U.S. Set to Open a Climactic Battle Against ISIS in Mosul, Iraq
By all indications, the battle for Mosul will happen in stages. As in the recapture of Ramadi in December, Iraqi forces will first surround and cordon off the city, then gradually tighten the circle in a process that could take months. In a similar situation, American forces would maneuver into the heart of the city, much as they did in their assault on Baghdad in 2003. But Iraqi forces who do not have the same kind of battlefield support, particularly high-quality medical care have been far more risk-averse and deliberate in their operations.
A dozen Iraqi Army brigades, each of which includes anywhere from 800 to 1,600 troops, have been gathering at Qaiyara Airfield West, an Iraqi base 40 miles south of Mosul. Kurdish pesh merga fighters, who are positioned to the north and east, will also help isolate the city.
The eventual assault into Mosul will be carried out by Iraqs counterterrorism service, whose commandos have been trained by American Special Forces and are the countrys most reliable and proficient fighting force. Iraqs federal police and some Army units will also join the push into the city.
The United States military is poised to influence the battle in potentially decisive ways. Apache attack helicopters equipped with Hellfire missiles have been striking targets in northern Iraq, and American and French artillery can be positioned to provide support. American Special Operations commandos have also been active in northern Iraq.
American intelligence analysts estimate that 3,000 to 4,500 fighters remain in Mosul, a mixture of Iraqi militants and foreign recruits who have been steadily dropping under a barrage of coalition airstrikes over the past several months. One notable loss for the Islamic State was Omar al-Shishani, a Chechen and one of the groups top field commanders, who was killed in an airstrike in March in a town south of Mosul.
Their backs are against the wall, Lt. Gen. Sean MacFarland, who recently stepped down as the overall commander for the United States operations in Iraq and Syria, said in a telephone interview. He added that the militants were having trouble drawing new recruits to Syria and Iraq because of tougher border checks by Turkey. Theyre not the ISIS that drove there a couple of years ago, he said.
Even so, the Pentagon and its allies in the American-led coalition are bracing for a tough fight against an enemy that has burrowed a network of tunnels throughout Mosul, dug trenches and filled them with oil, and planted improvised explosives so densely they resemble minefields.
Mr. Obamas aides say he would like to be able to hand the Islamic State issue to the next president with the Iraq portion at least on the right trajectory, if not solved.
The presidents supporters say he does not want to pass to his successor a terrorism threat as bad as or worse than the menace Mr. Obama faced from Al Qaeda when he became commander in chief.
He talks about being a relay swimmer, about the idea that hes got this moment where he has to turn things over, said Derek Chollet, a former assistant defense secretary in the Obama administration.
But Iraq has a way of confounding even the best-laid plans, and the presidents critics see it differently. Suppose there are a million refugees from Mosul. What are they going to do? said Eliot A. Cohen, who was a State Department counselor in the Bush administration. Id like to see Mosul retaken, but one thing we all learned from Iraq is that things never simply break your way.
American military officials acknowledge that retaking Mosul will not defeat the Islamic State, because Raqqa, Syria, the groups de facto capital, is the heart of its self-declared caliphate.
It is not the end of the caliphate if Mosul falls, General MacFarland said. But if Raqqa falls, the caliphate as we know it really begins to unfold.
For all its complexity, however, Mosul presents an opportunity for the White House that may not be readily at hand in Syria. After nearly eight years in Iraq during the Bush and Obama administrations, the American military knows the terrain well and has a network of large and well-secured Iraqi bases it can use to assist in the fight. It also has a sizable proxy force: the thousands of Iraqi and Kurdish troops the Americans have trained.
Some officials expect the militants to pull back from the eastern side of Mosul, which is divided by the Tigris River, and instead defend the west bank, where the government center is. The west bank has many narrow streets, making it difficult for tanks and artillery to operate.
A key question is who will secure the city once the Islamic State is driven out.
Iranian-backed Shiite militias, which are a politically powerful movement in Iraq, have been accused of detaining and killing hundreds of men who fled the fighting in and around Falluja this year. To guard against human rights abuses, Prime Minister Haider al-Abadi is expected to give those militias a role well outside the city.
The Kurds have already said they will not send their forces into Mosul once it has been secured. Nor does the United States want Iraq to keep its largely Shiite army inside the city any longer than it needs to.
As a result, security will have to be provided by thousands of local police officers, including many who have yet to be trained, as well as former officers who joined the Iraqi Army after the Islamic State attacked and now need to be recalled to their police units. More than 20,000 tribal fighters, whom the Iraqis and Kurds are vetting, will also help with security.
This plan has the virtue of giving the lead to local security forces, but it also means that one of the most delicate phases of the operation is being entrusted to fighters who are lightly equipped and whom the United States will not be directly advising.
