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IRAQ WARS
IS suicide attack kills five in Iraq's Ramadi: officers
by Staff Writers
Baghdad (AFP) June 13, 2016


Iraqi forces press offensive south of Mosul
Kirkuk, Iraq (AFP) June 12, 2016 - Iraqi forces on Sunday advanced towards Qayyarah, which lies south of the Islamic State group's main hub of Mosul, reviving a weeks-old operation that has made slow progress so far.

The operations command for Nineveh, the province of which Mosul is the capital, said the fresh push "aimed to liberate the villages that lie east of Qayyarah".

Iraqi forces launched an offensive in late March which was billed as the first step in the drive to retake Mosul, Iraq's second city.

The operation involves joint Iraqi forces, including Kurdish peshmerga, as well as a US Marine artillery post based outside Makhmur.

Qayyarah, which has an air field, lies to the west, on the other side of the Tigris river, but is still about 60 kilometres (35 miles) south of Mosul.

Nineveh operations command said the renewed offensive saw Iraqi forces close in on Hajj Ali, a village on the banks of the Tigris that is the last key IS position before Qayyarah.

The Iraqi forces said they were supported by air strikes from the US-led coalition.

The fresh operation comes as Iraqi forces are battling IS fighters in Fallujah, which lies 50 kilometres (30 miles) west of Baghdad and is the jihadist group's other main Iraqi bastion besides Mosul.

A suicide attack carried out by Islamic State group fighters killed at least five members of the Iraqi security forces on Monday in the city of Ramadi, army officers said.

The Iraqi army earlier this year regained control of Ramadi, the capital of the country's vast Anbar province, and in recent weeks has been battling to retake Fallujah, another city in the province, from IS jihadists.

Major General Ismail al-Mahalawi said the IS attack targeted an army base in Ramadi with several explosives-laden vehicles driven by suicide bombers and gunmen who fired on soldiers.

"Our forces killed all the attackers and destroyed all the car bombs but there were a number of killed and wounded among army ranks," said Mahalawi, who heads the operations command for Anbar province.

Two senior Iraqi army officers, speaking on condition of anonymity, said five soldiers were killed and 11 wounded in the attack.

The attack highlighted IS's continued ability to stage deadly operations in areas where it lost control of territory, as the government seeks to bring local populations back and start rebuilding.

Fallujah, which lies about half way between Baghdad and Ramadi, 50 kilometres (30 miles) west of the Iraqi capital, is IS's last major bastion in Anbar.

US Apache helicopters strike IS for first time in Iraq
Washington (AFP) June 13, 2016 - US Apache helicopters have struck an Islamic State target for the first time in Iraq, the Pentagon said Monday.

The sophisticated attack choppers destroyed an IS car bomb Sunday near Qayyarah, which is about 50 miles (80 kilometers) south of Mosul, the group's main stronghold in Iraq.

"The government of Iraq approved the use of Apaches in support of ISF (Iraqi Security Forces) operations," Defense Department spokesman Christopher Sherwood said.

"The strike was vetted and approved through the same process the (US-led) coalition uses for all strikes."

Pentagon chief Ashton Carter has since early December made it clear to the Iraqi government that the US military is willing to use its Apaches based in Iraq to support local forces.

But the government had until now declined. US officials say this is because Prime Minister Haider al-Abadi didn't want to anger Shiite militias, who oppose the ramping up of US combat operations in Iraq.

Still, coalition warplanes and drones have since August 2014 been bombing IS targets in Iraq and Syria after the jihadist group overran large parts of the two countries.

The Apache strike came as Iraqi forces advanced towards Qayyarah with the eventual aim of retaking Mosul.

Iraqi forces are also battling IS fighters in Fallujah, which lies 30 miles west of Baghdad and is the group's other main Iraqi bastion besides Mosul.


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