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IRAQ WARS
Battle of Mosul: Anti-IS coalition to take stock on Oct 25
by Staff Writers
Paris (AFP) Oct 17, 2016


Tactics of the battle for Iraq's Mosul
Baghdad (AFP) Oct 17, 2016 - Iraqi security forces have launched a final push to retake Mosul from the Islamic State group, which seized the country's second city more than two years ago.

Here are some of the tactics that will likely be employed by Iraqi security forces, and those IS may use against them:

- Encirclement then assault -

Iraqi forces will fight their way to Mosul and then seek to encircle the city before launching an attack inside it -- tactics they have used in operations to retake other IS-held cities including Ramadi and Tikrit.

The eventual assault into Mosul will likely be led by Iraq's elite counter-terrorism service, which has spearheaded most operations against the jihadists.

To reach Mosul, Iraqi forces will have to advance through several dozen kilometres (miles) of IS-held territory, including multiple villages.

The US-led anti-IS coalition will carry out strikes against IS with various types of aircraft, possibly including Apache attack helicopters. The coalition has also deployed artillery including cannons and rocket launchers to provide fire support from the ground.

The operation will involve a coalition of sometimes rival Iraqi forces including soldiers, police, peshmerga forces from Iraq's autonomous Kurdish region, and various pro-government paramilitary groups.

The exact role of the various forces has not been publicly announced, but there have been reports of an agreement under which neither the peshmerga nor Iran-backed Shiite militia forces will enter Mosul, leaving that assault primarily to the Iraqi army.

Iraqi forces are equipped with assault and sniper rifles, light and heavy machineguns, mine-clearing charges, armoured personnel carriers, tanks, various types of artillery, attack helicopters and aircraft including Su-25 and F-16 jets.

- Bombs, berms and human shields -

IS will be vastly outnumbered in the battle and will seek to use hit-and-run tactics, ambushes, snipers, bombs, berms and trenches to slow down and bleed Iraqi forces.

The jihadists have littered other cities with thousands of bombs, placing them in roads, buildings and houses.

The large civilian population inside Mosul may have limited the locations they could place explosives, but bombs will still play a major role in IS's defences.

Obstacles such as earthen barriers -- sometimes with bombs inside -- will be used to slow down Iraqi forces who will need to clear them to advance, exposing them to ambushes.

IS will target Iraqi troops with suicide bombers wearing explosive vests or belts, and others driving bomb-rigged vehicles. The jihadists may equip attackers with rifles as well as bombs, allowing them to attack with guns and then blow themselves up.

The jihadists will likely seek to use Mosul civilians as human shields to limit air strikes against them, and have also previously lit fires in an attempt to provide cover from attacking warplanes.

IS seized a large number of armoured vehicles, trucks, arms and other equipment when they overran Mosul and other areas in June 2014, but it is unclear how much of it has been lost in previous battles that have driven the jihadists out of much of the territory they seized.

IS fighters will be armed with assault and sniper rifles, light and heavy machineguns, armoured vehicles, possibly including tanks, mortars, and a wide array of bombs -- some planted to be triggered by Iraqi forces, and others set off by suicide bombers.

Defence ministers from the international coalition fighting the Islamic State group in Mosul and elsewhere in Iraq and Syria will meet in Paris on October 25, France said on Monday.

US Defence Secretary Ashton Carter will be among 13 ministers who will assess progress in the battle to drive IS jihadists from Iraq's second-biggest city, which Iraqi forces launched on Monday.

"The aim is to take a look at the progress of the Mosul plan," an aide to French Defence Minister Jean-Yves Le Drian said.

The ministers are also expected to stress the importance of the next step in the battle against IS -- routing the jihadists from their Syrian stronghold of Raqqa.

The coalition is concerned that IS will attempt to move fighters and military equipment from Mosul to Syria as the offensive intensifies.

"We must prevent (fighters) based in Mosul from moving easily to Raqqa and we need to ensure that those who are currently able to roam around freely in Syria can be tracked down," the aide said.

Although the coalition includes around 60 countries, the meeting will only comprise Western nations providing air support.

