Colonel Pat Work of the US Army’s 82nd airborne division looks at the skyline as he meets Iraqi commanders near the front lines on the rooftop of a house in Mosul.—AP
Colonel Pat Work of the US Army’s 82nd airborne division looks at the skyline as he meets Iraqi commanders near the front lines on the rooftop of a house in Mosul.—AP

MOSUL: US army Colonel Pat Work and a small team of about a dozen soldiers drove through western Mosul in two unmarked armoured vehicles. Iraq’s prime minister had just declared the end of the militant Islamic State group’s caliphate the day before, but the fighting still raged on as Iraqi forces prepared for another big push on Saturday morning.

The American colonel had a series of urgent calls to make: to talk face-to-face with generals from the Iraqi Army, the federal police and the Iraqi special forces. While the gains in the Old City are bringing Iraqi troops closer to victory against IS in Mosul, they also mean the three branches of the country’s security forces are now fighting in closer quarters than ever before. The new battle space and lingering communication shortcomings mean Iraqi ground troops are at increased risk of being hit by non-precision fire like mortars and artillery by their partner Iraqi forces, he explained.

Throughout the course of the day Colonel Work shuttled between bases and command centres inside the city meeting with Iraqi commanders deep inside Mosul, underscoring the increasingly prominent US role in the offensive as it enters its final days.

“It’s a very violent close fight,” said Colonel Work, the commander of the 82nd Airborne’s 2nd Brigade Combat Team who deployed to Iraq in January. “When the bullets aren’t enough the commanders want to turn to high explosives which might be mortars or artillery ... so understanding where the other guy is all the time is kinda rule number one, so the lethal effect is directed at the target and not accidentally at another player that’s on your team.”

The various forces that make up Iraq’s military have long struggled with coordination. While the Mosul operation is overseen by a joint operations command and the prime minister, forces on the ground maintain independent command structures, standards and cultures. The Mosul fight is the first time all three forces have had to cooperate in an urban environment and throughout the operation the army, federal police and special forces have faced deadly setbacks when they acted independently, allowing IS fighters to concentrate their defences on a single front.

“We’re helping [Iraqi forces] see across the boundaries between their different units ... just helping them understand where they are and how rapidly things might be changing.” said Colonel Work.

One of Work’s stops was at a modest house in a residential west Mosul neighbourhood. About a dozen US troops and Iraqi soldiers were hunched over computers identifying IS targets just a few hundred metres away ahead of the next day’s operation. The presence of US forces at the small patrol base deep inside Mosul is a level of support that had not been authorised when the Mosul fight first began.

Under the administration of US President Donald Trump, Defence Secretary Jim Mattis moved US combat advisers closer to the fight by authorising US troops to partner with Iraqi forces at the battalion level.

The US-led coalition’s fight against IS in Iraq has slowly expanded over the past three years from a campaign of air strikes carried out by coalition forces who largely stayed within heavily fortified bases to an operation with some 6,000 American troops on the ground, many operating close to frontline fighting. The evolution suggests that despite a large training programme designed to generate enough soldiers to retake Mosul, coalition officials assessed Iraqi forces lacked the tactical skills to conduct the operation without close support.

Between meetings, as Colonel Work’s vehicle rolled through a traffic circle in western Mosul, he said being on the ground beside his Iraqi counterparts is essential.

“For any commander there is no substitute for seeing it with your own eyes ... for talking to the stake holders who are in it making the decisions every day,” he said. “ISIS has no boundaries, so our adviser network can’t have any boundaries. And so part of it is getting out there daily to see it.”

Colonel Work’s one-on-one meetings inside Mosul come with a huge operational footprint. During his visit on Friday a team of dozens of US soldiers most young men on their first deployment provided him security and handled logistics. At each patrol base inside Mosul where US troops work with Iraqi forces there can be dozens to over a hundred soldiers deployed to protect a team of just 10 advisers.

With the vast majority of Mosul retaken from IS, soldiers trained by the coalition to fight in combat are now transitioning to act as hold forces to help provide security. Even after the last pockets of the city are retaken, Colonel Work said he doesn’t expect that will necessarily mean an end to the US role in Mosul.

“Mosul is going to be a challenge, ISIS is going to continue to challenge the hold,” using an alternative acronym for the militant Islamic State group. He said US troops would continue to facilitate coordination and provide advice just as they did during the offensive.

“We will continue to help Iraqi commanders recognise that this is what you fought for.”

Published in Dawn, July 2nd, 2017

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