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IS claims suicide attack that killed 2 Iraqi generals in Anbar

The car bomb killed the generals in a town north of Ramadi, seized by the Islamic State group in May
Smokes billows from Husaybah, an Iraqi rural town in the Euphrates Valley near Ramadi in July (AFP)

The Islamic State group has claimed responsibility for a car bomb that killed two Iraqi army generals north of the Anbar provincial capital Ramadi on Thursday, a military spokesman said.

The blast killed the deputy head of the Anbar Operations Command, Staff Major General Abdulrahman Abu Raghif, and 10th Division commander Staff Brigadier General Safin Abdulmajid, spokesman Brigadier General Yahya Rasool told AFP.

A statement from the Joint Operations Command confirmed the deaths of the two officers along with an unspecified number of other "heroic martyrs".

Rasool said the attack took place in the Al-Jaraishi area north of Ramadi, a city the Islamic State militant group seized in May after pro-government forces had held out against militants for more than a year.

IS launched a devastating offensive in June 2014 that overran around a third of the country, sweeping security forces aside.

Baghdad's forces have managed to regain significant territory in two provinces north of Baghdad, but much of western Iraq, including Anbar province, remains outside government control.

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