BAGHDAD — A top US envoy said Iraqi troops would begin a major ground offensive against the self-proclaimed Islamic State group in the coming weeks, as a suicide bomber killed 14 people in Baghdad on Monday.
IS spearheaded an offensive that swept through large areas north and west of Baghdad last June, and Iraqi forces are battling to regain ground with support from US-led air strikes.
Jordan announced it has carried out dozens of strikes against the militants since Thursday, as it seeks to avenge an airman burned alive by the group.
John Allen, the US coordinator for the anti-IS coalition of Western and Arab countries, said Sunday that Iraqi troops would begin a major ground offensive against the militants “in the weeks ahead.”
“When the Iraqi forces begin the ground campaign to take back Iraq, the coalition will provide major firepower associated with that,” he told Jordan’s official Petra news agency.
Iraqi forces have already carried out operations near Baghdad and in Diyala and Salaheddin provinces north of the capital.
The militants were stopped short of the capital in June and have since been pushed back, but can still carry out deadly attacks.
On Monday, a suicide bomber attacked Baghdad’s Shiite-majority Kadhimiyah district, killing at least 14 people and wounding at least 43, officials said.
The bomber struck near pavement vendors in the district’s crowded Aden Square, an AFP journalist reported. Blood stains were still visible on the ground.
It was the second suicide bombing to hit the capital in three days. On Saturday, an attack inside a restaurant in the Baghdad Jadida area killed at least 23 people.
Jordanian air force chief Major General Mansour Al-Jobour said on Sunday the kingdom had launched 56 strikes against the militants since Thursday as part of the US-led air campaign that Washington says is beginning to bite.
Jordan had vowed an “earth-shattering” response after IS captured one of its pilots and released gruesome video of him apparently being burned alive.
“On the first day of the campaign to avenge our airman Maaz Al-Kassasbeh, 19 targets were destroyed, including training camps and equipment,” Jobour told reporters.
The air force chief said strikes since last Thursday had destroyed dozens of targets, including barracks, training camps, and ammunition and fuel depots. – AFP