Iraqi Forces Reportedly Enter Western Mosul

The first Iraqi troops have entered a neighborhood in western Mosul as the government’s four-month-long offensive to recapture the city from Islamic State (IS) militants enters its final phase, military commanders have said.

Lieutenant General Sami al-Aridhi of the Counterterrorism Service said on February 24 that Iraqi forces have moved into Mosul’s Al-Maamun neighborhood.

The previous day, government forces reported capturing the disused Mosul airport and the Ghazlani military base, as well as the village of Tal al-Rayyan southwest of Mosul.

The government declared the eastern part of Mosul liberated in January.

Mosul fell to IS fighters in the summer of 2014.

U.S. officials said on February 20 that some 2,000 IS fighters were still entrenched in the city.

Some 750,000 civilians remain in the city, Iraq’s second-largest and the last IS stronghold in the country.

Officials have said taking the western part of the city could be particularly difficult because it contains older neighborhoods with narrow, densely developed streets.

Iraqi forces will have a much harder time using their armored vehicles.

Based on reporting by AP and Reuters