Battlefield Iraq Heavy Clashes And
Fighting Between Insurgents And
Iraqi Army In The
Anbar Province. Heavy Fighting Firefights And Clashes In Iraqs Anbar Province. Since 2014 the Anbar Province is place of fierce fighting between
Sunni Iraqi Militias and the Iraqi Army. The main area of the clashes are the citys
Ramadi and
Falluja where a strong sunni population is located.
According to
Officials and witnesses, the Iraq government mainly has lost control over the strategic citys, west of
Baghdad.
The renewed violence in the Sunni province has raised concern about the stability of the government amid dueling claims by the terror group and security forces over who was in control of Falluja and Ramadi.
Al-Qaeda black flags have been seen on government and police vehicles captured by the fighters.
The army has besieged Ramadi, the capital of
Anbar province, and has launched air strikes on the city.
Security forces backed by tanks on battled militants in Iraq's Anbar province, where fighting has displaced thousands and sparked warnings of rights abuses and a worsening humanitarian crisis.
Some of the most significant fighting appeared to be in Falluja, where the
U.S. military fought one of the bloodiest battles of the Iraq war, with militants planting al Qaeda flags on buildings.
Gunmen calling themselves the
Islamic State of Iraq and Levant, formerly known as al Qaeda in Iraq, took to a stage before thousands of
Sunnis following
Friday prayers in Falluja.
The takeover of
Fallujah and parts of Ramadi is the first time that tribal fighters have exercised such open control in major Iraqi cities since the height of the bloody insurgency that followed the
US-led invasion of
2003.
The fighting has left more than a hundred people dead and forced thousands of Falluja's residents to flee the city, to Baghdad, northern Iraq and the southern city of
Karbala, where
Shiite leaders are hosting the displaced families in housing built for religious pilgrims.
The United States said it would speed up its deliveries of missiles and surveillance drones to Iraq as the
Baghdad government battles a resurgence of Al-Qaeda linked militants.
Iraq's prime minister has urged residents and tribes in Anbar province to "expel" al-Qaeda-linked fighters to avoid an all-out battle - remarks that may signal an imminent military move to retake the former insurgent stronghold.
The Insurgents mainly ambushing Iraqi Army convoys in urban areas and attacking small check points and police stations with small arms, rpgs and ieds. The Iraqi Army repels with Air
Strikes and armored infantry units.
The
ISIL rebels were trying to bring the battle to the cities of
Anbar and Fallujah because there's no security there and they know they will be thoroughly defeated in the desert.
The
Iraqi civil war never really ended it just went off the boil for a while.
Last year, the heat was turned back to high, with the number of civilian deaths from political violence doubling to roughly 8,
000 people over the previous year, the highest civilian death toll since at least 2008.
Officials have blamed the upsurge in violence to a resurgent Al-Qaeda
emboldened by the civil war in neighbouring
Syria, but the government has itself faced criticism for not doing enough to address the concerns of Iraq's disaffected
Sunni Arab minority ahead of April elections.
Map of Falluja:
http://bit.ly/1dKNT1j
Map of Ramadi: http://bit.ly/1kO0t5l
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*DISCLAIMER*
This footage is part of an war archvie of the conflict in Iraq and should be viewed as educational. This footage is also to be taken as a raw documentary on the events of the conflict in Iraq. This footage is not meant to glorify war or violence.
This footage is NOT meant to be violent in any way. I am ONLY sharing this footage for the purposes of news reporting and educating. I also want to share this footage for: news reporting, sharing important information with the public, and the transformative nature of the footage.
- published: 20 Jan 2014
- views: 1611720