Iraq promises to reclaim Anbar

Local residents and Sunni tribal fighters welcome newly-arriving Iraqi Shiite Hezbollah Brigade militiamen,  brandishing their flag, who are joining the fight against Islamic State group militants in Khalidiya, 100 kilometers (60 miles) west of Baghdad, Iraq.
Local residents and Sunni tribal fighters welcome newly-arriving Iraqi Shiite Hezbollah Brigade militiamen, brandishing their flag, who are joining the fight against Islamic State group militants in Khalidiya, 100 kilometers (60 miles) west of Baghdad, Iraq.

BAGHDAD -- Iraq vowed Tuesday to retake Anbar province -- now mostly held by the Islamic State -- by launching a large-scale military operation less than two weeks after suffering a defeat at the hands of the extremists in the provincial capital of Ramadi.

The operation, which Iraqi state TV said was backed by Shiite militias and Sunni pro-government fighters, is deemed critical in regaining momentum in the fight.

But as a sandstorm descended across the region, there was no sign of any major engagement against the extremists, who have been gaining ground in the province west of Baghdad despite U.S.-led airstrikes.

A Pentagon spokesman, Col. Steve Warren, said Iraqi forces have begun "shaping operations" and "security zone interactions," which he described as probing and reconnaissance actions that would precede any major combat in or around Ramadi.

The Iraqis have begun moving forward from their base at Habbaniyah, and Islamic State fighters are probing in the direction of Habbaniyah, Warren said. He added that he could not confirm that the Iraqi forces have surrounded Ramadi.

The Islamic State seized large parts of Anbar in early 2014 and captured Ramadi earlier in May. Iraqi forces, which had been making steady progress against the extremists in recent months with the help of the air campaign, scored a major victory in recapturing Saddam Hussein's hometown of Tikrit last month.

Elsewhere in Anbar province, the Islamic State last week captured the Iraqi side of the key al-Walid border crossing with Syria. Those gains followed the Islamic State seizure of the ancient town of Palmyra in Syria.

The start of the operation in Anbar came days after U.S. officials, including Defense Secretary Ashton Carter, criticized Iraq's forces, saying its troops fled the Islamic State advance on Ramadi without fighting back, leaving behind weapons and vehicles for the extremists.

Baghdad defended its troops and said preparations were underway for the large-scale counteroffensive in Anbar, involving Iranian-backed Shiite militias known as Popular Mobilization Units. That possibility sparked fears of potential sectarian violence in the Sunni-dominated province, long the site of protests and criticism of the Shiite-led government in Baghdad.

The Shiite militias chose a religious name for their campaign, deepening those worries and drawing criticism from the Pentagon. The Popular Mobilization Units have named it "Labaik Ya Hussein," which is Arabic for "I am here, Hussein" -- referring to a grandson of the Prophet Muhammad and one of the most revered figures of Shiite Islam.

Warren called the title "unhelpful."

"We've long said ... the key to expelling ISIL from Iraq is a unified Iraq that separates itself from sectarian divides," he said, referring to the Islamic State by another name that it goes by.

Karim al-Nouri, a spokesman for the Popular Mobilization Units, said the name wasn't sectarian.

"This name has no sectarian dimension [or meaning] because all Iraqis, regardless of their sect or religion, love Imam Hussein," al-Nouri said.

A spokesman for Iraq's Shiite militias said the operation would "not last for a long time," and that Iraqi forces have surrounded Ramadi on three sides.

New weapons are being used in the battle "that will surprise the enemy," said Ahmed al-Assadi, who is also a member of parliament. He said another operation was underway north of the nearby province of Salahuddin.

Plans called for the forces in Salahuddin to move against Ramadi from its northeastern side, al-Assadi added.

The Anbar operation aims to cut off supply routes and recapture the outskirts of Ramadi first -- not the city itself, according to provincial councilman Faleh al-Issawi and tribesman Rafie al-Fahdawi.

They said there was fighting and airstrikes west and south of Ramadi on Tuesday, adding that more Sunni fighters will be armed starting today to fight the Islamic State.

The sandstorm complicated efforts to retake the city, al-Issawi said.

Earlier this month, security forces and Sunni militiamen who had been battling the extremists in Ramadi for months collapsed as Islamic State fighters overran the city.

The militants gained not only new territory 70 miles west of Baghdad but also large stocks of weapons abandoned by government forces as they fled.

Prime Minister Haider al-Abadi had urged the Shiite militias to help retake Anbar province. The militiamen have played a key role in clawing back territory from the Islamic State elsewhere in Iraq, although rights groups and Sunni residents have accused them of looting, destroying property and carrying out revenge attacks. Militia leaders deny the allegations.

Information for this article was contributed by Sameer N. Yacoub, Robert Burns and Jim Kuhnhenn of The Associated Press.

A Section on 05/27/2015

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