U.S. strikes easing advance against
Islamic State in Sirte, says commander
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[August 04, 2016]
By Aidan Lewis
SIRTE, Libya (Reuters) - U.S. air strikes
are easing the passage of Libyan forces as they seek to clear Islamic
State from the militant group's former North African stronghold of
Sirte, a senior field commander said on Wednesday.
Mohamed Darat said the first strikes, which took place on Monday, had
helped Libyan brigades under his command secure the Dollar residential
neighborhood by targeting militants who had been holding out on the
district's edge.
Libya's U.N.-backed government requested the strikes nearly three months
into a campaign that had slowed due to heavy casualties from sniper
fire, mines and mortars.
"In the last two houses in this area we faced strong resistance so we
asked (the U.S.) to hit that site," said Darat, speaking from a part of
Dollar captured last week. "We moved back and they struck."
A U.S. defense official said there were five strikes on Monday and two
on Tuesday. The Pentagon said the first targets included two tanks,
construction and military vehicles and a rocket launcher.
The strikes were carried out by armed drones from Jordan and Marine
Corps AV-8B Harriers from the USS Wasp, an assault ship located in the
Mediterranean Sea, the U.S. official said, adding that
intelligence-gathering drone flights were being operated from Sigonella
air base in Sicily.
Losing Sirte would be a huge blow for Islamic State, which took control
of the city midway along Libya's Mediterranean coastline last year. The
group is already under pressure from U.S.-backed campaigns in Syria and
Iraq.
Libyan commanders say a few hundred Islamic State fighters are now
encircled in the center of Sirte, though they have retained control of
four neighborhoods.
The advance through residential areas would be gradual, Darat said.
"We'll do what we did in Dollar and move forward house by house.
"We're resting now and if there are air strikes it will make our lives
easier, but we will advance with or without them."
The forces fighting in Sirte are mainly composed of brigades from the
nearby city of Misrata, which counter-attacked in early May when Islamic
State advanced up the coast west of Sirte.
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Fighters of Libyan forces allied with the U.N.-backed government
move towards Islamic State fighters positions during a battle in
Sirte, Libya, July 31, 2016. REUTERS/Goran Tomasevic
Many of them are volunteers and former rebels who fought in the
uprising that toppled Muammar Gaddafi five years ago. At least 350
brigade members have been killed and more than 1,500 wounded since
May.
Almost all of Sirte's 80,000 residents have fled the city, and the
streets are mainly deserted. Each day of heavy fighting tends to be
followed by a lull of several days.
On Wednesday brigade fighters rested in buildings or in the shade of
trees, eating green almonds and cooling off with iced drinks, the
quiet broken by occasional crackle of gunfire.
They welcome the air strikes, some saying they should have come
sooner.
"We wish they'd do it on a more regular basis," said Mohamed Abu
Dabbous, a fighter on the front line between the Zafaran and Area
Two districts.
He said that when it tries to move forward his unit is exposed to
fire from a cluster of about 20 unfinished apartment blocks used by
Islamic State snipers, buildings he said would make an obvious
target for U.S. strikes. His fighters also risk being hit by mines.
"In 2011 we dealt with Gaddafi's snipers, but it was easier then
because there weren't any landmines."
(Additional reporting by Idrees Ali in Washington; editing by John
Stonestreet)
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