Iraq army targets Mosul bridge in new assault
Troops
employ new tactic of increasing numbers of advancing forces and
attacking from multiple fronts to curtail Daesh’s ability to mount
counter-attacks
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Baghdad, Arbil: Iraqi army units advanced from southeast Mosul
towards a bridge across the Tigris in the city centre on Tuesday, in an
attack that could give fresh impetus to the hard-fought, seven-week
battle for Daesh’s northern-Iraq stronghold.
Campaign commander
Lieutenant General Abdul Ameer Rasheed Yarallah was quoted by Iraqi
television as saying that troops had entered Salam Hospital, less than
1.5 km from the Tigris River running through the centre of Mosul.
If
confirmed, that would mark a significant advance by the army’s Ninth
Armoured Division, which had been tied up for more than a month in
deadly, close-quarter combat with Daesh fighters on the southeast edges
of the city.
A colonel in the armoured division said Tuesday’s
assault, launched at 6am, aimed to push towards the river and ultimately
reach Mosul’s Fourth Bridge, the southernmost of the five bridges
spanning the Tigris which splits the city in two.
The bridge, like
three others, has been hit by US-led air strikes to prevent Daesh
sending reinforcements and suicide car bombs across the city to the
eastern front, where counter-terrorism troops have spearheaded the army
campaign.
The last and oldest bridge, built of iron in the 1930s, was targeted
on Monday night, two residents said. The structure was not destroyed,
but the air strikes made two large craters in the approach roads on both
sides.
Militants immediately began to fill the craters, the residents told Reuters by telephone.
“I
saw Daesh using bulldozers to fill the craters with sand and by midday
vehicles managed to cross the bridge normally. I drove my car to the
other side of the bridge and saw also Daesh vehicles crossing,” said a
taxi driver.
Mosul is by far the largest city under Daesh control
and defeating its fighters there would roll back the self-styled
caliphate it declared in Iraq and Syria 2014 after seizing large parts
of both countries.
Some 100,000 Iraqi soldiers, security forces,
Kurdish Peshmerga fighters and mainly Shiite paramilitary forces are
participating in the overall Mosul campaign that began on October 17,
with air and ground support from a US-led coalition.
Although it
has made advances inside eastern Mosul, the army says it is battling the
toughest urban warfare imaginable — facing hundreds of suicide car bomb
attacks, mortar barrages, sniper fire and ambushes launched from a
network of tunnels. Its advance has also been slowed by the presence of
more than 1 million residents in the city.
The army colonel said
Tuesday’s offensive aimed to overwhelm the militants, who have put up
stiff resistance but are hugely outnumbered by the attacking forces.
“We
are using a new tactic — increasing the numbers of advancing forces and
also attacking from multiple fronts to take the initiative and prevent
Daesh fighters from organising any counter-attacks,” the colonel said by
telephone.
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