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TERROR WARS
IS forces move freely across Iraq's Anbar province: US
by Staff Writers
Washington (AFP) Oct 14, 2014


IS jihadists close in on town west of Baghdad
Baghdad (AFP) Oct 14, 2014 - Islamic State fighters closed in Tuesday on the Iraqi town of Amriyat al-Fallujah, one of the last still controlled by the government in the troubled western province of Anbar, its police chief said.

"IS has come from three directions; we are almost besieged," Aref al-Janabi told AFP by telephone.

"So far we are still standing," he said. "We have some support from tribal fighters, but if Amriyat falls, the battle will move to the gates of Baghdad and Karbala."

Amriyat al-Fallujah lies around 35 kilometres (20 miles) west of Baghdad's limits, and IS fighters would have to capture a significant stretch of government-controlled land before reaching the capital.

The town also lies between the IS bastion of Fallujah, further up the Euphrates River, and the contested area of Jurf al-Sakhr, which commands access to the holy Shiite city of Karbala.

Government forces have suffered a string of bruising military setbacks in Anbar in recent weeks, prompting some officials to warn that the entire province could fall within days.

Soldiers pulled out of a base near the city of Heet and regrouped in a large desert airbase, while government forces struggled to hold their ground in the provincial capital Ramadi.

Some officials in Anbar have argued that anything short of an intervention by US ground forces would lead to Anbar falling into jihadist hands.

On Tuesday, a Sunni tribal leader based in Kurdistan, Sheikh Ali Hatem al-Suleiman, even called for troops from the Arab nations involved in the US-led anti-jihadist coalition to deploy in Iraq.

But the head of Iraq's Shiite-dominated government, Prime Minister Haidar al-Abadi, has ruled out any foreign ground intervention.

While IS fighters have not moved closer to Baghdad in recent weeks, the group has claimed responsibility for a string of deadly suicide attacks in the capital.

A suicide car bomb blast claimed by IS on Tuesday killed a member of parliament who was also a prominent leader in the Iran-backed Badr Shiite militia.

Islamic State jihadists can move freely across Iraq's Anbar province and are piling pressure on government forces, despite two months of US air strikes, Pentagon admitted Tuesday.

"It is a tough fight in Anbar," spokesman Colonel Steven Warren told reporters, referring to the unruly Sunni-majority province.

The Islamic State group has pushed back Iraqi government troops in the western province in recent weeks, seizing control of the Anbar town of Heet, west of the capital.

Even before the latest push, insurgents already controlled Fallujah, 50 kilometers (30 miles) west of Baghdad, and much of the desert further west as far as the Syrian border.

"They have relative freedom of maneuver throughout Anbar, and continue to pressure ISF (Iraqi security forces) throughout the entire region," Warren said.

He acknowledged that Asad air base in Anbar province was under threat but said it was up to the Iraqi security forces to prevail against the IS extremists, albeit with the help of US-led air strikes.

"This is Iraq's fight to fight. The Iraqis are holding al-Asad now," he said. "We will continue to use air power as the opportunity presents itself."

Asked if Iraqi forces could fend off the onslaught in Anbar province, he said: "It's hard to say how close Anbar is to falling. It's contested."

There are about 1,400 US troops now in Iraq, including several hundred advisers, but none of them are deployed with Iraqi units in Anbar, Warren said.

The advisory teams are all in Baghdad or in Erbil in northern Iraq.

During the US military occupation of Iraq following the 2003 invasion, the Asad base was a sprawling hub for American forces, including a large contingent of US Marines and a fleet of aircraft and vehicles.

As the IS group pushes towards the main arteries into the Iraqi capital, the chairman of the US Joint Chiefs of Staff, General Martin Dempsey, made it clear that Washington would move decisively to safeguard Baghdad airport, used by US diplomats and troops.

Dempsey said Sunday that American Apache attack helicopters were called in recently when militants appeared to be on the verge of seizing ground just15 miles (24 kilometers) from Baghdad airport.

The IS group was so close that if they had prevailed, "it was a straight shot to the airport," Dempsey told ABC'S "This Week."

"We were not going to allow that to happen," Dempsey said. "We need that airport."

Anbar, largest of Iraq's provinces, is a vast desert area that borders Syria, Jordan, Saudi Arabia and the governorate of Baghdad.

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