A main concern for critics is that there is no plan in Iraq for how to govern Mosul and the surrounding Nineveh Province. This has prompted fear that retaking the city could aggravate the tensions between the predominantly Sunni population of Mosul and the Shiite-dominated government in Baghdad that fueled the rise of the Islamic State in the first place.
There is no agreement about anything after the liberation, said Atheel al-Nujaifi, who was the governor of Nineveh Province when the militants charged into Mosul in 2014. It is very dangerous.
Mr. Nujaifi is promoting a plan to give the region around Mosul far greater autonomy. But there are no indications that the Iraqi government will go along with that degree of decentralization.
While some Pentagon aides are worried, others in the Obama administration say that help from the United States will enable the Iraqis, Kurds and various other groups in Nineveh to figure out a political plan, in part by connecting the disparate factions, including Mr. Nujaifis successor as governor, Nofal Agoob.
But carving up the political spoils is not the only challenge.
Of the two million people who resided in Mosul before it was seized by the Islamic State, aid organizations estimate that about 1.2 million remain. Humanitarian assistance groups are already stretched thin from dealing with operations to recapture towns outside Mosul.
Though residents are being urged to stay in their homes, civilians fleeing the fighting could number in the hundreds of thousands. Some aid groups estimate that as many as a million people could be displaced by fighting to recapture the city, creating a daunting humanitarian task that the United Nations and other organizations say they are not yet ready to deal with.
Follow The New York Timess politics and Washington coverage on Facebook and Twitter, and sign up for the First Draft politics newsletter.
A version of this article appears in print on October 8, 2016, on page A1 of the New York edition with the headline: U.S. to Open Battle to Retake Iraqi City From ISIS.
Read the original post:
U.S. Set to Open a Climactic Battle Against ISIS in Mosul, Iraq
- Largest U.S. Military Buildup Since the Iraq War Points to a Long-Term War with Iran - - February 26th, 2026 [February 26th, 2026]
- Pentagon Reveals How the Defense Mapping Agency Helped Win the First Iraq War - Defense Mirror - February 26th, 2026 [February 26th, 2026]
- 8 soldiers die in road accident in western Iraq - Iraqi News - February 26th, 2026 [February 26th, 2026]
- Chevron wins year to conclude talks for Lukoil's stake in Iraq's West Qurna 2 - Upstream Online - February 26th, 2026 [February 26th, 2026]
- Chevron Is Negotiating for a Stake in a Massive Oilfield in Iraq. 2 Key Takeaways for Investors. - The Motley Fool - February 26th, 2026 [February 26th, 2026]
- Advanced Negotiations for a Friendly Match Between Spain and Iraq - ysscores.com - February 26th, 2026 [February 26th, 2026]
- Iran-Backed Iraqi Militia Officials: U.S. Attack On Iran Would Mean All-Out War On Iraq, Yemen, Lebanon, And Shi'ites Worldwide, Potentially Provoking... - February 26th, 2026 [February 26th, 2026]
- Russia ready to repatriate ISIS-linked detainees held in Iraq - - February 26th, 2026 [February 26th, 2026]
- 'I left for the Iraq war days after birth of son' - BBC - February 22nd, 2026 [February 22nd, 2026]
- US air power buildup in Middle East is largest since 2003 Iraq invasion report - The Times of Israel - February 22nd, 2026 [February 22nd, 2026]
- Iraq bloc may drop Maliki from PM nomination after US threats - The New Arab - February 22nd, 2026 [February 22nd, 2026]
- Trump considered giving himself highest military award for three-hour Iraq visit - The Independent - February 22nd, 2026 [February 22nd, 2026]
- Arnold: Iraq will shock the world - FIFA - February 22nd, 2026 [February 22nd, 2026]
- U.S. Gathers the Most Air Power in the Mideast Since the 2003 Iraq Invasion - The Wall Street Journal - February 22nd, 2026 [February 22nd, 2026]
- Iraq approves 'amicable settlement' with Russia's Lukoil over transfer of operations of giant field - Reuters - February 22nd, 2026 [February 22nd, 2026]
- Germany moves troops out of Iraq, citing Mideast tensions - The Times of Israel - February 22nd, 2026 [February 22nd, 2026]
- Trump Says He Deserves the Congressional Medal of Honor for His 2018 Visit to Iraq: 'I Was Extremely Brave' - People.com - February 22nd, 2026 [February 22nd, 2026]
