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Iraqi forces secure southern edge of ISIS stronghold of Fallujah

Iraqi forces secured the southern edge of the ISIS stronghold of Fallujah on Sunday, two weeks after the launch of an operation to recapture the city.

Special forces operation coincides with twin offensive on ISIS-held towns in neighbouring Syria

Smoke rises from a car bomb on the frontlines of the battle for Fallujah, Iraq on June 5, 2016. Iraqi forces secured the southern edge of the ISIS stronghold Sunday, two weeks after the launch of an operation to recapture the city. (Maya Alleruzzo/Associated Press)

Iraqi forces secured the southern edge of the Islamic State in Iraq and Syria (ISIS) stronghold of Fallujah on Sunday, two weeks after the launch of an operation to recapture the city, the commander overseeing the operation said.

Iraqi special forces, also known as its counterterrorism forces, have secured the largely agricultural southern neighbourhood of Naymiyah under cover of U.S.-led coalition airstrikes, Lt. Gen. Abdel Wahab al-Saadi said.

He said special forces are now poised to enter the main city.

The Fallujah operation coincides with a twin offensive on ISIS-strongholds in neighbouring Syria. Syrian Kurdish forces are advancing on Manbij, an ISIS-held city controlling the supply route between the Turkish border and the town of Raqqa, the militants' de facto capital. At the same time, Syrian government troops are advancing on Raqqa from the south.

The slow-moving Iraqi operation was announced in May. An array of troops, including Iraqi military divisions, the federal police and the largely Shia militia groups, known as the Popular Mobilization Forces, had cleared ISIS from the majority of Fallujah's suburbs.

A member of the Iraqi security forces carries a child as he assists civilians, who had fled their homes due to clashes, at Camp Tariq, located south of Fallujah. (Thaier Al-Sudani/Reuters)

On Monday, Iraq's elite special forces began pushing into the city centre, but they have faced stiff resistance as Fallujah has been under ISIS control for more than two years, and the militants have been able to erect complex defences.

Tall dirt berms dot the dusty fields to the city's south. A single column of counterterrorism Humvees snaked up toward a row of low lying houses that mark the beginning of the main city.

"VIBED! VIBED!" shouted an Iraqi air commander from a small mobile base on Fallujah's southern edge. Using an acronym for a car bomb, the Iraqi special forces officer called to Australian coalition forces over a hand-held radio. Moments later, a plume of white, then black smoke appeared on the horizon. Commanders at the scene said the explosion was created by a coalition rocket destroying the incoming car bomb.

A burnt armoured vehicle belonging to the Iraqi security forces is seen on a road near Fallujah, Iraq on Sunday. (Thaier Al-Sudani/Reuters)

Car bombs were once the most deadly form of ISIS counterattack for Iraq's special forces, who have taken the lead in a number of anti-ISIS operations, including in the cities of Tikrit and Ramadi.

Al-Saadi, who also commanded the Tikrit operation, says coalition air power in Fallujah has prevented car bombs from inflicting casualties on his forces, but they have still succeeded in slowing progress.

"We are expecting many more" once inside the city's more urban neighbourhoods, al-Saadi said.

Fallujah is one of the last strongholds of ISIS in Iraq. While the militants once held nearly a third of the country's territory, their grip has slipped to less than half that, according to the Iraqi Prime Minister Haider al-Abadi.

ISIS still controls patches of territory in northern and western Iraq, as well as its second largest city, Mosul.