Iraq launches final offensive against Islamic State, near Syrian border
Iraqi forces launched on Thursday an offensive to recapture the last patch of Iraqi territory still in the hands of the Islamic State group (IS), on the border area with Syria, Prime Minister Haider al-Abadi said.
"Daesh members have to choose between death and surrender," he said in a statement announcing the offensive in the region of al-Qaim and Rawa and using an alternative name for the militant group.
The Iraqi airforce dropped thousands of leaflets on the border area calling on the militants to surrender and urging the population to stay away from their positions, according to a statement from the Joint Operations Command in Baghdad.
The militant group also holds parts of the Syrian side of the border, but the area under their control is shrinking as they retreat in the face of two sets of hostile forces - a US-backed, Kurdish-led coalition and Syrian government troops with foreign Shia militias backed by Iran and Russia.
IS's self-declared cross-border caliphate effectively collapsed in July, when US-backed Iraqi forces captured Mosul, the group's de facto capital in Iraq, in a gruelling battle which lasted nine months.
The militants' Syrian stronghold, Raqqa, fell to US-backed forces last week.
The group's leader, Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi, who declared the caliphate from Mosul in mid-2014, released an audio recording on 28 September that indicated he was alive, after several reports that he had been killed. He urged his followers to keep up the fight despite setbacks.
"Tell those among your children and relatives who took up a weapon against the state to throw it aside immediately, and to go to any house on top of which a white flag has been raised when the liberation forces enter al-Qaim,'' said the leaflets dropped by the Iraqi airforce.
Regular army units, Sunni tribal forces and Iranian-backed Popular Mobilisation units are taking part in the offensive toward the Syrian border, the Joint Operations Command said.
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