Albuquerque Journal

Significan­t progress made in isolating IS-held city in Iraq

Islamic State took Ramadi in May

- BY MITCHELL PROTHERO MCCLATCHY FOREIGN STAFF

IRBIL, Iraq — Iraqi forces backed by Iranian-trained militias and U.S. airstrikes have made significan­t progress in isolating Ramadi, the capital of Anbar province that Islamic State overran in May, according to Iraqi officials, local residents and Western military advisers.

But it is uncertain that the city will soon be retaken. Iraqi officials have repeatedly expressed optimism about progress against Islamic State, only to be unable to defeat the extremists, especially in areas such as Ramadi where Sunni Muslims are in the majority and have little trust in the Shiite-led government in Baghdad.

“We have now cut the last supply line of Daesh connecting Ramadi to Syria,” said an Iraqi officer who works in the Anbar command center. “Iraqi forces can now strangle the terrorists inside the city, and we should see victory in a few days.”

Daesh is an Arabic term for Islamic State.

A Western military adviser to Iraq’s autonomous Kurdish Regional Government who has been briefed on the situation by his country’s trainers working to rebuild the Iraqi military agreed that the progress to isolate Ramadi was a legitimate achievemen­t. But he cautioned that much harder work is to come as Iraqi military units face fighting in a city of nearly 1 million people that remains populated. Kurdish forces are not participat­ing in the operation.

“Iraqi forces have struggled in urban operations, and Ramadi will be tough once they enter the city itself,” he said. He said the Iraqi government’s success in recapturin­g Tikrit in the spring was unlikely to prove precedent for the push to take Ramadi.

“They were only able to take control of an empty and much smaller Tikrit due to heavy coalition air support, which is far less feasible because Daesh didn’t allow much of Ramadi to flee when they took control,” he said, referring to Iraqi government forces. “House-to-house fighting is hard for well-trained armies, and Iraq does not have anything resembling that.”

The operation to encircle Ramadi began Wednesday. According to U.S. Central Command, at least seven airstrikes a day have targeted the area, primarily the outskirts of the city in an effort to deny Islamic State fighters the ability to maneuver.

On Thursday, Iraqi officials said airstrikes had destroyed five large Islamic State tactical units, allowing the seizure of a bridge to the west of the city that was the last link to other Islamic State-held areas. But the Iraqi officer at the Anbar operations center admitted the situation was complicate­d. Recapturin­g Ramadi would be difficult, given Islamic State’s penchant for sowing the areas it holds with thousands of improvised explosive devices and other defenses, he said.

“They have turned Ramadi into a giant bomb since May,” he said of the Islamic State. “The number of IEDs, suicide bombers and mines makes progress very slow for our soldiers. Some days they can only move 50 meters because they have to destroy 10 bombs set by Daesh in that space.”

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