Iraq launches assault on last Daesh-held town in country: army

Iraqi security forces gather in the Rawa area during an operation to retake the Euphrates Valley town from the Daesh group on November 11, 2017. (AFP)

BAGHDAD: The Iraq army said it launched an assault on Friday on the small Euphrates valley town of Rawa, the last in the country still held by Daesh.
“Operations to liberate Rawa began at dawn,” the Joint Operations Command said in a statement.
The launch of the attack as the Syrian army battled for a second day to retake the town of Albu Kamal just across the border.
An army general contacted by AFP at the front predicted that the battle for Rawa would be swift as “the majority of IS fighters who were in the town have fled toward the Syrian border,” using another acronym to describe Daesh.
The US-led coalition battling the jihadists said on Thursday that they had lost 95 percent of the cross-border “caliphate” the size of Britain that they declared in Iraq and Syria in 2014.