Iraq
launched the long-awaited operation to retake the Anbar provincial
capital, which was captured by IS militants in May, but after an initial
push across the Euphrates River, their progress stalled.
Gen.
Ismail al-Mahlawi, head of the Anbar military operations, told The
Associated Press that the advance was hampered by suicide bombers,
snipers and booby traps.
Iraqi
troops will "need days" to get to the city's central government
complex, said al-Mahlawi, adding that the troops were about one
kilometer (half mile) from the complex on Sunday.
Al-Mahlawi
said he could neither confirm nor deny media reports that IS fighters
had pulled out of the government complex by nightfall Sunday. But he
cited residents in the area as telling his troops that the IS militants
had withdrawn from the neighborhood of Albu Alwan, adjacent to the
complex.
Another officer said
the Iraqi army has yet to gain full control of a single Ramadi
neighborhood. He spoke on condition of anonymity because he was not
authorized to talk to reporters.
On
Tuesday, Iraqi security forces reported progress in recapturing some
areas in the western city of Ramadi, 130 kilometers (80 miles) west of
Baghdad, from IS militants.
The extremists control large swaths of
land in western and northern Iraq and in neighboring Syria. The IS
group has declared a self-styled caliphate on the territory under its
control.After overrunning Ramadi, IS destroyed all the bridges around the city. It also demolished the Anbar operations command center and fanned out into the city's residential areas to set up less conspicuous centers of command.
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