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Tuesday, March 19, 2024
March 19, 2024

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Islamic State reported to control half of Iraqi oil refinery

Losing the facility would cripple the national government

The Columbian
Published:

IRBIL, Iraq — Islamic State fighters control half of Iraq’s largest oil refinery and have cut supply lines to the 150 or so government troops who are holding out inside, witnesses reported Saturday.

The surprise Islamic State advance came despite U.S.-led aerial bombardment of Islamic State positions in the central Iraqi city of Baiji, which includes the refinery, and is a reminder of the precarious security situation in central Iraq where government troops are stretched thin battling Islamic State forces.

Speaking from inside the facility, an Iraqi officer who spoke on the condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to talk to a reporter said government troops were running low on food, water and ammunition. He said the situation was chaotic after 11 months of nearly unbroken siege.

He said Islamic State fighters control “all the major buildings” and 80 percent of the watchtowers around the facility, and had flanked government positions with “snipers and suicide bombers driving heavily armored car bombs.”

He appealed for the government in Baghdad to send supplies, ammunition and air cover. “We have been under siege for four days without any major coalition airstrike assistance inside the facility,” he said.

The Baiji refinery remains one of the most important economic assets in Iraq, even though it has been shut down since last summer, when Islamic State fighters first began trying to capture it. Before last June, it produced about half Iraq’s refined oil products, such as gasoline. In addition to lost revenue, the government’s inability to operate it has forced it to import hundreds of millions of dollars’ worth of gasoline.

Losing the refinery, either if captured or seriously damaged, would be a crippling blow to the government and a huge strategic success for Islamic State. It would take billions of dollars and years to replace the refinery.

The Iraqi Defense ministry would not comment on the situation at the refinery, but a member of the governing council for Salahuddin province, which includes Baiji, admitted that Islamic State forces had breached the perimeter but denied that much of the facility was under their control.

“There are conflicting reports about Daash’s control,” the council member, Adnan Ibrahim, said, using the Arabic acronym for Islamic State. He said earlier reports had indicated that only 10 to 30 percent of the refinery had fallen to Islamic State. “Then last night there was the news that Daash had expanded its control and is progressing slowly into the refinery to between 30 and 40 percent of the area,” he said.

He said the key production control sections of the plant remained in government hands. “The security forces control more than 60 percent of the refinery,” he said.

On Friday, the United States Central Command said airstrikes had destroyed what it called two Islamic State fighting positions in the previous 24 hours near Baiji.

U.S. officials have been cautious in their assessments of Iraqi government efforts to roll back Islamic State in central Iraq, despite the victory a month ago in Tikrit, where a combination of heavy U.S. airstrikes and Iraqi special operations forces succeeded in taking the city, which had been occupied by Islamic State last year.

But Islamic State responded to its defeat at Tikrit by opening new offensives at Ramadi, the capital of Anbar province, and Baiji, where Islamic State two weeks ago also were closing in on the refinery. Both offensives were blunted by heavy airstrikes and Iraqi special forces.

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