Tikrit 'victory' boosts Iraq fight to defeat IS

Tikrit 'victory' boosts Iraq fight to defeat IS
Iraqi prime minister promises to reclaim the entire country from militants after retaking Tikrit from the Islamic State group.
5 min read
01 April, 2015
Iraqi forces celebrate inside Tikrit [AFP/Getty]

The Iraqi leader vowed to reclaim the entire country from militants after retaking Tikrit from the Islamic State group (IS, formerly Isis) as its forces fought to consolidate control of the city.

Speaking from a newly-recaptured area of central Tikrit after a month-long operation that was Baghdad's biggest success yet against IS, Prime Minister Haider al-Abadi said the government was "determined to liberate every inch of Iraqi land".

     The government is determined to liberate every inch of Iraqi land

- Prime Minister Haider al-Abadi

However, tribal leaders in the northern Iraqi governorate of Salahuddin announced on Thursday that the Popular Mobilisation militias had carried out extensive arsons and lootings in the city, only a few hours after breaking into it.

"The militants looted and burned down dozens of houses and stores" Tikrit tribal leader Sheikh Daham Assi al-Hamad told al-Araby al-Jadeed.

"They brought pick-up trucks to transport looted furniture and merchandise, and then they burned down the houses and stores to cover their crimes, claiming that they contained bombs that could not be deactivated" Hamad said, adding that the prime minister and defence minister had been informed and had vowed to "catch the perpetrators and return belongings."

Celebrations began on Wednesday when the black flag belonging to IS was replaced by Iraq's tricolour on the main provincial headquarters in central Tikrit.

Iraqi forces picked through the rubble-strewn streets of Tikrit after storming to the city centre, searching for fighters and avoiding the booby traps they left behind.

Prime Minister Haider al-Abadi claimed the city was liberated but the US-led coalition that has been helping Baghdad from the air said there was "still work to be done".

The fate of hundreds of IS fighters thought to have been holed up in former president Saddam Hussein's hometown for a bloody last stand was still unclear.

Abadi initially said Tikrit's centre, south and west had been retaken and moments later announced the city's full liberation on social media, hailing it as a "historic milestone".

A spokesperson for the 60-nation US-led coalition that has carried out air strikes against IS in Tikrit and across Iraq suggested it was premature to claim victory in the month-old battle.

"Parts of the city remain under (IS) control and there is still work to be done," Major Kim Michelsen told AFP by email.

US President Barack Obama's deputy envoy for the coalition, Brett McGurk, said Iraqi forces had made "encouraging progress" in Tikrit.

Snipers

A member of the Iraqi security atop a damaged house in Tikrit (AFP/Getty)

A top leader in the Badr organisation, one of the most prominent Shia militias in Iraq, admitted that IS had not been completely purged of fighters.

"Snipers are still there and many buildings are booby-trapped," Karim al-Nuri said in the northern Tikrit neighbourhood of Qadisiya.

In scenes captured in an AFP video Tuesday, jubilant fighters could be seen tearing up the black flag amid extensive destruction in the city.

"We are in the centre of Tikrit. The city and all administrative buildings were completely liberated," said one of them, policeman Bahaa Abdullah Nasif.

There was no immediate information on how many fighters were killed, wounded or captured in the fighting.

The government has not provided any casualty figures since the operation started on 2 March.

Iraqi army and police forces, as well as volunteers and Iran-backed Shia militias, completely surrounded Tikrit within two weeks of launching the operation.

There was a lull in fighting when government forces and their allies apparently balked at the number of snipers, booby traps, berms and trenches which IS was using to defend its city centre redoubt.

Iran was Baghdad's top foreign partner in the early stages of the operation but Iraqi air strikes were proving insufficient to break the back of IS resistance.

Abadi's government eventually requested strikes from the US-led coalition which has been assisting Iraqi forces elsewhere in the country since August last year.

US jets began bombing IS targets in Tikrit on 25 March. France also took part in the campaign.

The move sparked a freeze in the participation of the Popular Mobilisation units, an umbrella organisation for volunteers and militias which accounted for the bulk of the forces in Tikrit.

The Pentagon had expressed unease at the role played by Iran and its proxies and said it conditioned its intervention on regular forces taking the lead.

Mosul next 

But after giving themselves political cover by declaring they do not want to work with each other, both sides took part in the operation this week.

Tikrit, once with an estimated population of about 200,000, had been largely emptied of civilians by the time the operation was launched.

The fate of the few believed to have remained in the city was unclear, however.

Thousands of people displaced last year or more recently from Salaheddin province, of which Tikrit is the capital, have started returning to their homes in outlying liberated areas.

READ ALSO: Refugees in their own country: Iraq's ticking time bomb

But the level of destruction and the threat posed by unexploded bombs mean Tikrit residents could take longer to return.

Tikrit was the hometown of executed dictator Saddam Hussein. Remnants of his Baath party collaborated with IS last summer and a victory in the Sunni Arab city carries symbolic importance for Baghdad.

Iraqi forces have been working their way north from areas south of Baghdad since last year and retaking Tikrit would mark another tactical step in the march towards Mosul, the jihadists' largest hub in Iraq.

Defence Minister Khaled al-Obeidi met all his top commanders Tuesday to discuss preparations for an operation to retake the Nineveh province, of which Mosul is the capital.

"This victory is only a new starting point from which to launch the operation to liberate Nineveh province," his ministry said.

Mosul, Iraq's second city, is close to 10 times the size of Tikrit however and still holds a large civilian population.

With additional reporting from AFP.