BAGHDAD -- Iraqi forces battled Islamic State fighters for a third day Tuesday in a remote western town far from Mosul, but the U.S.-led coalition insisted the latest in a series of "spoiler attacks" had not forced it to divert resources from the fight to retake Iraq's second-largest city.
Iraqi Prime Minister Haider al-Abadi acknowledged the militants briefly seized the local government headquarters in the western town of Rutba, offering new details about the assault, which U.S. and Iraqi officials have sought to downplay since it began Sunday.
The White House envoy to the U.S.-led coalition battling IS insisted the militants' strategy was failing, saying there had been "no diversion whatsoever" of forces taking part in the Mosul operation, which is expected to take weeks, if not months.
"Daesh is trying to launch spoiler attacks," Brett McGurk said at a Baghdad news conference, using the Arabic acronym for IS. "This was expected, it's planned for, and we can expect more of it."
The complex assault on Rutba, located hundreds of miles south of Mosul, is the latest IS attempt to divert Iraqi military resources from the fight for the militants' last major urban bastion in Iraq. Last week, the group launched a similar attack in and around the northern city of Kirkuk, some 100 miles southeast of Mosul, igniting gun battles that lasted two days and killed at least 80 people.
McGurk said the militant attacks on Rutba were carried out by "small, isolated teams" and were "easily defeatable." But he acknowledged there still was a "small Daesh presence" in two neighborhoods.
The Iraqi military has insisted throughout the Rutba assault the situation is under control.
Al-Abadi acknowledged Tuesday the militants had some successes at the start of the offensive Sunday.
"They took control, it's true, of the municipal headquarters," the Iraqi prime minister said. But he said Iraqi security forces drove them out "within hours" and regained control of the town.
But Rajeh Barakat, an Anbar provincial councilman who sits on the security committee, said earlier Tuesday that IS fighters still were clashing with security forces in two southern neighborhoods of Rutba.
"We have reports saying the militants killed some civilians and members of the security forces, but we don't know how many," he said.
Near Mosul, fighting continued Tuesday in a belt of villages and towns to the north, east and south of the city. Maj. Gen. Haider Fadhil said the Iraqi special forces had reached a village some four miles from the eastern edge of Mosul.
About 335 civilians were evacuated to a refugee camp from the village of Tob Zawa, about 5 1/2 miles from Mosul, which was retaken by special forces Monday, Fadhil said. He said the civilians were relocated to protect them from possible IS shelling.
Among them was Ezzat Shaheen, who drove his car along with his wife and some of his 10 children. Others were left behind to take care of their land and cattle.
"To be honest, our life (under IS) was good," the 55-year-old Shaheen said. "There was justice. There were clear principles -- such as don't shave your beard and pray in the mosque."
"If you don't violate them, no one will (bother) you," added Shaheen, who sported a full white beard.
Others who have escaped the Mosul area have described harsh conditions under militant rule, saying the fighters imposed religious and military training on children and forced people to attend daily prayers.
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