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Iraq conflict: PM fires senior officers over rebel advance Iraq conflict: PM fires senior officers over rebel advance
(35 minutes later)
Iraqi PM Nouri Maliki has fired senior officers for failing to halt a sweeping advance by Sunni Islamist rebels.Iraqi PM Nouri Maliki has fired senior officers for failing to halt a sweeping advance by Sunni Islamist rebels.
Four army commanders were dismissed for failing to perform "their national duty", a government statement said on Tuesday.Four army commanders were dismissed for failing to perform "their national duty", a government statement said on Tuesday.
Iraqi forces have been engaged in heavy clashes with the rebels who have seized several key cities in the past week.Iraqi forces have been engaged in heavy clashes with the rebels who have seized several key cities in the past week.
The US is deploying up to 275 military personnel to protect staff at its huge embassy in the capital, Baghdad.The US is deploying up to 275 military personnel to protect staff at its huge embassy in the capital, Baghdad.
The militants, led by the Islamic State in Iraq and the Levant (ISIS), took control of the northern cities of Mosul and Tikrit in a rapid advance last week, and Tal Afar on Monday.The militants, led by the Islamic State in Iraq and the Levant (ISIS), took control of the northern cities of Mosul and Tikrit in a rapid advance last week, and Tal Afar on Monday.
They also briefly captured parts of the city of Baquba - just 60km (37 miles) from Baghdad - in an overnight assault, before government troops and allied Shia militia regained control on Tuesday.They also briefly captured parts of the city of Baquba - just 60km (37 miles) from Baghdad - in an overnight assault, before government troops and allied Shia militia regained control on Tuesday.
Qasem Suleimani, the commander of an elite unit of Iran's revolutionary guards, is reported to be in Baghdad, helping military and Shia leaders co-ordinate their campaign against the rebels.Qasem Suleimani, the commander of an elite unit of Iran's revolutionary guards, is reported to be in Baghdad, helping military and Shia leaders co-ordinate their campaign against the rebels.
Analysis: John Simpson, BBC World Affairs editor, Baghdad
Many Sunnis, particularly the conservative ones who started turning against al-Qaeda eight years ago, and enabled the US forces to leave Iraq with what seemed at the time to be dignity, are not at all happy that ISIS should control their towns and villages.
But the danger of the present fight-back by Shia volunteers is that they will victimise ordinary Sunnis, and make them feel that ISIS is the only group that can protect them.
In other words, this has the potential to turn into a clear-cut religious war, with the possibility of mass "cleansing" of civilians and brutality on a large scale.
Court martial
The Iraqi officers fired on Tuesday include the top commander for Nineveh, the first province where ISIS fighters made major gains.
Another senior officer would be court-martialled in absentia for deserting his position and fleeing a battle, the government said.
The announcement came as army reinforcements reportedly arrived in the strategic city of Tal Afar in Nineveh province to help recapture the town from insurgents.
The city of 200,000 people, which has a mixed Sunni and Shia population, lies between Mosul and the Syrian border and was taken just before dawn on Monday.
The Iraqi air force was said to have carried out strikes in the area.
In other developments:
ISIS in Iraq
Iraq 'massacre' photos: What we know