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Iraqi Forces Fighting for Ramadi Make Their Way Toward City Center Iraqi Forces Fighting for Ramadi Make Their Way Toward City Center
(about 2 hours later)
BAGHDAD — Iraqi soldiers began a fierce assault to wrest control of the city of Ramadi from the Islamic State on Monday night, and by midday on Tuesday they had battled their way toward the city center despite heavy resistance, an army commander said.BAGHDAD — Iraqi soldiers began a fierce assault to wrest control of the city of Ramadi from the Islamic State on Monday night, and by midday on Tuesday they had battled their way toward the city center despite heavy resistance, an army commander said.
The operation was undertaken by a mixture of soldiers, police officers and Sunni tribesmen opposed to the Islamic State, with close air support from the United States, which conducted 12 strikes around Ramadi on Tuesday. “They are moving into the city center,” said Col. Steven H. Warren, the United States military spokesman here. The operation was undertaken by a mixture of soldiers, police officers and Sunni tribesmen opposed to the Islamic State, with close air support from the United States, which conducted 12 strikes around Ramadi on Tuesday.
“I think the fall of Ramadi is inevitable,” said Col. Steven H. Warren, the United States military spokesman here. “The end is coming.” But he added: “That said, it’s going to be a tough fight.”
The Iraqis ran into stiff resistance from the Islamic State, including booby-trapped buildings and improvised explosive devices. Around 300 Islamic State fighters are believed to be hunkered down in the northern reaches of the city.
If Iraqi forces manage to reassert control over Ramadi — the capital and largest city in Iraq’s western Anbar Province — it will be the latest in a series of military setbacks for the Islamic State. President Obama said recently that the militant group had lost 40 percent of the Iraqi territory it had seized in the middle of last year, as the United States and its allies have intensified their aerial bombardment against the group. In October, Iraqi forces and Shiite militias retook control of the northern city of Baiji and its oil refinery, and last month, Kurdish and Yazidi forces expelled the Islamic State out of the northern city of Sinjar.If Iraqi forces manage to reassert control over Ramadi — the capital and largest city in Iraq’s western Anbar Province — it will be the latest in a series of military setbacks for the Islamic State. President Obama said recently that the militant group had lost 40 percent of the Iraqi territory it had seized in the middle of last year, as the United States and its allies have intensified their aerial bombardment against the group. In October, Iraqi forces and Shiite militias retook control of the northern city of Baiji and its oil refinery, and last month, Kurdish and Yazidi forces expelled the Islamic State out of the northern city of Sinjar.
Ramadi fell to the Islamic State in May, after a five-month battle. Since July, there have been a number of reports about efforts by the Iraqi Army to retake the city, but the latest offensive has been the most serious and sustained so far. Over the last month or so, Iraqi security forces and tribal fighters have encircled the city; two weeks ago, they seized a large neighborhood, Tamim, on its southwestern outskirts. Ramadi fell to the Islamic State in May, in a sudden collapse after a five-month battle. Since July, there have been a number of reports about efforts by the Iraqi Army to retake the city, but the latest offensive has been the most serious and sustained so far. Over the last month or so, Iraqi security forces and tribal fighters have encircled the city; two weeks ago, they seized a large neighborhood, Tamim, on its southwestern outskirts.
“We went into the center of Ramadi from different axes, and we started clearing residential areas,” Gen. Sabah al-Numani, a spokesman for the army counterterrorism unit in charge of the offensive, said in a statement on Tuesday. He predicted that “the city will be cleared within the coming 72 hours.”“We went into the center of Ramadi from different axes, and we started clearing residential areas,” Gen. Sabah al-Numani, a spokesman for the army counterterrorism unit in charge of the offensive, said in a statement on Tuesday. He predicted that “the city will be cleared within the coming 72 hours.”
Six hundred to a thousand Islamic State fighters were in Ramadi when the offensive began two weeks ago, but several hundred of them have been killed in heavy fighting since then, according to American officials. Colonel Warren, the military spokesman, estimated that 250 to 350 fighters were still in the city. Six hundred to a thousand Islamic State fighters were in Ramadi when the offensive began two weeks ago, but several hundred of them have been killed in heavy fighting since then.
Those remaining did not appear to be giving up easily. They destroyed three bridges over the Euphrates River to prevent security forces from entering the city, according to Gen. Ahmed al-Belawi, the leader of a battalion of Sunni tribal fighters.Those remaining did not appear to be giving up easily. They destroyed three bridges over the Euphrates River to prevent security forces from entering the city, according to Gen. Ahmed al-Belawi, the leader of a battalion of Sunni tribal fighters.
“We are making significant progress to liberate the center soon,” General Belawi said. “The Iraqi and international coalition air force are helping our ground forces to advance quickly. Victory will be announced soon.” Colonel Warren said that Iraqi forces had crossed the river by deploying “floating bridges” capable of moving fighters and heavy equipment across the water, as American troops had trained them to do.
