The Iraqi security forces' defeat in the capital of Anbar province came despite US and coalition warplanes carrying out more than 160 air strikes over the past month, and after an elaborate effort starting last year to arm and train government troops and Sunni tribesmen.
And the fall of the western city undercut the upbeat portrayal of the war effort promoted by President Barack Obama's administration. Commanders had insisted the IS group was losing ground and momentum on the battlefield.
Two outspoken critics of Obama's approach to the war, senators John McCain and Lindsey Graham, said Ramadi has once been "a symbol of Iraqis working together with brave young Americans in uniform to defeat Al-Qaeda.
"Today it appears to be a sad reminder of this administration's indecisive air campaign in Iraq and Syria and a broader lack of strategy to achieve its stated objective of degrading and destroying ISIL," the senators said, using an alternative acronym for the IS.
"The fact that the Baghdad government now is considering moving Shiite militias to Ramadi suggests that Iraq's central government still lacks adequate support from Sunni Arabs to defeat the Islamic State," said Jim Phillips of the Heritage Foundation think tank.
Ramadi is the first major city to fall into IS hands since the United States and its allies launched air strikes in Iraq last August.
US officials have described the raids as a way to stem the advance of the IS and to buy time for the training of the Iraqi army.
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