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IRAQ WARS
Iraq: from IS gains to the battle for Fallujah
by Staff Writers
Paris (AFP) May 30, 2016


Five things you need to know about Fallujah
Baghdad (AFP) May 30, 2016 - Forces led by Iraq's elite counter-terrorism service thrust into Fallujah on Monday, a week after Prime Minister Haider al-Abadi declared the launch of an offensive to retake the city.

The move marks a new phase in operations that had so far focused on clearing areas around Fallujah, a city west of Baghdad that looms large in the Islamic State group's mythology.

Here are five essential facts about Fallujah:

Rebel city

Fallujah was once a small trading post on the Euphrates River, 50 kilometres (30 miles) west of Baghdad, but its aura in modern Iraq belies its relatively modest size.

Sunni tribes were always powerful in Fallujah, whose reputation as a troublesome city predates the US-led invasion of 2003.

In 1920, the murder there of a British officer was one of the sparks that ignited a nationwide revolt against the colonial power.

The anti-British rebellion was the inspiration for the name of an armed group called the 1920 Revolution Brigades, which was founded in 2003 and still active in the Fallujah area in 2014 before it was swallowed up by IS.

'City of Mosques'

Fallujah is an important religious hub for Iraq's Sunni minority. Its skyline bristles with hundreds of minarets that have earned it the nickname "City of Mosques".

Built on a crossroads for routes from Saudi Arabia and Jordan, Fallujah was one of the first places in Iraq where hardline Wahhabi ideology took root.

Now executed dictator Saddam Hussein jailed several radical preachers from Fallujah, although the city was generally not hostile to him and benefited from the policies of his Baath party regime that favoured Sunni Arabs.

Blackwater Bridge

On March 31, 2003, insurgents ambushed a convoy carrying four US contractors working for the private military company Blackwater. They were killed, their bodies dragged on the road and eventually hung from a bridge over the Euphrates.

Photos of the mutilated bodies were beamed around the world, and remain among the most searing images of the US-led war in Iraq.

The bridge became known as "Blackwater Bridge" and the incident jolted the world into an awareness of the violent reality that was going to prevail in Iraq, a year after the overthrow of Saddam.

'New Vietnam'

Operation Phantom Fury was launched on November 7, 2004 and turned into the bloodiest battle US service personnel had seen since the Vietnam War.

They went house to house in a bid to retake a city that had already become the capital of Al-Qaeda in Iraq, a precursor of the Islamic State group that was founded by Abu Musab al-Zarqawi.

The battle, in which 95 US troops were killed and more than 500 wounded, holds a special place in recent US military history. Varying estimates put the number of insurgents killed at between 1,000 and 1,500, and civilian casualties were believed to be in the hundreds.

'Head of the snake'

Fallujah fell to anti-government fighters in early 2014 after security forces withdrew during unrest that began when they cleared a year-old anti-government protest camp near Ramadi, the capital of Anbar province, sparking fighting that later spread to Fallujah.

The fall of the Fallujah, which later became a key IS stronghold, was the first time that anti-government forces had exercised such open control in an Iraqi city since the height of the violence that followed the US-led invasion.

IS's broad offensive, in which second city Mosul was captured, did not happen until June 2014. Fallujah is seen by many Iraqis as the place where it all began and is sometimes nicknamed "the head of the snake".

Events in Iraq from the breakthrough by Islamic State group (IS) fighters in 2014 to the government counter-attack.

On January 4, 2014, Iraq loses its first key town since the US-led invasion of 2003. Fighters from the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL) and allies capture Fallujah and parts of Ramadi, west of Baghdad.

The vast Anbar province that surrounds the two towns is predominantly Sunni Muslim and fiercely resisted US troops when they occupied Iraq.

On June 9, ISIL captures Mosul, the second largest Iraqi city in the north, and declares an Islamic caliphate on June 29, calling itself the Islamic State group.