- Rights group condemns US transfer of detainees with ISIS affiliation to Iraq - Jurist.org - February 22nd, 2026 [February 22nd, 2026]
- Iraq transfers ISIS prisoners from Syria, plans to return them to their homelands - ANHA - February 22nd, 2026 [February 22nd, 2026]
- Connecticut National Guard members deploying to Iraq and Kuwait - WFSB - February 22nd, 2026 [February 22nd, 2026]
- Celebrating 25 Years of Wikipedia and 10 Years of Wikimedia Iraq in Baghdad - Wikimedia.org - February 22nd, 2026 [February 22nd, 2026]
- Iraq Deposits Maritime Boundary Map with the UN to Strengthen Legal Position - OANANews - February 22nd, 2026 [February 22nd, 2026]
- US pushes to end NATO mission in Iraq in strategic shift under Trump - middle-east-online.com - February 22nd, 2026 [February 22nd, 2026]
- Germany pulls troops from northern Iraq amid rising Middle East tensions - TRT World - February 22nd, 2026 [February 22nd, 2026]
- Germany moves troops out of Iraq, citing Mideast tensions - arabnews.jp - February 22nd, 2026 [February 22nd, 2026]
- Trump says he considered awarding himself Medal of Honor for 2018 Iraq visit - Anadolu Ajans - February 22nd, 2026 [February 22nd, 2026]
- I have seen what the Mullahs regime has exported to Iraq, and that has made my country what it is todayIraqi Activist Sarah Idan - The European... - February 22nd, 2026 [February 22nd, 2026]
- HRW warns of risk of abuse after ISIS detainees transfer to Iraq - The New Arab - February 22nd, 2026 [February 22nd, 2026]
- Belgium gives 1.35 million to UN mine clearance in Iraq and Syria - belganewsagency.eu - February 22nd, 2026 [February 22nd, 2026]
- U.S. military says controversial transfer of thousands of ISIS suspects from Syria to Iraq complete - CBS News - February 16th, 2026 [February 16th, 2026]
- U.S. Transfers Thousands of ISIS Prisoners to Iraq From Syria - The New York Times - February 16th, 2026 [February 16th, 2026]
- David Petraeus, the U.S. general who oversaw the transition in Iraq: In Venezuela there will be innumerable mini-crises - EL PAS English - February 16th, 2026 [February 16th, 2026]
- Prospects And Risks Of A U.S. Troop Withdrawal From Syria And Iraq - Forbes - February 16th, 2026 [February 16th, 2026]
- In Iraq, Trump Achieves in a Tweet What It Took Bush an Army to Do - Middle East Forum - February 16th, 2026 [February 16th, 2026]
- No exit in sight: Why Turkey is keeping troops in Syria and Iraq - The New Arab - February 16th, 2026 [February 16th, 2026]
- IS suspects transferred from Syria to Iraq are interrogated in a Baghdad prison - AP News - February 16th, 2026 [February 16th, 2026]
- Iraq taps UAE expertise to boost local automotive industry - middle-east-online.com - February 16th, 2026 [February 16th, 2026]
- Iraq boosts US Treasury holdings to $40.8B in Dec. 2025 - - February 16th, 2026 [February 16th, 2026]
- Iraq to reopen key crossings with Syria - The New Region - February 16th, 2026 [February 16th, 2026]
- 5,000 Islamic State detainees transferred to Iraq from Syria, will face investigations - Foundation for Defense of Democracies - February 16th, 2026 [February 16th, 2026]
- What the 1991 uprising in Iraq can teach US and Iran - - February 16th, 2026 [February 16th, 2026]
- Reel Thoughts: The Presidents Cake offers a raw perspective on dictatorship in Iraq under Saddam Hussein - The Daily Northwestern - February 16th, 2026 [February 16th, 2026]
- A Legal Black Hole: Does Iraq Have the Right to Detain Prisoners Transferred from Syria? - Just Security - February 16th, 2026 [February 16th, 2026]
- Iraq seeks repatriation of transferred ISIS detainees to their home countries - The Arab Weekly - February 16th, 2026 [February 16th, 2026]
- US military says it completed Syria mission to transfer ISIS members to Iraq - Reuters - February 16th, 2026 [February 16th, 2026]
- PM: Iraq Bears Significant Security Responsibilities On Behalf Of The International Community - OANANews - February 16th, 2026 [February 16th, 2026]
- Iraq Weather Forecast: Stable conditions with cooler mornings and light rain chances - Iraqi News - February 16th, 2026 [February 16th, 2026]
- Erdoan, Iraqi PM Al Sudani discuss boosting Trkiye-Iraq ties | Daily Sabah - Daily Sabah - February 16th, 2026 [February 16th, 2026]
