Hundreds of roadside bombs, car bombs and heavy mortar fire slowed advancing Iraqi troops to a near halt today after entering the small town of Hit the previous day.
Hit - which lies along the Euphrates River in a valley in Anbar's sprawling desert - is strategically important as it sits along an IS supply line that links territory controlled by the extremist Sunni group in Iraq and in Syria.
Iraqi troops entered Hit yesterday, under cover of heavy airstrikes and a week after launching the operation to retake the town.
Their advance has been stalled as tens of thousands of civilians become trapped by the fighting.
A political crisis in Baghdad as well as poor weather conditions further slowed the push.
Iraqi commanders overseeing the operation said today that counterattacks and a shortage of engineering teams to clear roadside bombs slowed their advance.
"If we had more specialized engineers we wouldn't be in this situation," said the head of Iraq's counterterrorism forces, Gen. Abdel Ghani al-Asadi.
He didn't give casualty figures.
"Our speed depends on the resistance we're facing," said al-Jabri, adding that they want to "keep our casualties in the lowest level."
At a makeshift base on Hit's southern edge, Iraqi troops at the front line could be heard saying over a handheld radio to commanders that the "mortars are coming down like rain."
While Iraq's elite counterterrorism forces are some of the country's most capable ground forces, they still depend heavily on US-led coalition air strikes to clear territory.
"Every main road is rigged with explosives," al-Asadi said, explaining that the three small teams of engineers his troops have to clear the area just aren't enough to deal with the density of the bombs.
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