"Militants raise their flags over government compound in centre of city after using car bombs to breach blast walls."
"Iraqi troops have been forced out of most of Ramadi by Islamic State
forces, consolidating the militant group’s control over the capital of
Anbar province, which covers more than one-third of the country.
ISIS militants raised their flags over the government compound in the centre of the city on Friday little more than 12 hours after using car bombs to breach blast walls and open a path for fighters who stormed a police headquarters and military base. A British Isis fighter reportedly died in a suicide attack during the assault.
Civilians were fleeing the fighting along the perilous highway towards Baghdad, much of which is also controlled by Isis. Iraqi officials in Ramadi said they had pleaded for help ahead of the attack and now feared that the rest of the city would soon fall: a result that would give the terror organisation its biggest victory in Iraq this year.
It would also mark a significant defeat for Iraqi forces, who had allied with several powerful Sunni tribes in a bid to defend Ramadi and stop Isis from taking control of the highways west to Syria and Jordan, as well as the water supply to southern Iraq which is regulated by a dam on the Euphrates river that runs through the city.
The attack was launched hours after the release of an audio recording by Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi, in which the Isis leader exhorted followers to “fight the enemy wherever they are”. Baghdadi specifically mentioned Ramadi, in the first public message he has delivered since November.
The message seemed aimed at reassuring supporters that he remains in control of Isis, despite claims from inside the group that he was injured in an airstrike in mid-March. A source familiar with Baghdadi’s condition has told the Guardian that he is slowly recovering from a suspected spinal injury that left him unable to move for more than two months.
A reference to the Saudi-led military campaign in Yemen meant the recording was made after 26 March.
The loss of Ramadi to ISIS would mean that nearly all of Anbar would be, in effect, partitioned from the rest of Iraq. Only small pockets between the city and Fallujah immediately to the east, as well as Al-Nukhayb 200 miles south-west, and several border towns, remain under the control of government forces.
Ramadi is a stronghold of the al-Dulaimi tribe, one of the most powerful in Iraq. Several of its clans have been central to a Sunni revolt against Isis forces in the area. The Dulaimis were also the mainstays of the Awakening movement, which forced an earlier incarnation of Isis, the Islamic State of Iraq, from Ramadi in 2007.
The Awakening was at the time strongly backed by the US army, which launched a troop surge to sustain it. The US military suffered close to one quarter of its casualties in the area from 2003-08 and left in 2011 claiming that Baghdadi’s forces could no longer achieve their goals there.
Four years later, though, Isis appears closer than ever to imposing a de facto partition on Iraq, even after being forced to withdraw from Tikrit in April and losing large swaths of land near Kirkuk in the north to Kurdish forces.
US air strikes are understood to have killed at least 18 of 43 top-line Isis leaders since they were launched last August. However the group has demonstrated that it can quickly regroup and still call the shots during ground battles.
Senior US officials remained sceptical of Iraqi claims that Isis second-in-command, Abu Alaa al-Afri, was killed in an airstrike this week. The Iraqi defence ministry released a video of a strike to support its claim that al-Afri had been killed when a missile hit a mosque in the north western town of Tal Afar on 11 May. However, the video was shot on 4 May and appeared to target a regular building.
Also on Friday, an audio recording purporting to be from Izzat al-Douri, the most senior surviving figure of the Saddam Hussein era, the leader of Iraq’s now-outlawed Ba’ath party, was uploaded to the internet. Iraqi officials had claimed al-Douri had been killed near Tikrit in its successful offensive to reclaim the city. Troops and Shia militia had even driven what they claimed was al-Douri’s body through the streets of Baghdad as a war trophy.
Officials had pledged to offer DNA evidence to support their claim, but later backed away saying they could not find a family member with whom to compare the sample." Map of Iraq from UK Guardian
Image caption: " ." Reuters via BBC
5/15/15, "Analysis: Ahmed Maher," BBC News, Baghdad
"Islamic State wants to send a clear message to the central government in Baghdad that, having seized control of Ramadi, they are now the de facto rulers of Anbar province.
Supported by anti-government Sunni tribes and members of former President Saddam Hussein's army, the militant group has been trying for months to seize Ramadi.
And, after several false starts, they have succeeded in taking control of the city centre and the main government complex. This is an extraordinary victory that will give IS the momentum to control the whole of Anbar.
Since last year, the militants have made big territorial gains in Anbar and in the northern province of Nineveh, which is home to the group's stronghold city of Mosul."
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On Friday after news that Ramadi had fallen and Iraqis had fled, the pathetic US promised to send heavy weapons Iraqis had pleaded for earlier:
5/15/1, "Islamic State crisis: Militants seize Ramadi stronghold," BBC
"This latest attack comes a day after Islamic State put out an audio message it claimed was from its leader, Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi, who Iraq had said was seriously wounded in a coalition air strike in March.
The White House said on Friday US Vice-President Joe Biden had spoken to Iraq's PM Haidar al-Abadi and pledged to deliver heavy weaponry, including shoulder-held rockets and additional ammunition, as well as supplies to the Iraqi forces."...
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