They are: United States, France, Britain, Canada, Australia, Germany, Belgium, Netherlands, Italy, Spain, Norway, Denmark and New Zealand.

Battle for Mosul: a key test for US military strategy
Washington (AFP) Oct 17, 2016 - The Mosul offensive is a critical test for the Pentagon's strategy against the Islamic State group, which relies on local forces and keeping as many Americans as possible away from combat.

After IS overran large parts of Iraq and Syria in early 2014, the United States formed a coalition that launched an air campaign to strike the Sunni extremists and to train local, partnered forces to do the fighting.

Here are the basic elements of that coalition:

Coalition numbers

The anti-IS coalition is made up of 65 nations, about a dozen of which have conducted air strikes in Iraq or Syria. The rest provide auxiliary or logistical support, though US Secretary of Defense Ashton Carter has faulted some members for not pulling their weight.

In Iraq, the coalition comprises approximately 8,500 troops. Most of them -- about 4,900 -- are American, but other nations including Italy, Britain and France are helping train local Iraqi forces.

Train and equip

The focus of coalition efforts on the ground has been to train, arm and motivate local forces to fight IS.

The Iraqi army largely collapsed in the face of the IS push in 2014, dumping weapons and equipment -- much of it provided by the United States.

US and coalition forces have provided basic combat training to more than 45,000 Iraqi forces at a cost of about $1.6 billion, the Pentagon says.

Training has evolved by incorporating lessons learned from prior offensives against IS, including in Fallujah and Ramadi.

Instruction has shifted from counter-insurgency toward more of a "combined arms maneuver approach," training director Brigadier General Dave Anderson, a Canadian member of the coalition, said this month.

We are "teaching the Iraqis how to integrate infantry, armor, artillery, engineers, aviation and other combat multipliers to achieve an overwhelming advantage on the battlefield," he said.

Air campaign

As of October 11, the coalition had conducted 10,129 air strikes in Iraq, and another 5,505 in Syria.

Virtually all munitions are guided bombs aimed at striking IS fighting positions, missile launchers and other targets.

The unchallenged air supremacy also has afforded continual surveillance of the jihadists' movements.

For months, the coalition has conducted "shaping operations" around Mosul. On Sunday, coalition planes attacked IS telecommunications towers, tunnels and several other targets.

Pentagon officials have also said they are using cyber experts to tackle IS, which initially ran a sophisticated social media operation.

Special-operations troops

Though the Pentagon stresses it is keeping US forces from the front lines, elite commandos from the US military's Joint Special Operations Command have been deployed near Irbil since the start of the year.

These troops know the terrain well, as some fought in or around Mosul during the Iraq war, and they are trained to extract maximum intelligence from the sites they raid.

Logistical support

The Pentagon last month said it would send about 600 extra troops to Iraq, with most heading to Qayyarah, a strategically vital air base 40 miles (65 kilometers) south of Mosul that will help funnel supplies and troops toward the city.

They are also helping at the joint Iraqi-US Al Asad air base to beef up flight capabilities for night operations and operations in low visibility, such as poor weather.

A difficult fight

Despite coalition efforts, it will fall to the Iraqis to do the actual fighting in Mosul, and many expect a tough and bloody battle against a determined enemy dug into its last Iraqi stronghold.

Iraqi forces need to clear bombs and booby traps from countless buildings, face IS snipers and fight an enemy capable of launching sneak attacks from a network of tunnels.

The fight could last weeks or months. Iraqi forces are equipped with assault and sniper rifles, light and heavy machine guns, mine-clearing charges, armored personnel carriers, tanks, various types of artillery, attack helicopters and aircraft including Su-25 and F-16 jets.


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IRAQ WARS
US says Mosul a 'decisive moment' in anti-IS campaign
Washington (AFP) Oct 17, 2016
US Secretary of Defense Ash Carter said Sunday that operations to retake the Iraqi city of Mosul from the Islamic State group were key to defeating the jihadist group. "This is a decisive moment in the campaign to deliver ISIL a lasting defeat," Carter said in a statement. "We are confident our Iraqi partners will prevail against our common enemy and free Mosul and the rest of Iraq from ... read more


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