Washington on Sunday accused Iraqi forces of lacking the will to fight the Islamic State group, which scored a resounding victory a week earlier with the capture of Ramadi. The jihadists had appeared on the back foot in Iraq in recent months but twin offensives on Ramadi and on the ancient Syrian city of Palmyra have swung the momentum.
The loss of Ramadi, capital of Iraq's largest province of Anbar, raised questions over the strategy adopted not only by Baghdad but also by Washington to tackle IS.
Pentagon chief Ashton Carter told CNN the fall of Ramadi, Baghdad's worst military defeat in almost a year, could have been avoided.
"What apparently happened was the Iraqi forces showed no will to fight. They were not outnumbered, and they vastly outnumbered the opposing force, and they failed to fight and withdrew from the site," he said.
"That says to me, and I think to most of us, that we have an issue with the will of the Iraqis to fight ISIL and defend themselves," he said, using an alternative name for the group.
The US-led coalition air war that began two months after IS seized swathes of Iraq in June 2014 has led to more than 3,000 strikes.
"Air strikes are effective but neither they, or really anything we do, can substitute for the Iraqi forces' will to fight," Carter said.
Analysts usually argue that while air strikes cannot ensure territorial reconquest, they have at least prevented IS from spreading even further to key cities such as Baghdad or the Kurdish capital Arbil.
The coalition said it conducted another 17 strikes over a 24-hour period straddling Saturday and Sunday, including seven in Anbar.
Several units of Iraqi security forces, including elite troops, defied their chain of command and retreated from Ramadi when IS advanced.
The Anbar police chief has already been replaced and Prime Minister Haider al-Abadi promised an investigation.
The fall of Ramadi, which lies about 100 kilometres (60 miles) west of Baghdad, was reminiscent of the complete collapse of federal forces in Mosul a year ago, when jihadists took the country's second city almost without a fight.
The capture of the Anbar capital together with the IS takeover of Palmyra in eastern Syria has consolidated the jihadists' grip on the heart of their self-proclaimed caliphate.
On Sunday, IS forces crossed from Syria with two suicide car bombs to attack the Iraqi side of the southern border crossing.
Iraqi border guards promptly retreated to a nearby crossing with Jordan, arguing they had repeatedly called for reinforcements, in vain.
"We were ready to withdraw. We had decided that we would stay if any reinforcements reached us and that we would withdraw at the first attack we are exposed to if we received no reinforcements," one of them, Marwan al-Hadithi, told AFP.
After security forces retreated from Ramadi, Abadi called in the Hashed al-Shaabi, an umbrella for Iran-backed Shia militia and volunteers which he and Washington had wanted to keep out of the Sunni province of Anbar.
Several politicians within his own camp have accused Abadi of causing Ramadi's fall by failing to send the paramilitary force earlier.
On Saturday, Iraqi forces retook Husaybah, a rural town in the Euphrates Valley seven kilometres (4.5 miles) east of Ramadi.
In Diyala province, which the government claimed to have cleared of IS fighters in January, eight bombs went off almost simultaneously early Sunday, security sources said.
A top official said he feared more attacks and said Baquba was sealed off as a precaution.
Also Sunday, Syrian state television reported what it called a "massacre" in Palmyra, with 400 "mostly women, children and elderly people" killed by IS.
But the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said there was no evidence of such mass killings and added that no more than 35 people accused of ties to the regime had been killed.
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