Islamic State ‘loses 40% of territory in Iraq’
By Dan Wooding, Founder of the ASSIST News Service
IRAQ (ANS – Jan. 5, 2016)
– The BBC is reporting that Islamic State (IS) has lost 40% of the
territory it once controlled in Iraq, a spokesman for the US-led
coalition battling the jihadist group says.
Col. Steve Warren told reporters that IS was “on the defensive”, and had “not gained one inch in Iraq since May.”
It had also been driven out of 20% of its territory in Syria, he added.
“Despite
the losses, IS has continued to launch counter-offensives - including
several near the western Iraqi city of Haditha in the past 48 hours,”
said the BBC.
Col.
Warren said coalition air strikes had helped Iraqi government forces
repel an assault on Monday by about 200 militants, and that more than
100 had been killed.
He
did not give a figure for casualties on the government side, but a
Sunni tribal commander told AFP news agency that they had lost more than
25 fighters.
The
BBC went on to say that Haditha Mayor Mabrouk Hamid said the IS
counter-offensive had involved more than 40 armored vehicles, some of
them filled with explosives.
Col.
Warren said IS had shifted its focus to Haditha, situated near a key
dam in the north of Anbar province, after losing control of the
provincial capital Ramadi the government last week.
The
coalition spokesman also denied claims by IS that it had captured the
towns of Barwana and Sakran, near Haditha. He insisted it had not gained
any territory in Iraq since May, when Ramadi was overrun in an
embarrassing defeat for the army.
“In
June 2014, IS seized large parts of northern and western Iraq, and
proclaimed the creation of a caliphate stretching across the border with
Syria,” said the BBC.
Iraqi
government and Kurdish Peshmerga forces - supported by Iranian-backed
Shia militiamen, Sunni tribesmen and coalition air strikes - have since
regained more than 20,000 sq km (about 8.000 sq miles), according to the
coalition.
IS
militants have also been driven out of the city of Tikrit in the past
year, but they continue to control Mosul, the largest city in the north.
“In
Syria, the jihadists have been losing ground to President Bashar
al-Assad's forces, rebel groups, and Kurdish militia fighters. But they
have also been able to capture new territory of strategic value,
including the ancient city of Palmyra,” concluded the BBC story.
Photo
captions: 1) Iraqi government forces repelled an Islamic State assault
on Haditha, officials said on Tuesday. 2) Dan Wooding reporting for ANS
from outside the Kurdistan Parliament in Erbil, Northern Iraq.
About
the writer: Dan Wooding, 75, is an award-winning author, broadcaster
and journalist who was born in Nigeria of British missionary parents,
and is now living in Southern California with his wife Norma, to whom he
has been married for more than 52 years. They have two sons, Andrew and
Peter, and six grandchildren who all live in the UK. He is the author
of some 45 books and has two TV programs and one radio show in Southern
California, and has reported widely for ANS from all over the Middle
East including from Northern Iraq.
** You may republish this or any of our ANS stories with attribution to the ASSIST News Service (www.assistnews.net).
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