Iraqi family members who left their hometown of Ramadi walk towards
Baghdad, outside Ramadi, the capital of Anbar province, 115 kilometers
(70 miles) west of Baghdad, Iraq, Friday, May 15, 2015. Islamic State
Iraq's military has dispatched reinforcements to help its battered
forces in Ramadi, a city now largely held by the Islamic State group
after its militants swept across it the day before, an Iraqi military
spokesman said Saturday.
Map locates Ramadi in Iraq, where Islamic State militants captured the
main government building on Friday; 1c x 3 inches; 46.5 mm x 76 mm;
The spokesman of the Joint Operations Command, Brig. Gen. Saad Maan
Ibrahim, told Iraqi state television that the U.S.-led coalition was
supporting Iraqi troops with "painful" airstrikes since late Friday.
Ibrahim didn't give details on the ongoing battles, but described the
situation on the ground as "positive" and vowed that the Islamic State
group would be pushed out of the city "in the coming hours."
On Friday, the militants swept through Ramadi, the
capital of Anbar province, launching a coordinated offensive included
three near-simultaneous suicide car bombs. The militants seized the main
government headquarters and other key parts of the city.
Local officials said dozens of security forces and
civilians were killed, mainly the families of the troops, including 10
police officers and some 30 tribal fighters allied with Iraqi forces. In
a sign of how the latest advance is worrying Washington, U.S. Vice
President Joe Biden spoke with Iraqi Prime Minister Haider Al-Abadi on
Friday, promising the delivery of heavy weapons, including AT-4
shoulder-held rockets to counter suicide car bombs, according to a U.S.
Embassy statement.
The statement said both leaders agreed on the
"importance and urgency of mobilizing tribal fighters working in
coordination with Iraqi security forces to counter ISIL and to ensure
unity of effort among all of Iraq's communities," using a different
acronym for the group.
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