You have commented 339 times on Rantburg.

Your Name
Your e-mail (optional)
Website (optional)
My Original Nic        Pic-a-Nic        Sorry. Comments have been closed on this article.
Bold Italic Underline Strike Bullet Blockquote Small Big Link Squish Foto Photo
Iraq
"Stench of death" from bodies of ISIS fighters fills Mosul
2017-06-26
Iraqi forces opened exit routes this weekend for hundreds of civilians to escape Mosul. Iraqi forces backed by the U.S. military are making a final push to drive ISIS out of a city now in ruins.
It will give the Iraqis plenty of work to have their ISIS slaves do after this is all over.
U.S.-backed Iraqi special forces said Sunday they've retaken two-thirds of the Old City, but it's come at a cost.
Well, yeah. That's the whole idea if you're ISIS trying to defend yourself.
Commanders finally decided that the suffering of tens of thousands of civilians still trapped inside this brutal battle outweighed of any hope of leaving the Old City intact -- especially after ISIS robbed Iraqi forces of a symbolic victory by blowing up the al-Nuri mosque, where ISIS leader Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi declared the creation of the so-called caliphate more than three years ago.
As sad as it is, it seems to me that generally there are fewer overall casualties if you break them with an overwhelmingly violent first strike.
CBS News entered the Old City with Iraqi special forces, the very forces that broke through ISIS defenses and started advancing toward the mosque.

CBS News and the special forces drove until the streets got so narrow we had leave the protection our humvees behind and get out on foot as gunfire and mortars rang out in every direction.
Looks like the Iraqi forces learned a lesson or two from the US Marines during the operation to take Falluja.
The stench of death from the bodies of ISIS fighters rotting in the sweltering heat filled the air.
Smells like . . . victory!
As you walk around the streets of the Old City, you just get an indication of the damage and destruction. Whole neighborhoods have ceased to exist after eight months of fighting - and it's not over yet.

General Abdul Ghani al-Assadi said they're starting to face female ISIS fighters on the battlefield for the first time.
Great. Bomb them, too.
"It's their ultimate point of weakness now," he said. "But they're also the women of ISIS, so they have the same ideology, that's why they're fighting."
And that's exactly why ISIS families don't need to be given any quarter now or after this is all over.
The Iraqi military has begun opening exit routes for shell-shocked residents to flee the Old City, with the U.N. warning of a rising civilian death toll and the "unimaginable" risks facing those trapped inside.
Especially if you're an ISIS wife.
As the battle enters its final phase, Iraqi soldiers are not locked in a fight against ISIS holdouts -- but a fight against time.
Before civilians are killed, die of disease or starve to death, I assume.
Posted by:gorb

#5  Neither.
Posted by: gorb   2017-06-26 20:00  

#4  I just spoke with a guy from Iraq. He claims the Shia soldiers are destroying the city way more than they need to because Sunni have been hard on them in the past.

Shia or Sunni?
Posted by: Zhang Fei   2017-06-26 19:05  

#3  When I first read the headline, I thought it was a Harley Quinn Suicide Squad quote.
Posted by: Whiskey Mike   2017-06-26 18:24  

#2  Yah, a classic 'can't both sides lose?' situation.
Posted by: Whiskey Mike   2017-06-26 18:21  

#1  I just spoke with a guy from Iraq. He claims the Shia soldiers are destroying the city way more than they need to because Sunni have been hard on them in the past. He doesn't really like either side in the battle.
Posted by: gorb   2017-06-26 18:16  

00:00