Tikrit Offensive Stalls Due to ‘Hundreds’ of ISIS Explosives
The
offensive on the ISIS-held Iraqi city of Tikrit has slowed to a halt
because of hundreds of explosives planted in the city’s centre as the
terror group await a final assault by Iraqi forces, according to
experts. Iraq’s defence minister today claimed that the army has slowed
down its operation…
Newsweek
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Tikrit Offensive Stalls Due to ‘Hundreds’ of ISIS Explosives
The offensive on the ISIS-held Iraqi city of
Tikrit has slowed to a halt because of hundreds of explosives planted in
the city’s centre as the terror group await a final assault by Iraqi
forces, according to experts.
The Iraqi offensive on the city, supported by the
Shia-majority Popular Mobilisation Units (PMU), had initial success,
with a number of towns on the city’s outskirts captured quickly and PMU
spokesman, Karim al-Nuri, declaring the city would be liberated in “no
more than 72 hours” earlier this month.
Yet, the assault on the hometown of former Iraqi dictator
Saddam Hussein has taken longer than expected, now entering its fourth
week. Iraq’s defence minister today claimed that the army has slowed
down its operation to prevent potential casualties which could occur if
they rushed the assault on the explosive-laden city centre.
"When we see that the time is right for the Tikrit
alliance, we will storm in as quickly as possible," he said. "Tikrit is
under full siege. We are taking caution to not take any losses and to
protect civilians in the city.”
"The terrorists are surrounded inside the city and their
morale is low. When the right moment comes, we will storm the city
without any resistance or losses," he added.
However, Sajad Jiyad, Iraq expert and research director at
the independent consultancy Integrity speaking from Baghdad, warned that
Iraqi forces were spread too thin to dismantle the number of improvised
explosive devices (IEDs) concealed by ISIS, with security operations
continuing against the terror group in the western Iraqi city of Ramadi.
“The Iraqi army is struggling because it doesn’t have the
capacity to continue operations everywhere,” Jiyad says. “The most
important part is the engineer corps, the people who dismantle the IEDs
and clear the way for soldiers to go in. There’s just not enough of them
in Tikrit.”
As Baghdad’s forces edge closer to the city centre, the
battle for central Tikrit will see the Iraqis involved in complex
street-to-street fights with ISIS, battling against the terror group’s
boobytraps, IEDs and suicide bombers, Jiyad adds.
“[Iraqi forces] just don’t have the capability to dismantle
the hundreds of IEDs that are all over central Tikrit. It’s very
dangerous territory. So it’s a technical issue,” he warns.
Iran’s major general Qasem Soleimani, the former leader of
the elite Quds Force, the special operations arm of the Iranian
Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC), is currently in Iraq as an advisor to oversee operations
against ISIS and provide the vital link to Tehran’s material support
for the Shia militias on the ground. However, some in Baghdad’s
coalition government have warned against Tehran’s growing influence in
Iraq and the assault on ISIS.
Iraqi vice president Iyad Allawi, speaking to Sky News
in the Iraqi capita today called Iranian involvement in Iraq’s affairs
“unacceptable” and claimed that they were attempting to make Baghdad the
capital of the Persian empire.
"I think the role of any regional power or any power in
Iraq's affairs is unacceptable," he said. He added that Iran "sending
officers to fight and to lead, and declaring that Baghdad is becoming
the capital of the Persian empire, is unacceptable".
Tikrit is situated on the Tigris river, approximately 95
miles (150 kilometres) north of the capital Baghdad, and would provide
Iraqi forces a strategic launchpad from which to attack ISIS-held Mosul,
Iraq’s second-largest city, further to the north.
The city was the site
of mass executions of Iraqi forces by ISIS militants at the time of its
capture last June when the terror group launched its march across
northern Iraq, capturing key Sunni areas. A Human Rights Watch (HRW)
report claimed that approximately 770 captured soldiers were killed
after the terror group took control of former U.S. military base in the
city, Camp Speicher, in executions which HRW advisor Fred Abrahams
described as “crimes against humanity”.
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