- Iraq says over 4,500 Daesh members transferred from Syria in coordination with US-led coalition - TRT World - February 16th, 2026 [February 16th, 2026]
- The Presidents Cake film review sadly charming tale of life in Iraq under Saddam and sanctions - Financial Times - February 16th, 2026 [February 16th, 2026]
- U.S. moving 7,000 ISIS suspects from Syria to Iraq amid concerns over security and due legal process - cbsnews.com - February 7th, 2026 [February 7th, 2026]
- Fragile Trump cannot see that Iran will make the Iraq War look like child's play - The i Paper - February 7th, 2026 [February 7th, 2026]
- Opportunity and Uncertainty in the Middle East: Next Steps for the Kurdistan Region of Iraq - Hudson Institute - February 7th, 2026 [February 7th, 2026]
- Explosion reported near US diplomatic facility in Iraq - Mehr News Agency - February 7th, 2026 [February 7th, 2026]
- US delivers new warning to Iraq over Maliki, threatens punitive measures - middle-east-online.com - February 7th, 2026 [February 7th, 2026]
- Iraq says received 2,250 terrorists from Syria - The New Region - February 7th, 2026 [February 7th, 2026]
- In Iraq, the Potential Return of a Divisive Leader Raises Alarm - Stratfor - February 7th, 2026 [February 7th, 2026]
- In the media: Letta Tayler on the mass transfer of IS detainees from Syria to Iraq - International Centre for Counter-Terrorism - ICCT - February 7th, 2026 [February 7th, 2026]
- Authorities warn of growing ISIS activities in western Iraq - rudaw.net - February 7th, 2026 [February 7th, 2026]
- What U.S. history with Iraq's oil can tell us about what could happen in Venezuela - NPR - February 4th, 2026 [February 4th, 2026]
- Iraq's Maliki says he would welcome decision to replace him as PM candidate - Reuters - February 4th, 2026 [February 4th, 2026]
- Archaeologists identify forgotten city of Alexandria on the Tigris in southern Iraq - Archaeology News Online Magazine - February 4th, 2026 [February 4th, 2026]
- Mohammed bin Issa Al Jabers Unprofitable Stand: Principle, Power, and Postwar Iraq - The Times of Israel - February 4th, 2026 [February 4th, 2026]
- Shock, awe, death, joy and looting: how the Guardian covered the outbreak of the Iraq war - The Guardian - February 4th, 2026 [February 4th, 2026]
- Nuri al-Maliki Is the Last Thing Iraq Needs - The National Interest - February 4th, 2026 [February 4th, 2026]
- IRGC Threatens To Strike Bases Housing U.S. Forces In Jordan, Iraq, Bahrain, And The UAE If They Take Part In U.S. Strike Against Iran - MEMRI |... - February 4th, 2026 [February 4th, 2026]
- Wary of regimes spies, Iranians along Iraq border speak out - CBC - February 4th, 2026 [February 4th, 2026]
- US reiterates opposition to Maliki as Iraq PM, ready to use full range of tools: Official - rudaw.net - February 4th, 2026 [February 4th, 2026]
- Iraq wins two golds and a silver at West Asia Paralympic Games - Iraqi News - February 4th, 2026 [February 4th, 2026]
- Iraq is moving to prevent the return of ISIS in a new form - thenationalnews.com - February 4th, 2026 [February 4th, 2026]
- Kurdistan's New Gas Play Just Exposed the Real Battle for Iraq - Crude Oil Prices Today | OilPrice.com - February 4th, 2026 [February 4th, 2026]
- Washington Threatens Iraq Over Independent Leadership - - February 4th, 2026 [February 4th, 2026]
- Christian Communities In Iraq Fear Resurgence Of ISIS-Linked Violence - Eurasia Review - February 4th, 2026 [February 4th, 2026]
- Iran defends Maliki amid fears of losing influence in Iraq - middle-east-online.com - February 4th, 2026 [February 4th, 2026]
- Youth Participate in Transformative Ziyarah Journey to Iraq in Partnership with the Imam Hussain Holy Shrine - Imam Mahdi Association of Marjaeya - January 24th, 2026 [January 24th, 2026]
- Europeans among 150 high-ranking IS members transferred to Iraq - Naharnet - January 24th, 2026 [January 24th, 2026]
- Singapore Airlines, Scoot avoiding airspace over Iraq, Red Sea amid US-Iran tensions - Yahoo News Singapore - January 24th, 2026 [January 24th, 2026]
- US threatened to block Iraq from its Federal Reserve deposits over Iran-aligned politicians - middleeasteye.net - January 24th, 2026 [January 24th, 2026]
- US begins transfer of up to 7,000 IS group detainees from Syria to Iraq - France 24 - January 24th, 2026 [January 24th, 2026]
- Seeking to limit Irans influence, US threatens to starve Iraq of its oil dollars - thearabweekly.com - January 24th, 2026 [January 24th, 2026]