Iraqi forces fighting ISIS slowed by roadside bombs
Saddam Hussein's hometown of Tikrit fell to ISIS last summer
Iraqi troops and Shia militias battled the Islamic State of Iraq and Syria (ISIS) Tuesday on the outskirts of militant-held Tikrit, unable to advance further on Saddam Hussein's hometown as roadside mines and suicide attacks slowed their progress.
On one eight-kilometre road alone, soldiers found some 100 mines and bombs scattered on the way to the strategic city on the Tigris River, Salahuddin deputy governor Ammar Hikmat said.
The discovery underlined how the battle likely will pivot on allied Iraqi forces' ability to counter such weapons, a mainstay of al-Qaeda in Iraq, the Islamic State group's predecessor, as it fought American forces following their 2003 invasion of the country.
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The bombs are "the main obstacle in the way of the attacking forces, which have to wait for bomb experts or to go around the area," Hikmat told The Associated Press. "And this costs time."
Extremists from ISIS, which holds both a third of Iraq and neighbouring Syria in its self-declared caliphate, have littered major roadways and routes with mines. Such mines allow the extremists to slow any ground advance and require painstaking clearing operations before troops can safely move through.
Suicide bombings also aid the militants in weakening Iraqi forces and have been used extensively in its failed campaign for the Syrian border town of Kobani. Already, a militant website affiliated with ISIS has said an American jihadi carried out a suicide attack with a truck bomb on the outskirts of nearby Samarra, targeting Iraqi forces and Shia militiamen. It identified him by the nom de guerre of Abu Dawoud al-Amriki without elaborating.
Suicide bomber
A suicide bomber also drove a military vehicle Tuesday afternoon into a checkpoint manned by government forces and Shia fighters south of Tikrit, killing four troops and wounding 12, a police officer and medical official said.
Tuesday marked the second day of the Iraqi advance on Tikrit, with its soldiers supported by Iranian-backed Shia militias and advisers, along with some Sunni tribal fighters who reject ISIS. Hikmat estimated the Iraqi force besieging Tikrit at some 25,000 people. Iran's semi-official Fars news agency has reported that Iranian Gen. Ghasem Soleimani, the commander of the country's elite Revolutionary Guard's Quds Force, was taking part in the offensive.
Brig. Gen. Saad Maan Ibrahim, an Interior Ministry spokesman, said explosive experts had disabled "so many bombs and car bombs."
"Tikrit has been besieged from three directions, from the north, west and south, but what has remained only from the eastern side," Ibrahim said. "The explosive experts were able to tackle so many bombs and car bombs."
Hikmat said the offensive had killed and wounded "dozens" of ISIS extremists, as attacking forces also have been killed. Authorities in Baghdad offered no immediate casualty figures.
Past attempts to retake Tikrit have failed, as Iraq struggles with a military that collapsed last summer during the ISIS militants' lightning offensive. The Tikrit operation is seen as a litmus test for the capability of Iraqi troops to dislodge the militants from major cities they conquered in the country's Sunni heartland.
Retaking Tikrit, the provincial capital of Salahuddin province some 130 kilometres north of Baghdad, would help Iraqi forces secure a major supply link for any future operation to capture Mosul, the country's second-largest city.
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On Monday, Iraqi and U.S. officials said the U.S.-led coalition was not involved in the Tikrit operation and had not been asked to carry out airstrikes. Overall, coalition airstrikes have killed more than 8,500 ISIS fighters since its campaign began in August, said Army Gen. Lloyd Austin, the commander of U.S. Central Command.
"The fact is that (the group) can no longer do what (it) did at the outset, which is to seize and to hold new territory," Austin said.
As the Tikrit battle rages, Iraq remains bitterly split between minority Sunnis, who were an important base of support for Saddam, and the Shia majority. Since Saddam was toppled and later executed, the Sunni minority has felt increasingly marginalized by the Shia-led government in Baghdad. In 2006, long-running tensions boiled over into sectarian violence that claimed tens of thousands of lives.
ISIS tapped into that Sunni resentment, though Prime Minister Haider al-Abadi, a Shia, has offered an amnesty for insurgents who abandon the extremists. His comments appeared to be targeting former members of Iraq's outlawed Baath party, loyalists of Saddam.