Iraqi Troops Close In On Islamic State Redoubt In Ramadi
Iraqi troops have pushed deeper into the heart of the last remaining district held by the Islamic State group in the city of Ramadi, despite being slowed by bombs and booby traps, army spokesmen said Saturday.
Recapturing Ramadi, which fell to the militants in May, would be one of the most important victories achieved by Iraq's armed forces since the terrorist group, aka ISIS, swept across a third of the country in 2014.
Soldiers advanced overnight in the Hoz neighborhood, which houses the provincial government compound, the target of an attack that started Tuesday, joint operations command spokesman Brigadier Yahya Rasool said.
"The counterterrorism forces are within 800 meters [0.5 miles] from the government complex," advancing by about 1 km in the past day, Rasool said. "Airstrikes helped detonate explosive devices and booby-trapped houses, facilitating our advance," he added.
Special-operation commander Sami al-Aridhi said the plan was "to liberate all of Ramadi from three sides."
"Our troops are now advancing towards their targets but were delayed because the criminals have booby-trapped everything," he said.
Ramadi is a provincial capital in the fertile Euphrates River valley, just two hours' drive west of Baghdad. Most remaining civilians in the ISIS-held central district have taken shelter in the city's hospital, knowing that the army will not target it, Rasool said.
He declined to give a timeframe for the final onslaught to dislodge the militants. "The campaign's priority is to avoid casualties among civilians and the troops, no matter how long it takes," he said. About 120 families were rescued from the combat zone Saturday after securing safe routes for their exit, and they were taken to a camp near Habbaniya, north of Ramadi, according to a military statement broadcast on state TV.
Military officials had said Wednesday the offensive to retake the central district should take several days.
The Iraqi government forces are backed by air support from an international coalition led by the United States. Shiite militia units backed by Iran, which have played a major part in other government offensives, have been kept away from the battlefield in Ramadi to avoid angering Sunni Muslim residents. The city is the capital of mainly Sunni Muslim Anbar province. The government said it would be handed over to the local police and to a Sunni tribal force once it was secured. Ramadi was ISIS' biggest prize of 2015, abandoned by government forces in May in a major setback for Baghdad and for the Iraqi troops that have been trained by the United States since the overthrow of President Saddam Hussein in 2003.
After Ramadi, the army plans to move to retake the northern city of Mosul, the biggest population center under ISIS control in Iraq and Syria.
Dislodging the militants from Mosul, which had a prewar population close to 2 million, would effectively abolish ISIS' state structure in Iraq and deprive it of a major source of funding, which comes partly from oil and partly from fees and taxes on residents.
"The liberation of dear Mosul will be achieved with the cooperation and unity of all Iraqis after the victory in Ramadi," Prime Minister Haider al-Abadi said Friday.
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