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As Mosul falls to ISIS militants, doubts over US-trained Iraqi security forces

Militants from ISIS, an al Qaeda offshoot, now control much of Iraq's largest city in the north, underscoring the group's growing strength and the failure of Iraqi troops to repel insurgents.

By Ariel Zirulnick, Staff writer

A daily roundup of terrorism and security issues

Insurgents overran much of the northern Iraqi city of Mosul Tuesday, seizing the provincial government headquarters, the airport, police stations, and prisons as members of the Iraqi army shed their uniforms and fled.聽

The capture of Mosul, described by news outlets as either Iraq's second- or third-largest city, underlines the growing strength of sectarian and extremist insurgencies in Iraq, and casts doubt on the capabilities of the US-trained Iraqi security forces.聽

Charles Lister, a senior fellow with the Brookings Institute in Doha who studies extremist groups, told the Washington Post that this will prompt questions about whether the US should continue sending military equipment to the Iraqi government.

Mr. Maliki reportedly called on parliament to declare a state of emergency in Mosul and impose martial law across the entire country聽amid聽a larger campaign by the group, the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIS), across the country. Agence France-Presse reports that ISIS has launched offensives in Nineveh, Anbar, Diyala, Salaheddin, and Baghdad provinces in the last week.

ISIS is an evolution of Al Qaeda in Iraq, which was largely pushed underground by the time of the US withdrawal. But ISIS reemerged in Syria after the civil war there broke out, and has resurfaced in Iraq. Earlier this year the group stormed the city of Fallujah, where the US fought some of its fiercest battles of the Iraq war, and swaths of Anbar Province.

While losing Fallujah was a blow for Maliki, its significance was partially symbolic. But Mosul, the capital聽of Nineveh Province, is the commercial hub of northern Iraq and a cornerstone of US post-war stability efforts. However, it has long been considered one of the most dangerous cities in Iraq, with various insurgent groups establishing a foothold there.

Iraq鈥檚 speaker of parliament, Osama Nujaifi, who is from Mosul, said at a press conference today that the city is entirely in insurgents' hands聽after the Iraqi Army fled, The Washington Post reports.

鈥淲hen the battle got tough in the city of Mosul, the troops dropped their weapons and abandoned their posts, making it an easy prey for the terrorists,鈥 he said.聽

鈥淓verything is fallen. It鈥檚 a crisis,鈥 he said. 鈥淗aving these terrorist groups control a city in the heart of Iraq threatens not only Iraq but the entire region.鈥

ISIS only launched its assault on the city Friday. The government and Army held their ground in much of the city until Monday, according to the Post.聽

BBC reports that ISIS has been "informally controlling" parts of Nineveh Province for months.聽

News reports trickling out of Mosul point to the release of thousands of prisoners, many of them likely imprisoned insurgents.

The takeover of the city has stoked concerns about the seizure of weapons and equipment at police stations and military bases around the city. The Washington Post reports that, according to the聽Twitter account聽of the Nineveh Province branch of ISIS, the group captured arms and ammunition. There were reports that ISIS seized military helicopters.