Iraqi Commander: ISIL Resistance 'Weakening' as Militants Flee Mosul Battle - Islamic Invitation Turkey
Iraq

Iraqi Commander: ISIL Resistance ‘Weakening’ as Militants Flee Mosul Battle

 

A senior Iraqi commander said on Friday that the ISIL militants are fleeing the front lines in Western Mosul, as pro-government forces are pushing on with their assaults on the terror group in the area.

“Intelligence reports indicate the majority of ISIL militants remaining in west Mosul are non-Iraqis,” noting that they were likely to be “suicide bombers,” said the commander, who spoke on condition of anonymity, New Arab reported.

He added that most ISIL units were now fighting without guidance from leaders.

“The majority of armed militants and senior ISIL leaders have fled the battle scene, which indicates that the militant group knows it is losing the battle,” the commander told The New Arab.

He said that the battle in Mosul is now being left to a core of hardline “foreign militants”.

Early on Friday, Iraq’s Counter-Terrorism Service assaulted the al-Amil al-Oula neighbourhood of west Mosul, and were battling the militants inside it.

“The enemy fought fiercely in the first defensive line from al-Ghazlani base to Wadi Hajar and to al-Sumood neighbourhood,” said Staff Major General Maan al-Saadi, from Iraq’s Counter-Terrorism Service, referring to areas recaptured by Iraqi troops.

But “after these neighborhoods, after we broke the defensive line, they lost many fighters”, Saadi said.

“The enemy has begun to collapse. They have lost many of their combat capabilities. Today, the enemy sent car bombs, but not in the numbers that they sent at the beginning of the battle.”

But the battle for Mosul’s Old City, which could see some of the toughest fighting of the operation, has not yet begun, nor has fighting inside the city of Raqqa, ISIL main bastion in Syria.

In another sign that the militants are feeling the squeeze, their chief Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi was reported to have abandoned Mosul, leaving local commanders behind to oversee ISIL defense of the city.

“He was in Mosul at some point before the offensive…. He left before we isolated Mosul and Tal Afar,” a town to the west, a US defence official said.

“He probably gave broad strategic guidance and has left it to battlefield commanders.”

Baghdadi, who declared ISIL’s pro-clamed “caliphate” at a Mosul mosque in 2014, urged supporters in an audio message in November to make a stand in the city rather than “retreating in shame”.

Iraqi forces launched their operation to retake Mosul in October, and recaptured the whole Eeast bank of the Tigris River that runs through it in January.

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