Tens
of thousands of trapped civilians have stalled Iraqi forces fighting
the Islamic State group in the country's western Anbar province, the
spokesman for Iraq's elite counterterrorism forces gave the report on Friday.
Iraqi
forces re-launched an offensive on the town of Hit, 85 miles (140
kilometers) west of Baghdad, under cover of heavy coalition airstrikes
early Thursday morning, Sabah al-Numan said. Over the past week the
U.S.-led coalition launched 17 airstrikes in and around Hit, according
to Pentagon statements.
Hit
lies along an IS supply line linking the group's extremist forces in
Iraq to those in Syria. Iraqi commanders say retaking the town is key to
building on their current momentum after retaking Ramadi earlier this
year and linking up government forces to the west and the north of
Baghdad in preparation for an eventual push on Mosul.
The
counterterrorism forces, who are leading the Hit operation, reached
within three kilometers of the city center Thursday before being forced
to stop, al-Numan said. "The commanders are making a plan to evacuate
these families," Al-Numan said, adding that leaflets were dropped over
Hit indicating which roads can be used to flee safely.
Iraqi
forces encountered similar problems when trying to clear Ramadi, the
provincial capital of Anbar, of IS fighters earlier this year. As
government forces advanced across downtown Ramadi, the extremists pulled
back and took civilian captives with them as shields.
The
tactic significantly slowed the advance of ground troops. While
downtown Ramadi was declared under government control in December 2015,
it wasn't until two months later that Iraqi and coalition forces said
the rest of the city was "fully liberated."
After
storming across Iraq in the summer of 2014, over-running Iraq's second
largest city of Mosul, IS still controls large swaths of territory in
the country's north and west.
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