Story highlights

NEW: Spokesman for U.S.-led coalition says homemade bombs and booby-trapped homes are a concern

ISIS took control of Ramadi in May

Ramadi is a predominately Sunni Arab city about 70 miles from Baghdad

CNN  — 

Iraqi troops have retaken the city of Ramadi from ISIS, the country’s military said.

Troops have raised the Iraqi flag on top of the government compound in central Ramadi, military spokesman Brig. Gen. Yahya Rasoul said Monday.

Ramadi, in Anbar province, about 110 kilometers (70 miles) from Baghdad, fell to ISIS in May, a major setback in the country’s effort to contain the terror group.

Iraqi TV showed Iraqi soldiers celebrating what the government is calling the “liberation” of the city. During the live coverage, explosions and gunfire could be heard in the background. Ramadi is a predominantly Sunni Arab city, and the Iraqi military forces are mostly Shiites.

Map: Ramadi

‘A significant accomplishment’

The U.S.-led coalition that has been launching airstrikes on ISIS targets addressed the positive development Monday.

“The clearance of the government center is a significant accomplishment and is the result of many months of hard work by the Iraqi Army, the Counter Terrorism Service, the Iraqi Air Force, local and federal police and tribal fighters,” coalition spokesman Col. Steve Warren said.

Warren told CNN that Iraqi forces have made “great progress” securing what is essentially the city hall of Ramadi and areas south to railroad tracks, and have cleared some major neighborhoods. But there remain pockets of insurgents – some six to eight men – fighting back in some neighborhoods, he said.

ISIS is well known for planning homemade bombs to ambush enemies. “There’s a real threat of unexploded ordinances and booby-trapped houses,” Warren said.

CNN’s Becky Anderson, reporting from the United Arab Emirates capital of Abu Dhabi, noted the coalition spokesman used careful wording in the statement that pointed out the city government center had been retaken.

“Reports suggest that it is likely that ISIS has moved from the government compound to the north of the city, and there’s every chance they could regroup,” Anderson said.

It’s possible that the Iraqi military’s achievement is a symbolic victory, she said, and what happens next is critical.

The city in central Iraq has strategic importance, with roads into Jordan and Syria, and Anbar province is the heartland of Iraq’s Sunni Muslim population.

CNN contributor Michael Weiss, author of “ISIS: Inside the Army of Terror,” said a wait-and-see approach to what’s happening in Ramadi is necessary.

Noting the Shiite-majority Iraqi military, he said the Sunni population in Ramadi might perceive the troops as worse than ISIS. “The real test is can they (the Iraqi forces) hold onto” the city, he said.

Warren said that it doesn’t appear that ISIS has the strength to take Ramadi back.

Kimberly Dozier, a CNN contributor and journalist who has reported extensively from Iraq, pointed out that the Iraqi military has previously overstated military successes and that’s a reason for pause. Earlier this year the Iraqi army retook the city of Tikrit from ISIS but it took months, Dozier said, for the Iraqis to get the electricity back on for the population and to make it safe and practical for residents to return.

“Ramadi will be a new test,” she said. “This will be a test of (the Iraqis’) capability to keep the peace and inspire confidence.”

‘We will liberate’ other cities

Rasoul said he is confident the military will retake other cities captured by ISIS.

“We will liberate all the other places like we liberated Jurf al-Nasr and Tikrit a