mosul, Iraq's third largest city, still waxes and wanes.

"This is our hottest area," said Sergeant Ron Corella, a decorated
combat veteran in this war-scarred quarter of the ancient city where moments before his troops spotted – and disarmed – the roadside bomb.

"The enemy knows that if we gain a foothold and they can't push us out, it's another safe haven they have lost. So they have to fight," he added.

Lieutenant-Colonel Robert Molinari, of the 3rd Armoured Cavalry Regiment, says Mosul "looks like Baghdad about 18 months ago" at the height of violence in the Iraqi capital.

It was the generally successful pacification of Baghdad that drew al-Qaeda and other insurgents to this hub of northern Iraq to open a new battleground and safeguard their infiltration and supply routes.

But security clampdowns, a lack of aid money and a power struggle between Kurds and Sunni Arabs are also blamed for Mosul's woes.

In the city's version of the Baghdad surge, 22,000 US forces and Iraqi troops and police have spread out in an operation called "Mother of Two Springs" – taken from an Arab nickname for Mosul – that began in May and went into a new phase on 15 October.

Armoured vehicles snake through mile-long lines of traffic, backed up behind checkpoints. Soldiers man sandbagged positions atop houses and mosques. Iraqi and US troops stage patrols around the clock from some 40 makeshift bases in the city of 1.8 million people.

US and Iraqi commanders cite some progress after months of struggling to root out insurgents in street-by-street battles.

Attacks, they say, are down to fewer than 70 a week, compared to about 130 before May. Insurgents have switched from well co-ordinated attacks to hit-and-run strikes and roadside bombs. "The people feel more secure, so some dare to come forward with tips about the bad guys," said police Lieutenant-Colonel Adel Kader, in the Hadba district, one of the city's most violent.

On the security front alone, Mosul is a complex nut to crack. Not just al-Qaeda, but more than a dozen Sunni Muslim and other insurgent groups are on the loose, together with criminal syndicates and rival tribes.

"Al-Qaeda looks to Mosul as a gateway to Iraq. It's a place that it doesn't want to lose," says Lt-Col Molinari. "It is not as such the last stand of al-Qaeda. It's a last stand to maintain their lines of communication, thus their viability to conduct operations in Iraq."

Roughly equidistant from the borders of Syria, Iran and Turkey, Mosul has been an important junction on trade and smuggling routes for centuries. The route from Syria across the desert and along the Tigris River is the prime conduit for fresh insurgents.

"It's key terrain for the insurgents. They continue to fight there because they badly need to control it," said Captain Justin Davis Harper, commander of the regiment's Killer Troop.

After an attack, he says, the insurgents slip into alleys too narrow for military vehicles. Within this enclave of eight square miles are Mosul's wholesale and retail markets, magnets for extortion, smuggling and businesses serving as cover for insurgents.

Heavy lorries, ideal for hiding weapons, can move in and out to every point in Iraq and beyond.

"You can buy a bus ticket to just about anywhere, including Mecca," said Capt Harper.

"This is not a final, apocalyptic battle with someone walking off the field as the victor," he observes. "It is an achievable goal but it will be months of hard effort and enough Iraqi forces doing the job. It will be messy. It will require time and patience."

And that has been Mosul's problem – a failure to sustain the effort.

Desert war zone where cultures collide

MOSUL, a strategic city where cultures, religions and ethnicities collide, saw an exodus of thousands of Christians last month following a campaign of threats and violence against them, although some have since returned.

Kurds control the provincial governing council after most Sunnis boycotted local polls in 2005, but the balance of power in Mosul could change in elections due by late January.

Christians, who are believed to number around 250,000 to 300,000 in the province, could be a swing vote, wooed by Kurds or Arabs in a fight for power.

Local Iraqi army units in Mosul are mainly made up of Kurds. Arabs in the area scornfully refer to them as "Peshmerga", the name for the former guerrilla fighters who make up the security forces of the autonomous Kurdish region further north.

Bashar Fahdil, a shopkeeper in Mosul, like other Arabs says Kurdish soldiers share blame for ongoing violence.





The full article contains 851 words and appears in The Scotsman newspaper.
Page 1 of 1

  • Last Updated: 13 November 2008 10:18 PM
  • Source: The Scotsman
  • Location: Edinburgh
  • Related Topics: Iraq , War in Iraq
 
1

Postmark-55,

China, 14/11/2008 07:51:04
Bottom line, the US has no business anywhere other than within its own borders and needs to withdraw immediately, but we know that won't happen anytime soon, so I sincerely hope that they suffer heavy losses there so that they have no choice but to withdraw and go home, same goes for the UK forces, let them go home in body bags if they won't leave an illegal invasion of and illegal war in Iraq.
2

carrottop,

Dumfries 14/11/2008 09:21:48
Must be so easy just to sit and moan about America, put a little thought into it and ask yourself who the average Iraqi was better off under, Saddam or America and there is only one answer, so ask yourself what am I talking about.
3

Postmark-55,

China, 14/11/2008 10:20:18
#3 carrottop,
The choice isn't up to us but rather the citizens of Iraq and most on the street have openly condemned the invasion and occupation by foreign troops and that they have suffered far more since the American and British forces have occupied their land.
So what are you talking about, that you believe the American propaganda?
4

Let's have the truth,

Queensland 14/11/2008 12:48:39
#3

"ask yourself who the average Iraqi was better off under"

Ask the average dead Iraqis and the millions of Iraqi refugees.
5

Taz,

The Land of the Free. 14/11/2008 17:35:32
5 Let's have the truth,Queensland 14/11/2008 12:48:39
#3
"ask yourself who the average Iraqi was better off under"
Ask the average dead Iraqis and the millions of Iraqi refugees.
...........................................
You people being the experts. It was open season on your native people until the mid 1970's. They were hunted down like rabbits and slaughtered. If it wasn't for the USMC, you would lucky to be speaking Japanese. You have to be the most ignorant individual in this entire forum, and that is saying plenty.
6

Conan the Librarian™,

14/11/2008 20:56:00
6
Here we go again Taz.

YOUR "Native" people were hunted down and slaughtered like rabbits too.

Just how did the USMC save Australia?

I thought it was the A.I.F. in New Guinea myself.

 

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