Date: Aug 4, 2016
Source: The Daily Star
Coalition pounds Daesh in Saddam palace
Agence France Presse
LONDON: Coalition warplanes bombed one of former Iraqi dictator Saddam Hussein’s palaces which was being used as a training base by Daesh (ISIS), Britain’s Defense Ministry said Wednesday.

The palace in the Daesh stronghold of Mosul in northern Iraq was attacked in a joint operation by the U.S.-led coalition Monday, with British Tornado jets targeting the headquarters buildings and a security center.

Extensive surveillance established that Daesh was using the palace and its sprawling grounds as a headquarters and training center for foreign recruits, the ministry said.

Within the secure compound on the banks of the River Tigris, the main palace building was being used as accommodation and a meeting venue. The site also contained “a number of more discreet outbuildings used for command and control, training, internal security and repression,” it said.

“A large coalition air package drawn from several nations conducted a carefully coordinated attack on the complex,” the ministry said in a statement.

“The British contribution was a pair of Tornados, armed with the largest guided bombs in the RAF’s [Royal Air Force’s] inventory, the 910-kilogram Enhanced Paveway III, which were used to target first the headquarters buildings, then a security center.”

“Initial analysis indicates that the coalition mission was successful.”

Mosul, Iraq’s second city, has been held by Daesh since June 2014. Iraqi forces are conducting operations to set the stage for an assault but the final push to retake it is likely still months away.

As part of the international coalition, RAF Tornado and Typhoon jets are flying daily missions against Daesh in Iraq and Syria from the British sovereign bases on Cyprus.

“Daesh has been losing followers and territory for months, and emphatic strikes like this show that we and the coalition will not waver,” Defense Secretary Michael Fallon said after the Mosul bombing was carried out.

“Daesh fighters, both foreign and home-grown, can see that they are targets inside this cult.”