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Iraq rebuts US criticism of security forces

Iraq on Monday rejected accusations by the US defence chief that its security forces dodged battle in Ramadi and lack the will to fight the Islamic State group. Pentagon chief Ashton Carter argued that the May 17 fall of Ramadi, the worst defeat Baghdad has suffered in almost a year, could have been avoided. "We have an issue with the will of the Iraqis to fight ISIL and defend themselves," he told CNN on Sunday, using an acronym for the jihadist group. Washington has been one of Baghdad's key partners in the war to reclaim the ground lost to IS last year and Iraqi Prime Minister Haider al-Abadi expressed disbelief at Carter's stinging comments. "I'm surprised why he said that. I mean, he was very supportive of Iraq. I am sure he was fed with the wrong information," Abadi told the BBC. A senior Iranian general involved in the fight against IS hit out, saying Washington had failed to help Iraqi forces in Ramadi despite its military presence at the Al-Asad air base in the same province. "How can you be in that country under the pretext of protecting the Iraqis and do nothing? This is no more than being an accomplice in a plot," said Qassem Suleimani, the Revolutionary Guards' commander of foreign operations. Shiite Iran has military advisers in Iraq and Syria and provides financial and military support to the governments of both countries in their battle against Sunni extremists. US Vice President Joe Biden later sought to end the rift. In a call to Abadi, the White House quoted Biden as saying he "recognised the enormous sacrifice and bravery of Iraqi forces over the past 18 months in Ramadi and elsewhere." The loss of Ramadi, capital of Iraq's largest province Anbar, raised questions over the strategy adopted by both Baghdad and Washington to tackle IS. Months of air strikes and the deployment of advisers to reform and train the security forces have failed to keep up with IS's aggressive tactics. "Secretary Carter's remarks are surprising and likely to negatively affect the morale of the ISF," Iraq analyst Ahmed Ali said, referring to Iraqi security forces. Ali argued there were examples of Iraqi forces showing plenty of grit and cited the Baiji refinery, where elite troops have repelled relentless IS attacks for months. - Ramadi fightback imminent - Ahmed al-Assadi, spokesman of the Hashed al-Shaabi umbrella organisation for Shiite militia and volunteers which Abadi reluctantly called in after Ramadi's fall, reacted angrily to Carter's comments. "This lack of will the US defence secretary mentioned is how the enemies of Iraq have tried to depict the Iraqi security forces," he told AFP. The government has admitted to shortcomings, vowing to investigate the chaotic retreat from Ramadi and punish "recalcitrant" fighters. After a year of fighting and despite a string of territorial losses, the jihadists' will to fight, on the other hand, was never really in doubt. IS is a trim fighting force which has time and again displayed great tactical skill and whose men see death on the battlefield as the ultimate reward. Abadi and Washington had hoped to keep the Hashed and its Iranian-backed militia out of the Sunni stronghold of Anbar. But the collapse of the security forces during Ramadi's fall was seen as evidence Baghdad could not afford to do without the Hashed's determination to fight and sheer numbers. "It makes my heart bleed because we lost Ramadi but I can assure you we can bring it back soon," Abadi told the BBC. - Palmyra violence - Iraqi regular forces backed by the Hashed and Sunni tribal fighters from Anbar have begun clawing back land east of Ramadi during the past few days. Abadi said a major counteroffensive in Anbar would be launched in a matter of days. The US-led coalition said another 25 air strikes were carried out against IS in Iraq in a 24-hour period straddling Sunday and Monday. The capture of Ramadi together with the IS takeover of Palmyra in eastern Syria last week has consolidated the jihadists' grip on the heart of their self-proclaimed caliphate. IS is accused of executing hundreds of people in and around Palmyra since it swept into the oasis city last week. The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights says it has documented the executions of at least 217 people, among them 67 civilians, including 14 children. A Syrian military source said regime aircraft struck more than 160 IS targets around Palmyra and elsewhere in the east of Homs province on Monday. The source said an unspecified number of "terrorists" were killed and their military hardware destroyed in the raids, which the Observatory said were the most intense since the jihadists overran the city on Thursday.