Airstrikes fuel Mosul gains as Iraq pushes for quick victory
MOSUL, Iraq — Half a dozen units of Islamic State group fighters holed up in western Mosul began their morning radio checks at just after 4 a.m. It was still dark and Iraqi forces deployed a few blocks away were listening in as they prepared an advance on the city’s al-Rifai neighbourhood.
“Thirty, what’s new? … 120, do you read me? What’s up?” the IS radio operator said, using Iraqi slag.
About 40 minutes later the first U.S.-led coalition airstrike hit as Iraqi forces pushed across a main road and began clearing the neighbourhood’s narrow streets.
“We’re seeing at least two squirters at the impact site,” a member of the coalition force radioed back to the Iraqi troops in Australian-accented English, using a slang term for badly wounded IS fighters. Moments later the extremists were calling for doctors over their own radio network.


