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Sectarian conflict looms as Iraq rallies against ISIS

Shia leaders are turning to militias and calling on citizens to reinforce security forces, as ISIS and other Sunni militants fight toward Baghdad.
Volunteers who have joined the Iraqi Army to fight against the Islamic State of Iraq and al-Sham (ISIS) travel in army trucks in Baghdad June 13, 2014. (AHMED SAAD/Reuters)

BAQUBA - Iraq's Shia-majority government is scrambling to counter a devastating offensive by radical Sunni militants, reinforcing security forces by tightening ties with militias and calling on citizens to take up arms.

The moves could help slow the rapid advance of the Islamic State of Iraq and al-Sham (ISIS) toward Baghdad, but they also risk aggravating sectarian divisions. ISIS has been successful largely because it has been able to exploit Iraq's dysfunctional politics, which have been polarized largely along ethnic and sectarian lines.

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