Nineveh operations strike at ISIS again as international coalition returns
A state of relief had prevailed around the world after former
Iraqi Prime Minister Haider al-Abadi had announced in July 2017 that his
country's forces were victorious in the battle of Mosul and put an end to ISIS
after three years under the terrorist organization’s control, but some of ISIS pockets
still harass Iraqi forces.
ISIS destroyed about 5,000 buildings, including 490
buildings in the old city of Mosul, from June 2014 to July 2017, according to
official data released by the United Nations.
Despite the official announcement that ISIS’s geographic
presence in Iraq had ended, some of its pockets still have sufficient strength
to attack security points in the country.
Targeting checkpoints
ISIS also targeted checkpoints belonging to the Tribal
Mobilization Forces and the Iraqi Security Forces in Diyala Governorate in two
successive attacks in early May 2020.
At the same time, the terrorist organization launched a
military attack targeting pro-Iranian militias in the Jurf Al-Sakhr region
south of Baghdad, resulting in a number of dead and wounded.
In April, ISIS launched successive attacks in the areas
between Kirkuk, Salahuddin and Diyala governorates, which resulted in dozens
Iraqi security forces killed or wounded, in addition to the destruction of
electricity towers in Kirkuk.
The commander of Norway’s military forces in Iraq,
Lieutenant-Colonel Stein Grongstad, said on May 13 that ISIS operatives were
hiding in agricultural areas, where it is difficult to track and target them,
so they succeed in attacking Iraqi forces and then return to their hideouts
again.
New commander to confront ISIS
After new Iraqi Prime Minister Mustafa al-Kazemi was approved
by the parliament, he placed the issue of confronting ISIS as his top priority,
which was reflected in his selection of a new commander for the Iraqi
Counter-Terrorism Service, Abdul Wahab al-Saadi, with a promise to provide the
newest types of weapons and equipment to the Iraqi army forces.
Saadi’s selection to lead the Counter-Terrorism Service came
after he played an important role in liberating the governorates of Nineveh,
Anbar, and Salahuddin in northern and western Iraq from ISIS control.
In his first press statements after taking office, Saadi
indicated that his forces would focus mainly on confronting ISIS, especially in
the northern and western regions such as Salahuddin, Kirkuk and Mosul, as there
are indications of terrorists gathering in these places.
New operation
In the first practical implementation by the new commander,
the Nineveh Operations Command, affiliated to the Iraqi army, announced the
launch of a new expanded security operation to hunt ISIS operatives south of
Mosul.
The commander of the Nineveh operations, Major General Numan
al-Zobaie, told the German news agency (DPA) that the operation was launched at
dawn on May 14 and aims to eliminate ISIS in the villages of Qayyarah and the
villages on the banks of the Tigris River south of Mosul, such as Zour Kanous.
Zobaie explained that joint forces from the army and police
carried out raids in various villages to search for ISIS pockets. As a result,
21 terrorists were arrested and large amounts of weapons and equipment were
confiscated.
ISIS militants tried to infiltrate the city of Samarra in
Salahuddin Governorate in northern Iraq, but the security forces succeeded in
thwarting the operation and the terrorist elements fled.
The Iraqi military operation comes hours after the US-led
international coalition carried out air strikes against ISIS locations on
Thursday, May 14.
This strike is the first of its kind since the international
coalition forces withdrew from Iraqi bases in April 2020. According to a
statement issued by the coalition forces, French aircraft launched air strikes
targeting the village of Mazirir, located in the Hawija district of Kirkuk
Governorate in northern Iraq.




