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Iraq forces face Daesh resistance but US says Tikrit will fall

By AFP - Mar 07,2015 - Last updated at Mar 07,2015

SAMARRA, Iraq — Iraqi forces faced tough resistance from Daesh militants around Tikrit Saturday but the top US military officer said ahead of a visit to Baghdad victory was only a matter of time.

Iran has actively and visibly supported Baghdad's biggest operation yet against the Daesh terror group but General Martin Dempsey insisted US air strikes north of Tikrit had been key.

"The Tikrit operation is only possible because of the air campaign we've been running around Baiji," a town further north, he said.

Daesh’s footprint in Iraq has been shrinking steadily since federal and Kurdish troops went on the counteroffensive roughly six months ago, with foreign military backing.

The US military announced that a string of 26 air strikes over two weeks had succeeded in forcing Daesh out of Al Baghdadi, a small town near a large Iraqi base in western Iraq where US advisers are stationed.

"Iraqi security forces and tribal fighters from the Anbar region have successfully cleared Al Baghdadi of Daesh, retaking both the police station and three Euphrates River bridges," it said.

An offensive was also launched last week to recapture Gurma, another town in Anbar which is located only 10 kilometres from the Daesh stronghold of Fallujah and less than 30 kilometres from Baghdad airport.

"Gurma will soon be liberated totally; our forces are on the edge of town," a statement from Baghdad operations command said late on Friday.

It claimed that 73 militants were killed in the first two days of fighting and a number of bombs defused.

Hospital sources told AFP that dozens of government forces wounded in the operation had been brought in but that the bodies of those killed were being handed over to their families directly.

 

Overwhelming numbers 

 

The government has provided no casualty toll for the much larger operation aimed at retaking Tikrit, which was launched on March 2.

Residents living on the road between Samarra, where the operation’s command centre is located and Baghdad further south, say convoys bringing back bodies have been passing regularly.

Daesh used several devastating truck bombs in the early hours of the operation, targeting the army, police, Shiite militias and volunteer units.

Undated footage surfaced on the Internet Saturday of the bodies of eight men described as pro-government volunteers hanging from a bridge in Hawija, 75 kilometres north of Tikrit.

Iraqi forces spent the first days of the operation clearing outlying areas and are now closing in on Tikrit itself, as well as the towns of Al Alam and Ad Dawr.

Tikrit is the hometown of executed dictator Saddam Hussein and Ad Dawr that of Izzat Ibrahim Al Duri, the most senior member of his regime still at large.

Fighting raged in Ad Dawr on Friday but Dempsey, speaking to reporters aboard his plane en route to Bahrain and Iraq, said it was only a matter of time before Daesh was defeated in Tikrit.

“The numbers are overwhelming,” he said, adding that “hundreds” of IS fighters were facing an estimated 23,000 government and allied forces.

Columns of Iraqi military trucks and armoured vehicles were lined up along the main road to Tikrit, and it resembled a rush hour traffic jam in Washington, “bumper to bumper”, he said.

He spoke of the role of Iran, which with the United States has been Iraq’s other key foreign partner in the fight to reclaim the land lost last summer but is not a member of the 60-nation US-led coalition.

Dempsey said he is “trying to get a sense for how our activities and their activities are complementary”.

The militants have been responding by ramping up a campaign of what UNESCO has called cultural cleansing, destroying heritage treasures one after the other.

A week after releasing a video showing its militants smashing priceless statues inside Mosul museum, Daesh bulldozed the archaeological site of Nimrud just south of the city on Thursday, according to the antiquities ministry.

The destruction sparked a fresh round of global outrage but experts said little could be done to save other heritage sites under Daesh control short of defeating the jihadists militarily.

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