Chattanooga Times Free Press

Iraqi military takes a slow approach in battle for Fallujah

- BY QASSIM ABDUL-ZAHRA

CAMP TARIQ , Iraq — The battle for Fallujah is shaping up to be unlike any of the other assaults in the Iraqi military’s town-by-town war with the Islamic State group.

In the nearly two weeks since the operation began, airstrikes have been used sparingly, Shiite militias have so far been kept to the perimeter, and the initial advance on the symbolical­ly important town has been slow.

U.S.-trained Iraqi counterter­rorism forces, wary of coming street battles in the city, are already facing fierce resistance on the outskirts from well-entrenched militants. Those fighters are believed to include many foreign jihadis who are considered better-trained than the ones in towns that have been retaken in recent months.

In Ramadi, the last major victory for Iraqi forces against ISIS, many of the militants were able to flee to other stronghold­s along the Euphrates River valley. Now, all of that territory has been cleared, and the extremists have no escape route from Fallujah.

That suggests a long fight for the city less than an hour’s drive west of Baghdad.

While Fallujah is smaller in area than Ramadi, an estimated 50,000 people are trapped in the city, twice as many as were in Ramadi when it was recaptured.

Aid groups say about 1,000 families have managed to flee the outskirts of Fallujah since the operation began May 22. But the Norwegian Refugee Council, an internatio­nal humanitari­an group that does extensive work in Iraq’s Anbar province, said none of the civilians trapped in the center of the city have made it out.

 ??  ?? Smoke rises after an airstrike by U.S.-led coalition warplanes as Iraqi security forces advance towards the Shuhada neighborho­od of Fallujah on Friday.
Smoke rises after an airstrike by U.S.-led coalition warplanes as Iraqi security forces advance towards the Shuhada neighborho­od of Fallujah on Friday.

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