Convoys of Iraqi Humvees snaked through the sprawling university compound in eastern Mosul, pausing for artillery and airstrikes to clear snipers perched within classrooms, dormitories and behind the trees that line the campus streets.
Iraqi forces entered the university from the southeast yesterday and by nightfall had secured a handful of buildings, Brig Gen Haider Fadhil and Lt Gen Abdul-Wahab al-Saadi said on a tour of the university today.
Unlike in the surrounding neighborhoods, Iraqi officers said they believe the university grounds are largely empty of civilians and so they've been able to use air cover more liberally.
Iraqi soldiers said their initial advance faced less resistance than they faced during the first weeks of the Mosul operation.
"We were targeted with only four car bombs where before (IS) would send 20 in one day," special forces Lt Zain al- Abadeen said. "And they aren't armored like before, they're just using civilian cars."
The massive operation to retake Mosul, Iraq's second largest city, from IS was launched in October. Since then Iraqi forces have slowly clawed back about a third of the city.
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