<p>Islamic State group jihadists said Sunday they had carried out an attack in northern Iraq killing nine police officers, setting off a roadside bomb before machine-gunning survivors.</p>.<p>The attack in the Kirkuk area -- which police said left nine federal officers dead -- is one of the deadliest in Iraq in recent months.</p>.<p>IS fighters attacked "a police patrol... detonated an explosive device then attacked them with machine guns and hand grenades," the group said in a statement on the Telegram messaging app.</p>.<p>A federal police officer, speaking to <em>AFP</em> on condition of anonymity, said the bomb blast hit a vehicle transporting members of Iraq's federal police near the village of Shalal al-Matar.</p>.<p>It was then followed by "a direct attack with small arms", the officer added.</p>.<p>"An assailant has been killed, and we are looking for the others," the officer said.</p>.<p>IS jihadists seized large swathes of Iraqi and Syrian territory in 2014, declaring a "caliphate" where they ruled with brutality before their defeat in late 2017 by Iraqi forces backed by a US-led military coalition.</p>.<p>IS lost its last Syrian bastion, near the Iraqi border, in 2019.</p>.<p>Iraqi Prime Minister Mohammed Shia al-Sudani condemned the violence as a "cowardly terrorist attack".</p>.<p>Security forces should show "vigilance, carefully inspect the roads and not provide any opportunity for terrorist elements", he said.</p>.<p>The US-led anti-IS coalition continued a combat role in Iraq until December last year, but roughly 2,500 American soldiers remain in the country to assist in the fight against the jihadists.</p>.<p>IS cells, however, remain active in several areas of Iraq.</p>.<p>On Wednesday, three Iraqi soldiers were killed and three others wounded when a bomb exploded as their patrol vehicle passed through farmland in Tarmiya, a rural municipality about 30 kilometres (20 miles) north of the capital Baghdad that is a known hotspot for IS sleeper cells.</p>.<p>Last month a machine gun attack on a remote northern Iraqi military post killed four soldiers near Kirkuk, a military source said. There was no immediate claim of responsibility.</p>.<p>Iraqi security forces continue to carry out counter-terrorism operations against the group, and the deaths of IS fighters in airstrikes and raids are regularly announced.</p>.<p>Despite the setbacks, which has left IS a shadow of its former self, the group has "maintained its ability to launch attacks at a steady pace", a January report by the United Nations read.</p>.<p>The UN estimates the jihadist organisation maintains between 6,000 and 10,000 fighters inside Iraq and Syria, exploiting the porous border between the two countries and concentrating mainly in rural areas.</p>
<p>Islamic State group jihadists said Sunday they had carried out an attack in northern Iraq killing nine police officers, setting off a roadside bomb before machine-gunning survivors.</p>.<p>The attack in the Kirkuk area -- which police said left nine federal officers dead -- is one of the deadliest in Iraq in recent months.</p>.<p>IS fighters attacked "a police patrol... detonated an explosive device then attacked them with machine guns and hand grenades," the group said in a statement on the Telegram messaging app.</p>.<p>A federal police officer, speaking to <em>AFP</em> on condition of anonymity, said the bomb blast hit a vehicle transporting members of Iraq's federal police near the village of Shalal al-Matar.</p>.<p>It was then followed by "a direct attack with small arms", the officer added.</p>.<p>"An assailant has been killed, and we are looking for the others," the officer said.</p>.<p>IS jihadists seized large swathes of Iraqi and Syrian territory in 2014, declaring a "caliphate" where they ruled with brutality before their defeat in late 2017 by Iraqi forces backed by a US-led military coalition.</p>.<p>IS lost its last Syrian bastion, near the Iraqi border, in 2019.</p>.<p>Iraqi Prime Minister Mohammed Shia al-Sudani condemned the violence as a "cowardly terrorist attack".</p>.<p>Security forces should show "vigilance, carefully inspect the roads and not provide any opportunity for terrorist elements", he said.</p>.<p>The US-led anti-IS coalition continued a combat role in Iraq until December last year, but roughly 2,500 American soldiers remain in the country to assist in the fight against the jihadists.</p>.<p>IS cells, however, remain active in several areas of Iraq.</p>.<p>On Wednesday, three Iraqi soldiers were killed and three others wounded when a bomb exploded as their patrol vehicle passed through farmland in Tarmiya, a rural municipality about 30 kilometres (20 miles) north of the capital Baghdad that is a known hotspot for IS sleeper cells.</p>.<p>Last month a machine gun attack on a remote northern Iraqi military post killed four soldiers near Kirkuk, a military source said. There was no immediate claim of responsibility.</p>.<p>Iraqi security forces continue to carry out counter-terrorism operations against the group, and the deaths of IS fighters in airstrikes and raids are regularly announced.</p>.<p>Despite the setbacks, which has left IS a shadow of its former self, the group has "maintained its ability to launch attacks at a steady pace", a January report by the United Nations read.</p>.<p>The UN estimates the jihadist organisation maintains between 6,000 and 10,000 fighters inside Iraq and Syria, exploiting the porous border between the two countries and concentrating mainly in rural areas.</p>