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Sunni Militants Capture Major Iraqi Post at Syrian Border Militants Take Major Border Post; Kerry Hints U.S. Is Open to a New Premier
(about 5 hours later)
BAGHDAD — Sunni militants have gained control of a major Iraqi post on the Syrian border and several nearby towns, the Iraqi government said Sunday, trying to cast a positive light on what it and Western officials described as a worrisome development by saying Iraqi troops had made a “tactical decision” to withdraw from the locations. BAGHDAD — The Iraqi government said Sunday that Sunni militants had taken control of a major Iraqi post on the Syrian border, strengthening their ability to move men and supplies into Iraq’s heartland.
The Iraqi prime minister’s top military spokesman, Gen. Qassim Atta, said in his briefing Sunday that Iraqi Army troops had left the Qaim border post and the towns of Rawaa and Ana, but that the units were joining the battle elsewhere. As the government tried to cast the setback in a positive light, saying troops had made a “tactical” decision to withdraw, Secretary of State John Kerry appeared to increase the pressure on Iraq’s leadership by signaling that the United States was open to the selection of a new prime minister who could bridge the deep sectarian divides in the country.
“As a tactical procedure to reopen the military forces in al-Jazeera and al-Badiyah security operation field, the security forces in Rawaa, Ana and Qaim withdraw from these areas to reinforce other troops in other areas,” General Atta said. “The United States would like to see the Iraqi people find leadership that is prepared to represent all of the people of Iraq,” Mr. Kerry said Sunday in Cairo, at the start of a Middle East trip to rally Arab support on the Iraq crisis.
He did not mention whether the army had also fought in the small western town of Rutba, but local officials there said the militants from the Islamic State in Iraq and Syria, or ISIS, had driven in with 50 trucks late Saturday, burned the police station and clashed briefly with the police before taking control. The formal American position, which Mr. Kerry underscored at a news conference with Egypt’s foreign minister, is that the United States is not in the business of picking Iraq’s leaders. But without mentioning Prime Minister Nuri Kamal al-Maliki by name, Mr. Kerry noted that the Kurds, the Sunnis and some Shiites had registered unhappiness with Iraq’s leadership, as has Ayatollah Ali al-Sistani, the influential Shiite spiritual leader who has spoken out about the need to avoid the mistakes of the past.
“Around 50 vehicles full of militants and weapons came from Houran valley, and after sporadic clashes with police they took control over the central town,” said Ratif al-Ubaid, a member of the Rutba local council. “Then they left a group of them to secure the town and then headed toward the border.” On Sunday, Gen. Qassim Atta, a top military spokesman, acknowledged in a briefing that Iraqi Army troops had left the Qaim border post near the Syrian border as well as the towns of Rawaa and Ana, but that the units would be fighting the militants from the Islamic State in Iraq and Syria, or ISIS, elsewhere.
And on Sunday evening it appeared that the police had fled from the last post at the Syrian border that had remained in the army’s hands, at Al-Waleed, allowing the militants to enter. The loss of the border post was not confirmed, but the frightened police, reached by phone, said that the army had already left and that the police had scattered when the militants arrived in trucks. Some went to the Syrian side of the border, if they had family there, and others stayed on the Iraqi side, a police source said. “As a tactical procedure,” General Atta said, “the security forces in Rawaa, Ana and Qaim have withdrawn from these areas to reinforce other troops in other areas.”
The militants seem intent on methodically consolidating their hold on the large Sunni provinces to the west and north as the Iraqi Army focuses on securing Baghdad, the capital. There were also unconfirmed reports on Sunday evening that government forces had fled Al Waleed, the last post at the Syrian border that had remained in the army’s hands. Frightened police officers, reached by telephone, said that the army had already left and that the police scattered when the militants arrived in trucks. Some police officers crossed the border into Syria, if they had family there, and others stayed on the Iraqi side, a police source said.
The militants already have considerable strength in Anbar Province, but it has been mainly in remote villages and towns, with the exception of Falluja, which they have also seized. Now, with the taking of the border post of Qaim after a three-day fight and nearby towns, they will be able to move on the road that leads to the city of Haditha, where there is a major dam. On Sunday, the government was reinforcing its troops there, anxious to secure the dam. The militants seem intent on consolidating their hold on the large Sunni provinces to the west and north as the Iraqi Army focuses on securing Baghdad, the capital.
During the Qaim battle, it appeared that 70 volunteers who had left Baghdad to join the fighting on the side of the Iraqi Army were killed in an ambush. They were traveling in food freezer trucks to camouflage their arrival, but it seemed the militants knew they were on their way, a police officer said on the condition of anonymity, because he was not authorized to speak to reporters. The militants have allowed him to remain in his job, he said. The militants already have considerable strength in Anbar Province, mainly in remote villages and towns, though they have also seized Falluja. Now, with the taking of the Qaim border post and nearby towns, they will be able to move on the road that leads to the city of Haditha, where there is a major dam. On Sunday, the government was reinforcing its troops there.
It was not clear how many Iraqi Army soldiers had been killed in the fight, but there were many and they fought hard, according to the police. General Atta did not say whether the army had fought in the small western town of Rutba, but local officials there said ISIS militants arrived late Saturday, burned the police station and clashed briefly with the police before taking control of the town.
In Diyala Province, the struggle for power between the Sunni militants from ISIS and local Sunni militants, some of them former military officers under Saddam Hussein, continued on Sunday. ISIS fighters killed three brothers of one of the leaders of the Islamic Army and destroyed houses of fighters in that group as well as of the Men of Naqshbandia, former Saddam loyalists or Baathists. Ratif al-Ubaid, a member of the Rutba local council, said about 50 vehicles filled with militants and their weapons had arrived in the town and engaged in sporadic clashes with the police. He added, “They left a group to secure the town and then headed toward the border.”
During the Qaim battle, it appeared that 70 volunteers who had left Baghdad to join the fighting on the side of the Iraqi Army were killed in an ambush. They were traveling in food freezer trucks as camouflage, but it seemed the militants knew they were on their way, a police officer said on the condition of anonymity, because he was not authorized to speak to reporters. The militants have allowed him to remain in his job, he said.
It was unclear how many Iraqi Army soldiers had been killed in the fight.
In Diyala Province, the struggle for power between the ISIS militants and local Sunni militants, some of them former military officers under Saddam Hussein, continued Sunday. ISIS fighters killed three brothers of one of the leaders of the Islamic Army and destroyed the houses of fighters in that group as well as of the Men of Naqshbandia, former Saddam loyalists.