IS attack kills 10 Iraqi fighters north of Baghdad

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SAMARRA, Iraq, May 2, 2020 (BSS/AFP) – Ten Iraqi paramilitaries were
killed in Islamic State group attacks north of Baghdad overnight, security
forces said Saturday, the deadliest operation by jihadist sleeper cells in
months.

Iraq declared IS defeated in late 2017 but remnants of the group still
wage hit-and-run attacks on security forces in remote areas of the north and
west.

Early Saturday, the jihadists attacked fighters of Iraq’s Hashed al-Shaabi
paramilitary force stationed outside a town about 180 kilometres (110 miles)
north of Baghdad, according to a statement by Iraq’s security forces.

“Six fighters were killed. As another unit was dispatched to reinforce
them, an explosive device detonated on that convoy and killed three
fighters,” the statement said.

A 10th fighter was killed in a separate IS attack on nearby unit from the
Hashed, a network of armed groups incorporated into the regular army chain of
command.

A security source in Salahaddin province, where the attack took place,
told AFP that the first IS ambush took place just before midnight.

“All the Iraqi security forces manning the checkpoint were killed. F16
planes are flying overhead to search for the IS fighters,” the source said.

The attack was IS’s deadliest in several months and appeared to cap a
period of more numerous and aggressive operations.

Last week, the jihadists claimed a suicide attack that wounded four
outside an intelligence headquarters in the northern province of Kirkuk.

“The group’s attacks have seemingly grown bolder over the past month or
so, as it’s increasingly launched direct assaults on Iraqi security forces
and carried out some daytime attacks,” Sam Heller, an independent analyst
focused on IS and Iraq, told AFP.

“Last night’s attack, if it was in fact coordinated between several IS
units, would mark a new escalation by the group,” he added.

IS overran around a third of Iraq in 2014, triggering the creation of both
a US-led coalition to defeat the jihadists and the Hashed, comprised mostly
of Shiite units with ties to Iran — Iraq’s neighbour but a foe to
Washington. The two forces are at odds in Iraq, as the US blames hardline
Hashed factions for deadly rocket attacks on its troops while the Hashed and
allied politicians have demanded US troops leave the country.

In recent months, the coalition has pulled back from five bases where it
had been deployed to help track down IS sleeper cells, saying the Iraqi
military could largely finish the fight on their own.

The coalition is still backing Iraqi troops with air strikes, intelligence
and surveillance.