Iraqi forces battling the ISIL group in Mosul are approaching the Tigris River, which runs through the center of the city, the spokesman for the Counter-Terrorism Service said Saturday.
Iraq launched a massive operation on October 17 to retake Mosul from the ‘jihadists’, who seized the city more than two and a half years ago, and its forces have recaptured a number of neighborhoods on the east side of the river.
The smaller but more densely populated west side of Iraq’s second city remains completely under ISIL control.
Counter-Terrorism Service forces “are about 500 meters (yards) from the fourth bridge,” spokesman Sabah al-Noman said, referring to the southernmost bridge across the Tigris in Mosul.
In the early hours of Friday, CTS forces advanced using night-vision equipment in Al-Muthannah and retook the district, Noman told reporters in the Bartalla area east of Mosul.
“This operation was precisely planned; in fact we have been working on it for almost a week,” he said, adding that it “surprised the enemy.”
The CTS and the Rapid Response Division are the two elite units leading the advance against ISIL in Mosul.
A commander said that Rapid Response forces had recaptured the Al-Salam hospital, where troops were cut off and mauled by the ‘jihadists’ early last month.
“Rapid Response forces… are in control of Al-Salam Hospital and the medical college and Al-Shifa Hospital,” Staff Lieutenant General Abdulamir Yarallah said in a statement.
The 9th Armoured Division reached Al-Salam Hospital in a rapid drive deep into Mosul in December, but quickly found itself surrounded by ‘jihadists’ and needed support from special forces to withdraw.
ISIL overran large areas north and west of Baghdad in 2014, but Iraqi forces have since recaptured much of the territory they lost, and Mosul is now the country’s last major city in which the ‘jihadists’ hold significant ground.
Source: AFP