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Spectacular failure of Iraqi security forces culminated in ISIS attack that killed 32 and wounded at least 100 in Baghdad city centre

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Supspected ISIS attack kills 11 in Iraq, raises questions about security

Some experts believe, however, this week’s attacks may be more illustrative of accumulated security shortfalls than any significant ISIS comeback, experts have said.

Sunday 24/01/2021
Members of Iraqi security forces keep guard at the site of a twin suicide bombing attack in Baghdad, Iraq, January 21, 2021. (REUTERS)

Members of Iraqi security forces keep guard at the site of a twin suicide bombing attack in Baghdad, Iraq, January 21, 2021. (REUTERS)
BAGHDAD – At least 11 fighters from Iraq’s state-sponsored pro-Iran militia Hashed al-Shaabi (Popular Mobilisation Forces) were killed in an ambush by the Islamic State (ISIS) extremist group north of the capital on Saturday, Hashed security sources said.
The jihadists used light weapons and the cover of darkness to target the Hashed east of Tikrit, the capital of Iraq’s Salahaddin province, two days after a twin suicide attack claimed by the group killed 32 people in Baghdad.
“ISIS launched an attack on the Hashed’s Brigade 22,” said one of the unit’s officers Abu Ali al-Maliki.
Maliki said the brigade commander was among those killed before reinforcements from the federal police came to the unit’s aid.
Hashed security sources said the total toll was 11 dead and 10 wounded.
There was no immediate claim of responsibility, but security sources blamed ISIS.
The extremist group claimed responsibility earlier this week for suicide blast that killed and injured scores of Iraqi civilians in an open air market for used clothes in Baghdad.
Iraq declared the group territorially defeated in late 2017, but has continued to battle extremist sleeper cells, mostly in the country’s mountainous and desert areas.
Local troops have been aided by a US-led coalition, which first intervened to help fight ISIS in 2014 and continues to provide training, surveillance and air strikes in support of anti-jihadist operations.
The coalition has significantly drawn down its troop numbers over the past year, with the US shrinking its force from 5,200 to 2,500.
– Questions about troop readiness –
Local and Western sources have expressed concern over the readiness of Iraq’s security forces, who have been worn down by the spread of Covid-19, political infighting and corruption.
This week’s attacks may be more illustrative of those accumulated shortfalls than any significant ISIS comeback, experts have said.
Following the US-led invasion in 2003, Iraq’s security forces had to be effectively rebuilt from the ground up, relying heavily on training by foreign armies.
But with Covid-19 spreading fast through Iraq’s bases, coalition troops put a halt to all training operations.
Military sources and observers also cited political divisions within local security forces between units trained by the US and those — like the Hashed — who have received support from Iraq’s aggressive neighbour Iran.
Navigating those tensions has been a major challenge for Prime Minister Mustafa al-Kadhimi, seen as being friendly with the US.
Kadhimi has relied heavily on the US-trained Counter-Terrorism Service for a range of missions, from hunting down ISIS cells to reigning in groups launching rockets at the US embassy in Baghdad.
In an effort to bring in more names and faces he trusts, Kadhimi ordered an overhaul of Iraq’s security leadership late Thursday, including a new federal police commander and chief of the elite Falcons Unit.
But he had to walk back some of those decisions within a day following political pressure.

 
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