Whole neighborhoods are lawless, too dangerous for police. Some roads are so bomb-laden that U.S. troops won't use them. Guerrillas attack U.S. troops nearly every time they venture out - and hit their bases with gunfire, rockets or mortars when they don't.
Though not powerful enough to overrun U.S. positions, insurgents here in the heart of the Sunni Muslim triangle have fought undermanned U.S. and Iraqi forces to a virtual stalemate. ``It's out of control,'' says Army Sgt. 1st Class Britt Ruble, behind the sandbags of an observation post in the capital of Anbar province. ``We don't have control of this ... we just don't have enough boots on the ground.''
Reining in Ramadi, through arms or persuasion, could be the toughest challenge for Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki's new government. Al-Maliki has promised to use ``maximum force'' when needed. But three years of U.S. military presence, with nearly constant patrols and sweeps, hasn't done it.
Today Ramadi, a city of 400,000 along the main highway running to Jordan and Syria, 70 miles west of Baghdad, has battles fought in endless circles. Small teams of insurgents open fire and coalition troops respond with heavy blows, often airstrikes or rocket fire that's turned city blocks into rubble. ``We're holding it down to a manageable level until Iraqis forces can take over the fight,'' Marine Capt. Carlos Barela said of the daily violence battering the city. How long before that happens is anybody's guess.
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