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Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

Iraqi forces reclaim Tikrit from Islamic State

Iraqi Prime Minister Haider al-Abadi tours the city of Tikrit after it was retaken by the security forces in Baghdad on Wednesday. (Associated Press)
Tribune News Service

IRBIL, Iraq – Iraqi security forces backed by sectarian militias took control of the last Islamic State strongholds in Tikrit on Wednesday, the first successful operation by the government in Baghdad to reclaim a major Sunni Muslim population center since the extremist group took control of most of central, western and northern Iraq last year.

Reports from the scene indicated that the operation, far bloodier than anticipated when the security forces and their Shiite militia allies began it a month ago, had destroyed most of the city and surrounding areas. The death toll among the pro-government forces exceeded 1,000.

In Washington, the White House acknowledged the triumph and credited the late and controversial intervention by U.S. aircraft, which began bombing Islamic State sites last week after the Iraqi push had stalled for two weeks.

“You’ll recall that when this operation began, it did not include the support of coalition military airstrikes,” White House spokesman Josh Earnest said. The operation, Earnest said, “got stalled, right on the outskirts of the city, and remained stalled for a couple of weeks.”

Five days of airstrikes ended that stalemate, Earnest said, calling the result “a pretty compelling description of the successful implementation of our strategy.”

What it means for future operations against Islamic State forces in other areas they control was uncertain.

Iraqi Prime Minister Haider al-Abadi asked for American air support over the objections of Iraq’s largest Shiite militias, which had planned the operation as a showcase of the country’s ability to handle the Islamic State threat without Western involvement.

The episode revealed tensions within Iraq’s Shiite-dominated government over the roles of the U.S.-led air coalition and of Iran, whose famed Revolutionary Guard commander Gen. Qassem Suleimani had personally supervised the early stages of the offensive. Some of the militias pulled out of the offensive in protest, and it appeared Wednesday that the bulk of the forces in Tikrit were Iraqi army troops.

Earnest said the Iraqi force that had entered Tikrit on Wednesday was “a multisectarian force that’s being led by the Iraqi military,” though the Shiite militias remain vital to assembling a large-enough fighting force to tackle other Islamic State strongholds. There had been no American airstrikes on Tikrit in the last 24 hours, according to U.S. Central Command’s Wednesday statement of activities.

In announcing the end of operations, al-Abadi’s minister of defense, Khalid al Obeidi, promised to continue the fight in Nineveh and Anbar, major provinces to the north and west, respectively, that remain largely under Islamic State control.

“Here we come to you, Anbar! Here we come to you, Nineveh, and we say it with full resolution, confidence and persistence,” he said.