Houston Chronicle

Battles in Fallujah go from house to house

Iraqi troops enter ISIS-held city for the first time in 2 years

- By Susannah George

NAYMIYAH, Iraq — A column of black Humvees carrying Iraqi special forces rolled into southern Fallujah on Wednesday, the first time in more than two years that government troops have entered the western city held by the Islamic State group.

The counterter­rorism troops fought house-to-house battles with the militants in the Shuhada neighborho­od, and the operation to retake the city is expected to be one of the most difficult yet.

“Daesh are concentrat­ing all their forces in this direction,” said Gen. Haider Fadel, one of the commanders of the counterter­rorism forces, using the Arabic acronym for the Islamic State militants.

Prime Minister Haider al-Abadi promised a swift victory when he announced the start of the operation on May 22 to liberate Fallujah, about 40 miles west of Baghdad. But the complexity of the task quickly became apparent.

Other security forces from the federal and provincial police, government-sanctioned Shiite militias and the Iraqi military have surrounded the city, but only the elite counterter­rorism troops are fighting inside Fallujah at this stage of the operation. And they are doing so under the close cover of U.S.-led coalition air power.

“We expect to face more resistance, especially because we are the only forces entering the city,” Fadel said.

The Islamic State group has suffered setbacks on several fronts in the region where it captured large swaths of territory two years ago. In northern Syria, U.S.-backed rebels made a final push Wednesday in the town of Manbij — a key waypoint on the ISIS supply line to the Turkish border and its self-styled capital of Raqqa. And in Libya, forces loyal to a U.N.-brokered government have advanced deep inside the coastal city of Sirte, the main stronghold of an Islamic State local affiliate.

Fallujah is one of the last Islamic State stronghold­s in Iraq. Government forces have slowly won back territory, although ISIS still controls parts of the north and west, as well as the second-largest city of Mosul.

The sky above Fallujah’s Shuhada neighborho­od on Wednesday filled with fine dust and thick gray smoke obscuring minarets and communicat­ion towers as artillery rounds and volleys of airstrikes cleared the way for Iraqi ground forces.

At a makeshift command center, Iraqi forces coordinate­d the operation via hand-held radios, with Australian coalition troops stationed at a nearby base. One of the Australian­s listed the casualties among the militants.

“Two KIA (killed in action), one wounded with a missing arm — his right arm,” the unidentifi­ed Australian radioed after calling in an airstrike on Islamic State fighters.

On Wednesday evening, the prime minister visited the recently retaken territory.

Al-Abadi was joined by Lt. Gen. Abdel Wahab al-Saadi, the counterter­rorism commander of the Fallujah operation.

It was al-Abadi’s fourth trip to the area since the operation began.

 ?? Ahmad al-Rubaye / AFP / Getty Images ?? Iraqi soldiers patrol the streets of Saqlawiyah, northwest of Fallujah, on Wednesday during an operation that began in May to regain territory from the Islamic State group.
Ahmad al-Rubaye / AFP / Getty Images Iraqi soldiers patrol the streets of Saqlawiyah, northwest of Fallujah, on Wednesday during an operation that began in May to regain territory from the Islamic State group.

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