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EDITOR IN CHIEF- ABDULLAH BIN SALIM AL SHUEILI

Iraqi general sees easy victory over exhausted IS fighters in Tal Afar

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MOSUL: A senior Iraqi general predicted a relatively easy victory for his forces in the upcoming battle for the IS haven of Tal Afar as up 2,000 fighters and their families there are “worn out and demoralised”.


Less than one month after declaring victory in the city of Mosul, Iraqi forces are poised to attack Tal Afar, which is around 40 km to the west of Mosul, in what will be the next major battle against the militants.


“I don’t expect it will be a fierce battle even though the enemy is surrounded,” Major-General Najm al Jabouri said in an interview.


Jabouri, a key battlefield commander, said the fight would be simple compared to the nine months of gruelling urban combat in Mosul, which took a heavy toll on Iraqi forces.


“The enemy is very worn out,” said Jabouri, who was mayor of Tal Afar when it was overrun by insurgents more than a decade ago. “I know from the intelligence reports that their morale is low,” the general added.


The city, with about 200,000 residents before falling to IS, experienced cycles of sectarian violence after the US-led invasion of Iraq in 2003 and produced some of IS’s most senior commanders.


It has also become the focus of a wider regional struggle for influence. Turkey, which claims affinity with Tal Afar’s predominantly ethnic Turkmen population, opposes the involvement of paramilitary groups fighting with Iraqi forces. Jabouri estimated there were between 1,500 and 2,000 militants left in Tal Afar. The figure may include some family members who support them.


“It’s a large number, but the terrain is favourable (to Iraqi forces),” Jabouri said. Only one part of the city, Sarai, is comparable to Mosul’s Old City, where Iraqi troops were forced to advance on foot through narrow streets. The rest of Tal Afar can be navigated in tanks and armoured vehicles.


Unlike Mosul, where IS effectively held hundreds of thousands of people hostage to slow the advances of Iraqi forces, Jabouri said few civilians remained in Tal Afar, except those related to the militants.


Iraqi forces expect to face bombs, snipers and booby-traps. Despite being surrounded, there is no sign the militants are running low on ammunition, Jabouri said.


Many local Turkmen members of IS already managed to escape by mingling with displaced civilians and fled to Turkey, where they can blend in anonymously, Jabouri said. — Reuters


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