Pentagon welcomes Fallujah recapture, looks north to Mosul

Iraqi government forces are seen near the Falahat village west of Fallujah on June 27, 201
AFP

Washington (AFP) – The Pentagon on Monday welcomed the recapture of the Iraqi city of Fallujah from the Islamic State group, but warned of widespread booby traps and pockets of remaining jihadist resistance.

Iraqi forces seized the IS group’s last positions in Fallujah on Sunday, establishing full control over one of the jihadists’ most emblematic bastions after a month-long operation.

“There will be pockets of ISIL that they will encounter, we certainly know there will be significant challenges that they will face as they go through and back clear and remove that city of booby traps and IEDs (homemade bombs),” Pentagon spokesman Navy Captain Jeff Davis said, using an acronym for the IS group.

“Not just vehicle-borne IEDs but these house-borne IEDs which are particularly nasty to try to clear,” he added.

Davis said the US-led anti-IS coalition’s focus now shifts north, where the ultimate goal is to recapture Mosul, the jihadists’ main Iraq stronghold.

The coalition is helping Iraqi troops move north from Baiji towards the town of Qayyarah, which lies around 60 kilometers (35 miles) south of Mosul on the banks of the Tigris river.

Prime Minister Haider al-Abadi had already declared victory in Fallujah on June 17 after IS defenses collapsed, with Iraqi forces facing only limited resistance in subsequent clearing operations.

The fighting to get into Fallujah was initially fierce, particularly on the southern side, and Iraqi forces were supported by more than 100 US-led coalition air strikes.

“To some extent once (Iraqi troops) got through the hard candy shell and into the chewy center, things went much more quickly,” Davis said.

“It was really a heavy fight along the frontline but once they penetrated in it seemed to go very quickly.”

Davis said the recapture of Fallujah would “significantly” help the security situation in Baghdad, where IS fighters thought to have come from Fallujah have carried out a string of bomb attacks in recent weeks.

“The loss of Fallujah will further deny ISIL access to a province that is critically important to its overall goals,” he said.

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