Los Angeles Times

Iraqi forces push back Islamic State

The military says its forces recaptured the center of a key city from the Islamic State militant group.

- By Alexandra Zavis and Amro Hassan alexandra.zavis @latimes.com Special correspond­ent Hassan reported from Cairo and Times staff writer Zavis from Los Angeles. Staff writer W.J. Hennigan in Washington contribute­d to this report.

Troops recapture the main government complex in Ramadi from militants who had occupied the city since May, providing a key victory and a morale boost.

CAIRO — The Iraqi military said Monday that its forces have recaptured the main government complex in Ramadi from Islamic State fighters who have occupied the city since May, providing a strategic victory and a morale boost to the country’s struggling security forces.

Anti-terrorism troops hoisted the national flag atop the key complex in the long-contested Sunni Muslim city west of Baghdad, Brig. Gen. Yahya Rasool, Iraqi joint operations spokesman, said in a televised statement.

Rasool said Ramadi had been fully liberated. However, Maj. Gen. Ismail Mahalawi, head of operations in western Iraq’s Anbar province, later told reporters that the militants still controlled parts of the city. Fighting was reported in downtown Ramadi as well as in some communitie­s on the city’s eastern and northern outskirts.

The recapture of Ramadi, the Anbar provincial capital and its most populous city, would be the most significan­t in a series of recent successes by the Iraqi forces, which collapsed in the face of rapid Islamic State advances in mid-2014. Since the spring, the militants have been driven from the northern cities of Tikrit and Baiji, as well as Sinjar, a northweste­rn town near the Syrian border.

But defense experts caution that it is too soon to speak of a turning point in the struggle against Islamic State. The group still controls large stretches of Iraq and neighborin­g Syria, including most of the rest of Anbar and the large, densely populated city of Mosul in the north of Iraq.

“It’s a good tactical victory,” said Ben Connable, a retired Marine Corps intelligen­ce officer who served three tours in Iraq before joining the Rand Corp., a think tank. “But really, we are just back to where we were six months ago. So to paint this as a strategic victory against Islamic State I think is a gross exaggerati­on.”

The seizure of the government compound in Ramadi followed a week of intense fighting as Iraqi Prime Minister Haider Abadi’s forces pressed into the center of the heavily defended city after seizing ground on the periphery.

All bridges leading into Ramadi had been destroyed before the advance began, U.S. and Iraqi officials said. Barriers had been erected in every street and the ground seeded with explosives. There were also sniper nests and mortar batteries to contend with, they said.

“The clearance of the government center is a significan­t accomplish­ment and is the result of many months of hard work,” Col. Steve Warren, a spokesman for U.S. forces in Iraq, said in a statement.

He said the U.S.-led coalition, which includes major European and Middle Eastern powers, had carried out more than 630 airstrikes in the area, provided training and advice to Iraqi units, and contribute­d equipment to clear explosives.

Iraqi state television broadcast video of Iraqi troops celebratin­g in the government compound Monday. Some could be seen slaughteri­ng a sheep, while others raised their weapons and danced.

“Now will be a process of going block by block ... clearing out booby traps and clearing out small pockets of resistance,” Warren told The Times. “That could take time. Ramadi is a fairly large, densely populated center. Every house is a potential bomb.”

The city could provide an important base of operations for Iraqi forces as they attempt to recapture other parts of the fertile Euphrates River valley, which stretches from the outskirts of Baghdad to the Syrian border, and press north toward Mosul.

However, U.S. defense officials said Monday’s victory was as important symbolical­ly and politicall­y as it was militarily.

“The fight for Ramadi demonstrat­es how capable, motivated local forces backed by coalition air support and training can defeat ISIL,” said U.S. Defense Secretary Ashton Carter, using a common acronym for Islamic State. “Now it’s important for the Iraqi government, working with provincial and local authoritie­s, to seize this opportunit­y to maintain the peace in Ramadi, prevent the return of ISIL and other extremists, and facilitate the return of Ramadi’s citizens.”

The U.S. and the coalition have pledged more than $50 million to a United Nations Developmen­t Program fund to support efforts to rebuild and stabilize areas seized from Islamic State, Secretary of State John F. Kerry said in a statement.

Part of Islamic State’s strength has been its ability to recruit foreign fighters who are eager to join the group’s self-declared caliphate. That may be harder to do when the caliphate is contractin­g rather than expanding, said Stephen D. Biddle, a defense policy expert at George Washington University.

“This isn’t the first time they have lost real estate, but it’s the first time they have lost a major city,” Biddle said.

The militant group did not appear to be conceding a defeat. An Islamic State-affiliated website known as Minbar on Monday dismissed Iraqi claims of having liberated the Ramadi government complex, saying the group’s forces had destroyed the facility months ago.

Still, the gradual loss of territory will dent Islamic State’s tax base, one of the main sources of revenue for the extremists, Biddle said. That in turn could erode the group’s ability to conduct military operations and lead to further territoria­l losses. But he said he would be surprised if this happened quickly.

“It won’t look like a blitzkrieg,” he said.

Connable noted that the Iraqi government has been relying heavily on its counter-terrorism service, an elite force that has proved effective in battle but does not have the numbers to secure territory it has seized while conducting new operations elsewhere.

In Anbar, the Iraqi government is planning to tap Sunni tribal fighters who have received training from the coalition while efforts are underway to build up the local police force, Warren said.

The U.S. military used the strategy effectivel­y when it was battling Islamic State’s precursor, Al Qaeda in Iraq. But Connable said the number of Sunnis now willing to side with the Shiite Muslim-led government in Baghdad is a fraction of what it was during the last decade.

He praised Abadi’s decision not to use Iranianbac­ked Shiite militias that have proved a potent force elsewhere in the country but have been accused of revenge attacks against Sunnis. However, he questioned whether Sunni tribal fighters and regular Iraqi soldiers would stand up to any renewed attacks from Islamic State — a persistent problem in areas freed from the militants.

“Just because ISIL has been pushed out of Ramadi for now doesn’t mean they won’t be back,” Connable said.

 ?? Ahmad al-Rubaye AFP/Getty Images ?? IRAQI anti-terrorism troops hoist the national f lag atop the key government complex in Ramadi, a long-contested city. The victory was a morale booster, but defense experts caution that it is too soon to speak of a turning point in the struggle against...
Ahmad al-Rubaye AFP/Getty Images IRAQI anti-terrorism troops hoist the national f lag atop the key government complex in Ramadi, a long-contested city. The victory was a morale booster, but defense experts caution that it is too soon to speak of a turning point in the struggle against...

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States