Most Islamic State (IS) commanders in Mosul have been killed in battles with Iraqi government forces that raged over the past three months in the eastern side of the city, an Iraqi general said yesterday.
The fight to take the western side of Mosul, which remains under the jihadists’ control, should not be more difficult than the one on the eastern side, Lieutenant-General Abdul Ghani al-Assadi told Reuters before embarking on a tour of areas newly retaken.
Assadi’s Counter-Terrorism Service announced on Wednesday that almost all of the city’s eastern half had been brought under government control.
“God willing, there will be a meeting in the next few days attended by all the commanders concerned with liberation operations,” he said, replying to a question on when he expects a thrust into the western side of Mosul to begin.
“It will not be harder than what we have seen. The majority of (IS) commanders have been killed in the eastern side.”
He did not give further details.
Since late 2015, government forces backed by US-led coalition air power have wrested back large amounts of northern and western territory overrun by IS in a shock 2014 offensive.
Regular Iraqi army troops yesterday captured the Nineveh Oberoy hotel, the so-called “palaces” area on the eastern bank of the Tigris, and Tel Kef, a small town just to the north according to military statements in Baghdad.
The army is still battling militants in al-Arabi, the last district which remains under their control east of the river, said one of the statements.
Over 50 watercraft and barges used by Islamic State to supply their units east of the river were destroyed in air strikes, the US envoy to the coalition, Brett McGurty, tweeted.
Mogul’s five bridges across the Tigris had already been partially damaged by US-led air strikes to slow the militants’ movement, before Islamic State blew up two of them.
“God willing, there will be an announcement in the next few days that all the eastern bank is under control,” Assai said.
A Reuters correspondent saw army troops deploying in an area by the river as mortar and gun fire rang out further north.
On one of the streets newly recaptured from Islamic State, men were reassembling breeze blocks into a wall that was blown up by a suicide car bomb several days ago.
Prime Minister Hailer al-Badri said on Tuesday that Islamic State had been severely weakened in the Mosul campaign, and the military had begun moving against it in the western half. He did not elaborate.
If the US-backed campaign is successful it will likely spell the end of the Iraqi part of the self-styled caliphate declared by the ultra-hardline Islamic State in 2014, which extends well into neighbouring Syria.


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