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Daesh now controls less than 7 per cent of Iraq, military says

By AFP - Apr 11,2017 - Last updated at Apr 11,2017

BAGHDAD — The Daesh terror group now controls less than seven per cent of Iraq, down from the 40 per cent it held nearly three years ago, a military spokesman said Tuesday.

Iraqi forces backed by US-led air strikes and other support are now battling Daesh inside second city Mosul, after retaking much of the other territory the militants had seized.

"Daesh controlled 40 per cent of Iraqi land" in 2014, Brigadier General Yahya Rasool told reporters.

"As of March 31 [this year], they only held 6.8 per cent of Iraqi territory," said Rasool, the spokesman of the Joint Operations Command coordinating the anti-extremist effort.

Various members of the forces, Iraqi and foreign, battling the extremists have disagreed in the past on figures about control of territory, but Daesh has been losing ground steadily for close to two years.

The most brutal organisation in modern militancy shocked the world when it took over Mosul in June 2014 and then swept across much of the country's Sunni Arab heartland.

Its reach in Iraq peaked in August the same year when a second offensive saw it take over areas of northern Iraq that were home to various minorities and had been under the control of forces from the country's autonomous Kurdish region's forces.

Iraqi forces with the backing of the US-led coalition — which has thousands of military personnel deployed in Iraq and carries out daily air strikes — began a major offensive to retake Mosul in October 2016.

 

Coalition to stay 

 

They retook control of the eastern side of the city, which is divided by the Tigris River, in January and have since mid-February been battling diehard extremists holed up in their last west Mosul redoubts.

The full recapture of Mosul, the de facto capital of the “caliphate” that Daesh proclaimed nearly three years ago, would end the extremists’ dreams of a cross-border state.

Speaking at the same press conference in Baghdad on Tuesday, the spokesman for the US-led coalition vowed that Iraq would not be abandoned after the recapture of Mosul.

“Once that task is accomplished, the coalition will be here to support our Iraqi partners as they eliminate Daesh from every corner of Iraq,” Colonel John Dorrian said.

“Though the fighting is going to be very hard... this enemy is completely surrounded. They aren’t going anywhere — they will be defeated and the people of Mosul will be free,” he said.

The coalition has come under criticism following an air strike in west Mosul last month that took a heavy toll on civilians, a strike it admitted may have been its own.

“Every strike that we conduct, we conduct using precision-guided munitions. Every strike that we conduct is coordinated directly with the Iraqi security forces,” Dorrian said.

“We are very careful. We never, ever target civilians. Never. We reject anyone who says that we do, that is not happening, we only target Daesh,” he said.

But even if Daesh members are targeted, the fact that they are operating in areas still home to large numbers of residents means that civilians can easily still end up the victims.

Daesh still controls the large towns of Hawijah and Tal Afar, as well as remote areas along the border with Syria in western Iraq.

 

In Syria itself, it also holds the city of Raqqa and other areas.

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