Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

ISIS’ last Iraqi bastion falls

Militant group now holds only patches of desert, Baghdad says

- QASSIM ABDUL-ZAHRA More informatio­n on the Web Details of campaign against Islamic State arkansason­line.com/islamicsta­te Informatio­n for this article was contribute­d by Sarah El Deeb of The Associated Press.

Iraqi forces celebrate Friday in western Anbar province after retaking the town of Rawah, the last town in Iraq that was held by the Islamic State militant group. U.S.-led coalition forces supported the operation with intelligen­ce, airstrikes and advisers.

BAGHDAD — Iraqi forces backed by the U.S.-led coalition on Friday retook the last town in the country that was held by the Islamic State militant group, more than three years after the militants stormed nearly a third of Iraq’s territory, the Defense Ministry said.

At dawn, military units and tribal fighters pushed into the western neighborho­ods of Rawah in western Anbar province and retook the town after just five hours of fighting, according to Brig. Gen. Yahya Rasool, the ministry’s spokesman.

Iraq’s Prime Minister Haider al-Abadi congratula­ted his forces on retaking Rawah. In a statement released Friday afternoon, al-Abadi said Iraqi forces liberated Rawah in record time and were continuing operations to retake control of Iraq’s western desert and the border area with Syria.

Rawah, 175 miles northwest of Baghdad, lies along the Euphrates River Valley near the border town of Qaim that Iraqi forces retook from the Islamic State earlier this month.

U.S.-led coalition forces supported the operations to retake Rawah and Qaim with intelligen­ce, airstrikes and advisers, coalition spokesman Ryan Dillon said.

The Islamic State blitzed across Iraq’s north and west in the summer of 2014, capturing Iraq’s second-largest city of Mosul and advancing to the edges of the Iraqi capital, Baghdad. Later that year the United States began a campaign of airstrikes against the militants that fueled Iraqi territoria­l gains, allowing the military to retake Mosul in July this year.

All that now remains of Islamic State-held Iraq are patches of rural territory in the country’s vast western desert along the border with Syria.

The Islamic State has steadily been losing ground across the border in Syria as well, where its so-called caliphate has basically crumbled with the loss of the city of Raqqa, the group’s capital, which fell to the U.S.-backed Syrian Democratic Forces in October.

Both the U.S. and Russia have embedded special forces with their respective partners and are supporting their advances with airstrikes. Russia

backs Syrian government forces of President Bashar Assad.

The last urban areas controlled by the militants in Syria are parts of the border town of Boukamal and a patch of territory near the capital, Damascus, and in central Hama province.

Syrian government forces, backed by Russian troops and Iranian-backed militias, originally pushed the Islamic State out of Boukamal earlier this month, but the militants retook a large part of the town, mostly its northern neighborho­ods, days later. Since then, the Islamic State has repelled government forces trying to push back into the town.

Meanwhile, U.S.-backed Kurdish-led forces are also approachin­g Boukamal from the eastern side of the Euphrates.

Despite the Islamic State’s significan­t territoria­l losses, the group’s media arm remains intact, allowing it to continue to recruit supporters and inspire new attacks. Iraqi and American officials say Islamic State militants are expected to continue carrying out insurgent-style attacks in Syria, Iraq and beyond.

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AP/OSAMA SAMI
 ?? AP/OSAMA SAMI ?? Smoke rises while Iraqi security forces and tribal fighters attack Islamic State forces Friday in the Iraqi town of Rawah, 175 miles northwest of Baghdad.
AP/OSAMA SAMI Smoke rises while Iraqi security forces and tribal fighters attack Islamic State forces Friday in the Iraqi town of Rawah, 175 miles northwest of Baghdad.
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