U.S. warplanes launch bombing campaign on
Islamic State in Libya
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[August 02, 2016]
By Goran Tomasevic and Yeganeh Torbati
SIRTE, Libya/WASHINGTON (Reuters) - U.S.
planes bombed Islamic State targets in Libya on Monday, responding to
the U.N.-backed government's request to help push the militants from
their former stronghold of Sirte in what U.S. officials described as the
start of a sustained campaign against the extremist group in the city.
"The first air strikes were carried out at specific locations in Sirte
today causing severe losses to enemy ranks," Prime Minster Fayez Seraj
said on state TV. Pentagon spokesman Peter Cook said the strikes did not
have "an end point at this particular moment in time".
Forces allied with Seraj have been battling Islamic State in Sirte - the
home town of former dictator Muammar Gaddafi - since May.
The militants seized the Mediterranean coastal city last year, making it
their most important base outside Syria and Iraq. But they are now
besieged in a few square kilometers of the center, where they hold
strategic sites, including the Ouagadougou conference hall, the central
hospital and the university.
Seraj said the Presidential Council of his Government of National
Accord, or GNA, had decided to "activate" its participation in the
international coalition against Islamic State and "request the United
States to carry out targeted air strikes on Daesh (Islamic State)."
The air strikes on Monday - which were authorized by U.S. President
Barack Obama - hit an Islamic State tank and two vehicles that posed a
threat to forces aligned with Libya's GNA, Cook said.
In the future, each individual strike will be coordinated with the GNA
and needs the approval of the commander of U.S. forces in Africa, Cook
added.
This was the third U.S. air strike against Islamic State militants in
Libya. But U.S. officials said this one marked the start of a sustained
air campaign rather than another isolated strike.
The last acknowledged U.S. air strikes in Libya were on an Islamic State
training camp in the western city of Sabratha in February.
Although it does not include the use of ground troops beyond small
special forces squads rotating in and out of Libya and drones collecting
intelligence, the air campaign opens a new front in the war against IS
and what American officials consider its most dangerous component
outside Syria and Iraq.
Obama authorized the strikes after a recommendation by U.S. Secretary of
Defense Ash Carter. Washington took part in air strikes in 2011 to
enforce a no-fly zone in Libya which helped topple Gaddafi. The country
has struggled since then and Obama said in an interview with The
Atlantic magazine in April that the intervention "didn't work".
OPERATIONS IN SIRTE AND SUBURBS
"I want to assure you that these operations are limited to a specific
timetable and do not exceed Sirte and its suburbs," Seraj said, adding
that international support on the ground would be limited to technical
and logistical help.
"GNA-aligned forces have had success in recapturing territory from ISIL
(Islamic State) thus far around Sirte, and additional U.S. strikes will
continue to target ISIL in Sirte in order to enable the GNA to make a
decisive, strategic advance," said Cook, the Pentagon spokesman.
The White House said U.S. assistance to Libya would be limited to air
strikes and information sharing.
"There are unique capabilities that our military can provide to support
forces on the ground and that's what the president wanted to do," White
House spokesman Eric Schultz told reporters on Air Force One on Monday.
But that coordination will be a challenge, experts said.
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Libyan forces allied with the U.N.-backed government fire weapons
during a battle with IS fighters in Sirte, Libya, July 21, 2016.
REUTERS/Goran Tomasevic
Local forces in Libya fighting Islamic State are diffuse and
fragmented, with no single center of command, said Frederic Wehrey,
a Libya expert at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace in
Washington who recently spent three days with fighters in Sirte.
"U.S. and Western diplomatic strategy has been to try to boost this
GNA, but I think there are certain limits," Wehrey said. "It's not
the sort of conventional military operation we would think of where
there's a central point of contact."
U.S. and Libyan officials estimate that several hundred Islamic
State fighters remain in Sirte.
Brigades mainly composed of militia from the western city of Misrata
advanced on Sirte in May, but their progress was slowed by snipers,
mines and booby-traps.
Those forces have complained that assistance from the government in
Tripoli and external powers was slow to materialize. At least 350 of
their fighters have been killed and more than 1,500 wounded in the
campaign.
Libyan fighter jets have frequently bombed Sirte, but they lack the
weapons and technology to make precision strikes.
Islamic State took advantage of political chaos and a security
vacuum to start expanding into Libya in 2014. It gained control over
about 250 km (155 miles) of sparsely populated coastline either side
of Sirte, though it has struggled to win support or retain territory
elsewhere in the country.
The GNA was the result of a U.N.-mediated deal signed in December to
end a conflict between two rival governments and the armed groups
that supported them. But it is having difficulty imposing its
authority and winning backing from factions in the east.
Western powers have offered to support the GNA in its efforts to
tackle Islamic State, stem the flow of migrants across the
Mediterranean and revive Libya's oil production.
But foreign intervention is politically sensitive, and the GNA has
hesitated to make formal requests for help.
U.S. officials were developing military options in Libya earlier
this year. But enormous hurdles, including struggles in the
formation of a unified Libyan government strong enough to call for
and accommodate foreign military assistance, stood in the way.
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Small teams of Western countries' special forces have been on the
ground in eastern and western Libya for months. Last month France
said three of its soldiers had been killed south of the eastern city
of Benghazi, where they had been conducting intelligence operations.
(Additional reporting by Ahmed Elumami in Tripoli and Idrees Ali in
Washington; Editing by Yara Bayoumy and Dan Grebler)
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