Iraqi forces retake town of Rutba from IS

Iraqi ground forces, supported by American airstrikes, have retaken the southwestern town of Rutba from Islamic State fighters.

Iraqi ground forces have recaptured the western town of Rutba after Islamic State fighters who had occupied the town for nearly two years fled or put up only light resistance, US military officers say.

Army Lieutenant General Sean MacFarland, the top US commander in Baghdad, told reporters on Friday that it was an important victory for the Iraqi security forces, even though Rutba is a small town.

MacFarland said that taking Rutba from IS will allow the reopening of the main road from Amman to Baghdad, which he said is a significant economic lifeline for Iraq.

"Although it's a small town, it's an important success for the Iraqi security forces," he said.

Another US officer, Marine Brigadier General Bill Mullen, said in a separate interview that the decisive action in Rutba was US airstrikes outside the town that seemed to persuade the IS fighters to flee rather than put up substantial resistance.

He said there were an estimated "couple of hundred" IS fighters in Rutba prior to the Iraqi assault and that by the time the Iraqis arrived all but about 30 had fled north to the city of al-Qaim or across the border into Syria.

Colonel Steve Warren, spokesman for the US military command in Baghdad, said the Iraqis had sent about 1000 troops to Rutba. They were a combination of federal police, Sunni tribal fighters, border security forces and members of the Counter-Terrorism Force.

Warren said IS had used Rutba as a staging area for weaponry and foreign fighters flowing into Iraq.

Beyond the recapturing of Rutba, US officials were focused mainly on preparing Iraqi security forces for an assault on Mosul, which is the Islamic State's main stronghold in Iraq.

MacFarland said the US is pushing the Iraqis to prepare for that step but does not want to move faster than is prudent, given the Iraqis' military and political limitations.

"We don't want to rush them out there and achieve fragile victories," MacFarland told a small group of reporters travelling with Army General Joseph Votel, who was in Iraq on Friday to consult with MacFarland and other US commanders.

"We want to make sure that their victories are irreversible."


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Source: AAP



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