In Ramadi, Small Force Carried a Big Burden by Matt Bradley & Ali A. Nabhan, Wall Street Journal
Amid the rubble of hundreds of airstrikes that helped drive Islamic State fighters from the center of this city, almost the only people in sight earlier this week were among 500 members of an elite unit of U.S.-trained forces, credited by Iraqi officials with carrying out the bulk of the fighting.
On Friday, nearly two weeks after the government declared that it had retaken control of Ramadi, members of this unit had only just subdued the eastern neighborhood of Mala’ab with little help from the regular army, tribal fighters or federal police, who were deployed in large numbers but remained on the outskirts of the battle, according to Iraqi officials.
Ramadi has been hailed as an important victory for the Iraqis. But the counterterrorism forces’ dominant role highlights the risk of relying on a small, elite fighting group to take on a wide range of battlefield tasks…