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Iraq launches operation to retake IS-held city of Fallujah


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Iraq launches operation to retake IS-held city of Fallujah
By QASSIM ABDUL-ZAHRA

BAGHDAD (AP) — Iraqi Prime Minister Haider al-Abadi announced the beginning of military operations to retake the Islamic State-held held city of Fallujah, west of Baghdad, in a televised address late Sunday night.

Iraqi forces are "approaching a moment of great victory" against the Islamic State group, said al-Abadi, who was surrounded by top military commanders from the Ministry of Defense and the country's elite counterterrorism forces. Fallujah is about 40 miles (65 kilometers) west of Baghdad and has been under the control of IS for more than two years.

The announcement comes at a time of deepening political and social unrest in Baghdad.

Clashes between protesters and Iraqi security forces inside Baghdad's highly fortified Green Zone compound left two people dead after security forces fired tear gas, water cannon and live ammunition in an attempt to disperse the crowds. Over 100 people were wounded, hospital and police officials said. They spoke anonymously as they were not authorized to brief the press. The Green Zone houses most Iraqi government ministries and foreign embassies.

Al-Abadi's office released a preliminary investigation Sunday that claimed police and military guards did not fire directly into the crowd of demonstrators, according to a statement released Sunday by Saad al-Hadithi, the prime minister's spokesman.

Many of the protesters were supporters of powerful Shiite cleric Muqtada al-Sadr, who has led months of demonstrations and sit-ins calling for government reforms. Al-Sadr has since issued a statement condemning the use of force against "peaceful" demonstrations and vowed to continue to support the "revolution" against the government.

Al-Abadi spoke by phone with U.S. President Barack Obama on Saturday and "agreed on the critical importance of improving the security" of Baghdad and the Green Zone, according to a White House statement. It added that the two leaders also discussed progress being made in the campaign against the Islamic State group.

Iraq's political crisis has left the government deadlocked as security forces struggle to fight the Islamic State group.

In the midst of the political crisis Iraqi ground forces backed by U.S.-led coalition air support have achieved a number of territorial gains against IS, most recently in Iraq's vast western Anbar province.

Last week. Iraqi forces pushed IS out of the western town of Rutba, located 240 miles (380 kilometers) west of Baghdad, on the edge of Anbar province. Last month, Iraqi forces cleared territory along Anbar's Euphrates river valley after the provincial capital Ramadi was declared fully liberated earlier this year.

However Fallujah is expected to be a complicated fight.

The city is still home to tens of thousands of civilians and has been under IS rule longer than any other territory recently retaken by Iraqi forces. Iraqi security forces repeated calls for civilians trapped inside Fallujah to flee on Sunday, but residents say that checkpoints controlled by the extremists along all roads leading out of the city are preventing most from fleeing.

Despite a string of territorial defeats, IS still controls significant patches of Iraqi territory in the country's north and west including the country's second largest city of Mosul. The militant group also has claimed responsibility for a series of large-scale bombings in and around Baghdad recently that killed hundreds of people.

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-- (c) Associated Press 2016-05-23

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It must be a hard watch for all the veterans that fought in both Battles of Fallujah during the Iraq war. Nothing worse than seeing something you fought so hard for and your mates died for, have to be recaptured again because some imbecile didn't hold onto it as they should have. A severe blow to one's morale. How long will the Iraqis be able to hold on to her this time ? With trouble brewing in the capital it may not be long. With the current [flawed] tactic of pushing out IS from captured territory instead of destroying them, these fleeing IS soldiers won't just pack up and go home. A new kind of insurgency is just around the corner for Baghdad and the greater al Iraq me thinks.

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It must be a hard watch for all the veterans that fought in both Battles of Fallujah during the Iraq war. Nothing worse than seeing something you fought so hard for and your mates died for, have to be recaptured again because some imbecile didn't hold onto it as they should have. A severe blow to one's morale. How long will the Iraqis be able to hold on to her this time ? With trouble brewing in the capital it may not be long. With the current [flawed] tactic of pushing out IS from captured territory instead of destroying them, these fleeing IS soldiers won't just pack up and go home. A new kind of insurgency is just around the corner for Baghdad and the greater al Iraq me thinks.

I arrived just after the Second Battle of Fallujah. The defeated forces merely fled to Ramadi, which became the most violent place in the country and was billed as the most violent city in the world, so you are correct. ISIS fighters will slip away into the surrounding desert only to pop up somewhere else.

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