Al Qosh, Iraq: Iraqi Kurdish peshmerga forces backed by US air strikes on Sunday retook the country’s largest dam from militants who seized it the previous week, officials said.
“Mosul Dam was liberated completely,” Ali Awni, an official from Iraq’s main Kurdish party, told AFP, adding that fighting was now taking place in the nearby Tal Kayf area.
A peshmerga officer and another political party official also confirmed that Kurdish forces were in control of Mosul Dam, which provides electricity and irrigation water for farming to large areas of Iraq’s northern Nineveh province.
The recapture of the dam marks the biggest major prize won back from the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (Isil) militants since they launched their sweeping offensive in northern Iraq in early June.
The offensive swept federal security forces aside, clearing the way for Kurdish troops to take control of disputed northern territory they want to incorporate into their three-province autonomous region.
The militants launched a renewed drive in northern Iraq earlier this month, pushing back the Kurdish forces and taking control of Mosul Dam on August 7.
But the peshmerga have begun to claw back some ground with support from US warplanes and drones.