U.S. monitoring Iraq’s largest dam for signs of collapse
The United States is monitoring Iraq’s largest dam for signs of further deterioration that could point to an impending catastrophic collapse, U.S. army officers said on Thursday.
The Islamic State of Iraq and Syria (ISIS) jihadist group seized the Mosul Dam briefly in 2014, leading to a lapse in maintenance that weakened an already flawed structure, and Baghdad is seeking a company to make repairs.
“The likelihood of the dam collapsing is something we are trying to determine right now,” Lieutenant General Sean MacFarland, the commander of the U.S.-led operation against ISIS, told journalists in Baghdad.
The dam has long been in danger of collapse, which U.S. officials have warned could send a huge wave crashing into ISIS-held Mosul, Iraq’s second-largest city that lies about 40 kilometres (25 miles) away.
The U.S. put measuring devices on the structure in December to monitor how much it is “moving or deteriorating over time”, MacFarland said.
“We’re still evaluating that data,” he said, but if it does collapse, “it’s gonna go fast, and that’s bad.”
The U.S. is sharing the data it collects with the Iraqi government and working with Baghdad on an evacuation plan, MacFarland said.
“They understand that there is the potential for the Mosul dam to collapse,” he said.
“If this dam was in the United States, we would have drained the lake behind it — we would have taken that dam out of commission.”
Colonel Steve Warren, the spokesman for the anti-ISIS operation, said that divers had also assessed the dam.
The dam, which was completed in 1984, was constructed atop a foundation that continuously erodes with exposure to water, leaving cavities beneath the structure.
Since its completion, the Iraqi government has sought to shore up the foundation by injecting mortar-like grout into the subsoil and cavities and controlling seepage.
But that regular maintenance lapsed in 2014 after ISIS seized the dam, stealing the equipment and chasing off the workers, Warren said.
“After we regained control of that dam, the equipment was all gone, and the workers really never did come back,” Warren said.
“So the rate of decay increased because they weren’t doing that regular maintenance, that regular grouting.”
In 2007 the U.S. ambassador to Iraq and the top American military commander in the country wrote a letter warning the dam could fail with devastating results.
“A catastrophic failure of the Mosul Dam would result in flooding along the Tigris River all the way to Baghdad,” the letter said.
“Assuming a worst case scenario, an instantaneous failure of Mosul Dam filled to its maximum operating level could result in a flood wave 20 metres deep at the city of Mosul,” it said.
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