Colonel Warren said that Iraqi forces had crossed the Euphrates by deploying “floating bridges” capable of moving fighters and heavy equipment across the water, as American troops had trained them to do. Al Jazeera reported that 14 soldiers and 17 tribal fighters were killed by a suicide car bomber in Albu Diab, northwest of the city center, and that at least 12 militants had been killed. MSNBC released a video that it said showed an Islamic State counterattack on the eastern edge of the city, and it quoted a tribal fighter as saying that at least seven Islamic State militants had been killed. Those casualty numbers could not be independently confirmed.
Al Jazeera reported that 14 soldiers and 17 tribal fighters were killed by a suicide car bomber in Albu Diab, northwest of the city center, and that at least 12 militants had been killed. MSNBC released a video that it said showed an Islamic State counterattack on the eastern edge of the city, and it quoted a tribal fighter as saying that at least seven Islamic State militants had been killed. Those numbers could not be independently confirmed. Iraqi airplanes dropped leaflets on Sunday urging residents of Ramadi to evacuate within 72 hours, warning of an impending operation, and suggesting two evacuation routes. On Monday, Lt. Gen. Othman al-Ghanimi, the acting army chief of staff, said that “Iraqi forces will start the operation to retake Ramadi soon.” Colonel Warren estimated that thousands or even tens of thousands of civilians were still in the city; hundreds of thousands of others have fled.
Iraqi airplanes had dropped leaflets on Sunday urging residents of Ramadi to evacuate within 72 hours, warning of an impending operation, and suggesting two evacuation routes. On Monday, Lt. Gen. Othman al-Ghanimi, the acting army chief of staff, said that “Iraqi forces will start the operation to retake Ramadi soon.” In a telephone briefing on Tuesday, Colonel Warren said that coalition forces had recovered Islamic State leaflets in the nearby city of Falluja urging its fighters if they lose control of the city to impersonate Iraqi security forces and commit atrocities. “Some acts that they’re instructed to do on this document include blowing up mosques, killing and torturing civilians and breaking into homes while dressed as I.S.F. fighters,” Colonel Warren said, referring to Iraqi security forces. “They do all this to discredit the I.S.F.”
Colonel Warren called the instructions in the leaflets “the behavior of thugs, behavior of killers, the behavior of terrorists.”
A security official in Anbar Province said in a phone interview that “ISIS are preventing the people of Ramadi from leaving and using them as human shields.”A security official in Anbar Province said in a phone interview that “ISIS are preventing the people of Ramadi from leaving and using them as human shields.”
The official, who spoke on the condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to discuss military operations, added that the Iraqi forces, entering from the southeast of Ramadi, were within two miles of the city center, where the local government compound is. The official added that the suburb of Bakir had been “completely devastated” from airstrikes and shelling.The official, who spoke on the condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to discuss military operations, added that the Iraqi forces, entering from the southeast of Ramadi, were within two miles of the city center, where the local government compound is. The official added that the suburb of Bakir had been “completely devastated” from airstrikes and shelling.
Since the middle of 2014, the Islamic State has controlled perhaps one-third of the territory of Iraq, including the northern city of Mosul. But it has lost several towns in recent months since the government in Baghdad and in the autonomous Kurdish region in northern Iraq have begun to fight back.Since the middle of 2014, the Islamic State has controlled perhaps one-third of the territory of Iraq, including the northern city of Mosul. But it has lost several towns in recent months since the government in Baghdad and in the autonomous Kurdish region in northern Iraq have begun to fight back.
On Monday, Iraq’s prime minister, Haider al-Abadi, said that he had agreed to the deployment of 200 American ground forces in Iraq to help with the operations against the Islamic State. Mr. Abadi, a Shiite, has been trying to balance relations with the United States and Iran, which controls militias whose leaders are popular among the Shiite public. On Monday, Iraq’s prime minister, Haider al-Abadi, said that he had agreed to the deployment of 200 American ground forces in Iraq to help with the operations against the Islamic State.
Defense Secretary Ashton B. Carter had offered Apache attack helicopters to the Iraqi government to aid the effort, but so far, Mr. Abadi, under pressure from Shiite groups and Iran to keep the United States at a distance, has not accepted the offer.
To make gains in Anbar Province, which is a Sunni stronghold, the United States has urged Mr. Abadi’s government to reach out to Sunni tribal fighters trained and equipped by the United States. Although the Shiite fighters are among the most effective of Iraq’s military forces — playing a crucial role in retaking northern cities like Tikrit and Baiji — they have been kept out of the Ramadi fight for fear of alienating the local population.To make gains in Anbar Province, which is a Sunni stronghold, the United States has urged Mr. Abadi’s government to reach out to Sunni tribal fighters trained and equipped by the United States. Although the Shiite fighters are among the most effective of Iraq’s military forces — playing a crucial role in retaking northern cities like Tikrit and Baiji — they have been kept out of the Ramadi fight for fear of alienating the local population.
Even if the Iraqi military finally does reclaim Ramadi from the Islamic State, regional experts warn, the Sunni city will not take kindly to being overrun by the Shiite-dominated Iraqi military. The Pentagon has been training Sunni tribal fighters to make up a “hold” force for the city if and when the Islamic State is fully routed.