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Nineveh Plains offensive

Nineveh Plains Offensive
Part of the Iraq War (2014–present),
Military intervention against ISIL
Date 16–17 December 2015 (1 day)
Location Nineveh Plains, Iraq
Coordinates: 36°37′N 43°7′E / 36.617°N 43.117°E / 36.617; 43.117
Result Coalition victory
Belligerents
Iraqi Kurdistan
Iraqi Assyria
 Canada
Turkey Turkey
Air support:
 United States
 United Kingdom
 France
 Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant
Strength
Unknown number of Kurdish peshmerga
100–200 Turkish soldiers
69 Canadian special forces
300+ ISIL fighters
Casualties and losses
6+ Peshmerga fighters killed and 4 Turkish soldier wounded 250+ ISIL fighters killed
Nineveh Plains offensive is located in Iraq
Nineveh Plains offensive
Location within Iraq

The Nineveh Plains offensive was a battle in which the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL) mounted a multi–front attack against Peshmerga forces in the area north and east of Mosul, in December 2015. The attack—the most significant ISIL military operation in the area in months, was successfully repelled by the Kurdish forces and was followed by a coalition air counter-offensive.

Over the past year, Kurdish forces had been slowly retaking positions around Mosul under ISIL control as part of the Mosul offensive (2015), notably retaking Sinjar in November. These positions threatened ISIL's control over Mosul. Disagreements between Kurds and Iraqi forces slowed the process of expelling ISIL. The Kurds appealed to the West for more military support. It was noted that U.S. Defense Secretary Ashton B. Carter was visiting the nearby city of Erbil to meet a Kurdish official on the day of the attack.

On December 16 and 17, ISIL launched a multi–front attack against the Kurdish defensive lines lasting 17 hours and involving at least 300 heavily armed ISIL fighters. The offensive involved at least four coordinated attacks, in the Newaran, Bashik, Tl Eswed, Khazir and Zerdk Mountain areas, as well as the Peshmerga bunkers in the village of Shindokha. The attack involved an element of surprise, and the ISIL fighters were able to briefly breach the lines before being repelled. The attack was described as "the hardest punch ISIL had thrown since this summer" by a USA military official.

The military Zilikahn base, where 100–200 Turkish troops have been training local Kurd fighters, was also attacked by mortar fire and Katyusha rockets. A spokesman for the Patriotic Union of Kurdistan said that the ISIL fighters were trying to target Peshmerga forces and attacked the Zilikan base by mistake.

Canadian special forces, numbering 69, were also in the area to train Kurdish forces and were involved in the battle, laying down supporting fire to back up the Kurds as they undertook a counter-offensive Thursday. Canadian forces have also in the past acted as spotters for coalition planes.

Brig. Gen Mark Odom, the senior American officer in the area, indicated that ISIL's principal objective may have been a "spoiling attack", meant to disrupt efforts to encircle and capture Mosul. Iraq Kurdish president Masoud Barzani noted that the attack occurred on Kurdish Flag Day and speculated that it had been under preparation for a month.


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Wikipedia

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