Iraq launched a broad offensive to retake Mosul from the Islamic State group a week ago. Here is what we know so far about the country's biggest military operation in years:
Federal forces operating out of the main staging base of Qayyarah have taken dozens of small villages south of Mosul and are working their way up the Tigris Valley.
After an initial push by the Kurdish peshmerga, federal army and elite counter-terrorism forces have taken over the eastern front, where they have retaken swathes of the Nineveh plain.
They wrested back control of Bartalla, a Christian town only about 10 miles east of Mosul, and are fighting to take full control of Qaraqosh, formerly the largest Christian town in Iraq.
On the northeastern front, a large deployment of peshmerga have taken several villages from ISIS and are closing in on Bashiqa.
The US-led coalition says it has carried out 32 air strikes on the area in a week, delivering more than 1,700 munitions that destroyed 136 ISIS fighting positions, 18 tunnels and 26 car bombs.
Neither the federal government nor the autonomous Kurdish region release any figures for their dead and wounded, but both sides are suffering casualties.
However, Baghdad, the Kurds and the US-led coalition supporting them with airstrikes and advisers on the ground have said early gains exceeded expectations.
Kurdish leader Massud Barzani has hailed what he describes as excellent coordination with the forces from Baghdad, despite a running political and budgetary feud.
The push for Mosul, ISIS's last major stronghold in Iraq, has been delayed on many occasions and all sides have had ample time to learn from previous operations and fine-tune their battle plans.
While an increasingly pragmatic ISIS has been more inclined than previously to fall back when under recent attack, it has mounted a spirited defense of Mosul so far.
The group has unleashed dozens of suicide car bombs against Iraqi forces, apparently trading land it controlled around Mosul for casualties among its enemies' ranks.
ISIS has lit fires in and around Mosul to obfuscate the battlefield for the aerial and satellite assets of its enemies, but that tactic is having a limited impact, analysts say.
The jihadists have also hit back by attacking Iraqi forces elsewhere, notably with a spectacular attack on the Kurdish-controlled city of Kirkuk and another on the western outpost of Rutba.
Those two operations seemed less of an attempt at making territorial gains than a bid to stretch Iraq's security forces and draw attention away from their losses in the Mosul theater.
Medics at hospitals inside Mosul have told AFP that the number of wounded ISIS fighters brought in from the front lines has soared over the past week.
Civilians are already paying a heavy price for the offensive, with tough living conditions inside Mosul deteriorating sharply and increasingly paranoid jihadists stepping up repression and intimidation.
The widespread use of smoke — ISIS has set fire to tires across the city, oil wells and trenches — has led to an increase in the number of people checking into hospitals with respiratory ailments.
More than 7,500 people have already fled the fighting and the jihadists who ruled them for two years, but Iraqi forces are still advancing in sparsely populated areas.
That figure could grow exponentially as soon as forces reach the boundaries of the city proper and attempts are made to open safe corridors for the more than a million people still believed trapped in the city.
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