New intelligence reveals ISIS has lost almost a THIRD of the land jihadis seized since last year
Latest news comes just as US, British and Iraqi troops prepare to retake Iraqi city of Mosul
OVER the last 19 months, on the run ISIS has lost almost a third of the territory it seized in Iraq and Syria, experts claim.
Land controlled by the terror organisation has diminished - shrinking from 56,400 square miles in January last year to 40,700 sq miles as of October 3.
According to experts at security analytic firm IHS, this means ISIS is now only holding on to an area the size of Sri Lanka.
Although the news of the terror group's losses is welcome, and is said to be significant because they were concentrated in northern Aleppo in Syria, the trend has slowed down since July - with it only losing 1,739 sq mi over the past three months.
“The Islamic State's territorial losses since July are relatively modest in scale, but unprecedented in their strategic significance,” Columb Strack, senior analyst and head of the IHS Conflict Monitor, told .
“The loss of direct road access to cross-border smuggling routes into Turkey severely restricts the group's ability to recruit new fighters from abroad, while the Iraqi government is poised to launch its offensive on Mosul.”
The news of the decrease comes ahead of a large-scale assault on Mosul, the last major ISIS stronghold in Iraq.
The operation to retake Mosul is expected to take place at some point in the next 10 days.
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Britain is sending hundreds of troops to Iraq carrying gas masks and nuclear warfare clothing to protect themselves against in case of a chemical attack by ISIS jihadis.
The 250 soldiers from the Four Rifles Battalion are being deployed today in preparation for the ground and air assault on the city.
A dozen Iraqi Army brigades, each of which includes from 800 to 1,600 troops, have been gathering at Qaiyara Airfield West, south of Mosul, ahead of the attack.
But fears have been raised that the assault on the city, which has a population of around one million people, will spark a humanitarian disaster.
Bruno Geddo, from the United Nations refugee agency in Iraq, told the Sunday Times, the attack could trigger “one of the largest man-made disasters” in years.
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