Baghdad: A bomb struck the acting Iraqi defence minister’s convoy west of Baghdad on Tuesday, wounding two of his guards, officials said.

The roadside bomb hit Saadun Al Dulaimi’s convoy as it travelled between Fallujah and Ramadi, “wounding two of his guards and damaging one of the vehicles,” they said on their website.

It did not specify whether or not Dulaimi was travelling in the convoy, but a senior defence ministry official told AFP that Dulaimi was not present in the convoy during the attack.

The attack comes after five senior officers, among them a divisional commander, and 10 soldiers were killed on Saturday during an operation against militants in Anbar, the same province in which Dulaimi’s convoy was travelling.

The Iraqi government responded by launching an operation dubbed “Avenge the Leader Mohammad”, named after the divisional commander who was killed.

“Military operations are continuing in Anbar 24 hours per day, and we are focusing on areas near the border,” the senior official said, adding there was a major deployment along the Syrian border to stop the movement of militants and weapons.

On Monday, defence ministry spokesman, Mohammad Al Askari, said Iraqi forces had destroyed two militant camps in Anbar.

Militant camps have multiplied in areas near the border with neighbouring country, Syria, where a brutal civil war has bolstered the groups and fuelled violence in Iraq, Askari said at the weekend.

Speaking to AFP, he said aerial photographs and other information pointed to “the arrival of weapons and advanced equipment from Syria to the desert of western Anbar and the border of Nineveh province”.

This has encouraged Al Qaida-linked militants to “revive some of their camps that were eliminated by security forces in 2008 and 2009,” Askari said, adding that aerial photos showed 11 militant camps near the border with Syria.

“Photographs and intelligence information indicate that whenever there is pressure on armed groups in Syria, they withdraw to Iraq ... to regroup and then carry out terrorist operations in the two countries,” Askari said.

Violence in Iraq has reached a level not seen since 2008, when Iraq was just emerging from a brutal period of sectarian killings.

More than 6,650 people have been killed in Iraq since the beginning of the year, according to AFP figures based on security and medical sources.