BAGHDAD: Iraqi forces said Monday they face a tough battle against the Daesh group in deep gorges and other natural hideouts in the western desert along the Syrian border, their last bastion in Iraq.
“Our units have cleared 50 percent of the total area of the desert of around 29,000 square kilometers (11,000 sq miles). The first phase is over,” General Yahya Rassoul, spokesman of the Joint Operations Command, told AFP.
“Now our units will proceed to clearing the rest of the desert zones, including Wadi (valley) Hauran,” he said.
“The valley is deep and reaches Syrian territory. The mission is to destroy all the hideouts in the desert and valleys to secure western Iraq’s border with Syria” before soldiers are posted along the frontier, he said.
Wadi Hauran, with 200-meter-deep (650-foot-deep) gorges, is the longest valley in Iraq, stretching 350 kilometers (210 miles) from the Saudi border to the Euphrates River, also reaching the frontier with Jordan.
Daesh has controlled most of the valley in Anbar province since 2014, setting up arms depots and resupply posts.
Troops and paramilitaries launched the desert offensive on Thursday aiming to inflict a final defeat on Daesh.
Prime Minister Haider Al-Abadi has said he will not proclaim victory until the jihadists have been cleared from the western desert bordering Syria.
Iraq face tough battle against Daesh desert hideouts
Updated 27 November 2017