Iraqi troops, tribesmen killed in Anbar clashes with Daesh
Six soldiers and two tribal fighters are killed by Daesh suicide bomber in Iraq's western Anbar province, local security sources report

Iraq
By Suleyman al-Qubeisi and Ibrahim Saleh
BAGHDAD
Six Iraqi army personnel, including two high-ranking officers, and two Sunni tribal fighters were killed late Monday by a suicide bomber during clashes with the Daesh terrorist group in Iraq’s western Anbar province, according to local security sources.
"Four Daesh suicide bombers wearing explosive belts attacked a base of the army’s third battalion, which is responsible for security at a dam in the city of Haditha 160 kilometers west of Ramadi," Major-General Ali Ibrahim Daboun, chief of the Iraqi army’s Al-Jazeera operations, told Anadolu Agency.
"One of the attackers managed to enter the base and detonate his explosive belt, killing Brigadier-General Ali Aboud, Lieutenant-Colonel Farhan Ibrahim and four soldiers," Daboun said, adding that seven other army personnel had been injured in the attack.
Major-General Ismail al-Mahallawi, chief of army operations in Anbar province, told Anadolu Agency that Daesh had also attacked army positions with mortar fire and lights weapons "in the Al-Hamidiyah, Albu Farraj and Albu Diab areas north and northeast of Ramadi".
Al-Mahallawi added that Iraqi troops and their tribal allies had managed to repel the attack, killing 11 Daesh militants in the process.
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