Iraq forces push Islamic State out of western town
Iraqi forces pushed Islamic State (IS) fighters out of a pocket of territory near the key western city of Ramadi Friday evening, the military said, following a string of recent victories against the militant group in the sprawling western Anbar desert.
Iraqi forces are now largely moving north, ahead of an eventual push on the country’s second-largest city of Mosul, which has been under IS control for the past two years. Mosul is also the group’s last remaining urban bastion in Iraq.
The development came as a powerful Iraqi Shia preacher Muqtada al-Sadr in Baghdad expressed discontent with the country’s new ministers appointed this week, after months of political wrangling – a reflection of the still simmering political crisis.
The town retaken Friday from IS – Khaldiyah, 90 kilometers west of Baghdad – lies between Ramadi and Fallujah, the two key cities in Anbar province retaken from the extremist group by Iraqi security forces over the last year.
Sadr, issued a statement in which he repeated calls a complete government overhaul and trials for all corrupt politicians. He also accused Iraq’s political blocs of standing in the way of reforms that the prime minister pledged to pursue more than a year ago.
Iraq’s parliament approved a partial Cabinet reshuffle this week, endorsing five new ministers.
Over the past year Iraq’s government has come under mounting public pressure. Anti-government protesters stormed Baghdad’s highly fortified Green Zone once in April and a second time in May.