The jihadists also control Tikrit, home town of late dictator Saddam Hussein north of Baghdad, and large parts of the country up to Iraqi Kurdistan. IS drives out tens of thousands of Iraqi Christians and Yazidis, a Kurdish-speaking non-Muslim minority that lives around Sinjar near the border with Syria.

On August 8, the United States launches air strikes against IS and a month later has created a coalition to target the group in Iraq and Syria.

2015: Counter-offensives

On March 31, Iraqi troops and Shiite militias backed by neighbouring Iran recapture Tikrit.

By May 17 however, IS completely controls Ramadi, the capital of Anbar province which stretches west to Syria where IS has declared a de-facto capital in Raqa.

Later in the year, Iraqi forces and coalition air strikes begin driving IS back, and by mid-October they have recaptured Baiji and its strategic refinery north of Baghdad.

Kurdish forces backed by air strikes recapture Sinjar on November 13, severing an IS supply route between Iraq and Syria. Coalition strikes intensify after November 13, when attacks claimed by IS kill 130 people in France.

On December 27, Iraqi forces say they have liberated Ramadi, their biggest victory against IS to date. But the city is not totally cleared until February 9, 2016.

2016: Fallujah and Mosul

The government focuses on recapturing Fallujah and Mosul, IS's last strongholds in Iraq.

Officials have vowed to drive the jihadists out in 2016, but Washington is more cautious, evoking the fall of Mosul late this year or in early 2017. Observers say Fallujah is more of a priority for the Baghdad government.

In April, Washington says it will send attack helicopters and another 200 soldiers to train and assist Iraqi troops, bringing the total number of US military personnel in Iraq to more than 4,000.

On March 24, the army and allied militia begin an offensive in the northern Nineveh province around Mosul, making slow progress. On May 29, Kurdish peshmerga fighters backed by the international coalition recapture several villages east of Mosul.

To the south, coalition-backed Iraqi troops begin to squeeze Fallujah in March and capture Heet and Rutba, towns which control supply routes between Iraq and Syria.

On May 23, they begin an offensive to retake Fallujah, where several tens of thousands of civilians are trapped.

IS strikes back with suicide attacks in Baghdad and elsewhere, but is now estimated to control just 14 percent of Iraq, down from a peak of 40 percent in 2014.

On May 30, elite troops begin a three-pronged dawn assault on Fallujah.

Iraq Kurds retake nine villages from IS: statement
Arbil, Iraq (AFP) May 30, 2016 - Iraq's Kurdish peshmerga forces wrapped up an operation east of the Islamic State group's northern hub of Mosul Monday after recapturing nine villages, a statement said.

The Kurdistan Region Security Council said the operation launched before dawn on Sunday "had achieved its key objectives".

The KRSC statement listed nine villages that had been occupied by IS since the summer of 2014 and were previously mainly inhabited by northern Iraq's Kakai and Shabak minorities.

The operation involved around 5,500 peshmerga fighters backed by US-led coalition air strikes and reconquered an area of 120 square kilometres (46 square miles).

The area, near Khazir, lies near the main road between Mosul and the autonomous Kurdish region's capital Arbil.

The KRSC claimed that in the course of the two-day operation, 140 IS fighters were killed and 14 car bombs were destroyed.

The peshmerga officer in charge of the region said at a news conference that four Kurdish forces were killed and 34 others wounded during the operation.

The fresh push against the jihadist organisation in the north came a week after Iraqi forces launched an operation against Fallujah, IS's only other major urban hub in Iraq.


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Previous Report
IRAQ WARS
Iraq forces take position around Fallujah
Baghdad (AFP) May 28, 2016
Iraq's counter-terrorism forces deployed on the edge of Fallujah Saturday for the first time since an operation was launched to retake the jihadist-held city, top commanders said. The counter-terrorism service (CTS), Iraq's best-trained and most battle-tested fighting unit, moved into position on the boundaries of Fallujah, a bastion of the Islamic State group. "CTS forces, Anbar emergen ... read more


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