Iraqi forces yesterday launched an offensive aimed at retaking towns still under the control of the Islamic State (IS) group in western areas near the border with Syria, commanders said.
“A military operation has begun in the western areas of Anbar to liberate them from Daesh,” said Lieutenant General Qassem Mohammedi, commander of the Jazeera Operations Command, using an Arabic acronym for the IS.
He said the operation was led by the army’s seventh division, police, and fighters from local tribes that have opposed the extremists, with aerial backing from the US-led coalition.
The main targets of the operation are Aanah, Rawa and al-Qaim, the westernmost Iraqi towns along the Euphrates Valley.
The extremist hub of al-Qaim, which lies 330km northwest of Baghdad, is still a long way down the road and the most immediate target of the new offensive is the town of Aanah.
“Our forces started advancing from Haditha towards Aanah from several directions,” Mohammedi told reporters.
Haditha was never seized by the IS when the group swept across much of Iraq’s Sunni Arab heartland in 2014 and is home to a tribe that has led the fight against the extremist in the area.
“Zero hour has come to liberate the western areas,” Nadhom al-Jughaifi, a commander with the Haditha tribal fighters, said.
Last year, Iraqi forces retook large parts of the vast province of Anbar, including its capital Ramadi and the city of Fallujah.
Anbar is a desert area traversed by the Euphrates that borders Saudi Arabia, Jordan and Syria. Security in reconquered areas remains precarious and extremists continue to move across the province.
Tens of thousands of Iraqi forces are involved in an offensive to retake Mosul, the main northern city which is also the IS’ last major stronghold in the country.
The IS has lost more than half of the territory it once controlled in Iraq and the loss of Mosul would deal a major blow to the “caliphate” it proclaimed there in June 2014.
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