The military units` withdrawal (from Rawa and Ana and Al-Qaim) was for the purpose of redeployment.Ramadi, Iraq (ANTARA News) - Militants killed 21 leaders in the western Iraq towns of Rawa and Ana during two days of violence, officers and doctors said Sunday, after security forces made a "tactical" withdrawal.
Some of those killed were shot dead on Saturday, when the militants moved into the towns, while others were slain the following day.The killings came after Iraqi security forces members departed the towns, clearing the way for the militant takeover, according to AFP.
"The military units withdrawal (from Rawa and Ana and Al-Qaim) was for the purpose of redeployment," Lieutenant General Qassem Atta said, referring to it as a "tactical" move.
Witnesses said insurgents moved into Rawa and Ana, in Anbar province, on Saturday evening, after security officers and witnesses also reported militants entering Al-Qaim, a town on the Syrian border, earlier in the day.
Anti-government fighters have held all of one city in Anbar province, where the towns are located, and areas of a second since early January.
Beginning late on June 9, militants led by the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL) but also including a number of other groups such as loyalists of executed dictator Saddam Hussein, overran most of one province and parts of three others north of Baghdad.
The security forces wilted in the face of the initial onslaught, in many cases abandoning vehicles, equipment and even their uniforms. They appear to have recovered in the past few days, with officials touting gains against militants, though insurgents have made territorial progress elsewhere.
(H-AK)
Editor: Ella Syafputri
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