I think your understanding is correct.
I'd say that JSF fills most of the part of the controller. There are other libraries that are compatible with JSF though. For example, you can use Spring WebFlow together with JSF to get more powerful navigation features.
JSF is not very intrusive when it comes to the model. Ideally, there aren't any traces that you are using JSF in your domain model (the exception is that JSF provides annotations that you can optionally use, such as @ManagedBean). This means you are free to use any libraries you want. You can use Spring IOC or EJB if you want to, or you can code your entire model in plain old java objects.
That being said, I should like to emphasize that JSP is not obsolete. As digitaljoel points out, Facelets have replaced JSP as the view technology in JSF, but JSP is still alive and healthy in other frameworks. There is not an agreement that JSF including Facelets are "better" than JSP (together with another web framework); and JSF has not become an industry standard.
Writing a web application using JSF is closer to writing a desktop application, since they have abstracted away much of the request-response handling. There is not a specific method being invoked each time a client does a request, instead each request passes through a lifecycle of which you are not fully in control. Interacting directly with the HttpServletRequest is discouraged.
Ignoring the request-response nature of the web increases the complexity of a request and conflicts with another growing trend: rich web applications that heavily relies on Javascript. The responsibility of the view logic is moved from the server to the browser, which interacts with the server using Ajax against thin HTTP APIs.
The point is that JSF is not the end-all framework that you need to learn and ignore everything else. It can be the correct choice for some applications, but not for all.