U.S. weighs ‘military options’ in Libya

Libyan soldiers try to fix a weapon that jammed during clashes with militants on the frontline in Al Ajaylat, 120 kilometers (75 miles) west of Tripoli.

Libyan soldiers try to fix a weapon that jammed during clashes with militants on the frontline in Al Ajaylat, 120 kilometers (75 miles) west of Tripoli.


The U.S. is weighing potential military options in Libya as ISIS extremists expand their influence in the North African nation roiled by political instability, a Pentagon official said on Wednesday.

The growing ISIS presence in Libya is a “significant concern” and the United States is assessing how best to respond to the group’s “metastasis” from Iraq and Syria, said Pentagon press secretary Peter Cook.

“We’re looking at military options, a range of other options as… the situation in Libya unfolds,” Cook said.

“We want to be prepared, as the Department of Defense always wants to be prepared, in the event that ISIL in Libya becomes more of a threat than it is even today,” he added, using an acronym for the IS group.

In 2011, an uprising against longtime Libyan dictator Muammar Qaddafi quickly became an armed revolution backed by NATO, but his overthrow and killing have been followed by continued strife and political chaos.

Last June, ISIS fighters captured Sirte, 280 miles (450 kilometers) east of Tripoli. The group already controlled the city’s airport and a nearby power plant.

In recent weeks, ISIS fighters launched attacks from Sirte against facilities in the “oil crescent” along the coast.

Reluctant to see its 17-month air campaign against the IS group in Iraq and Syria spread to a third country, the United States has repeatedly stressed the importance of finding cooperative local partners in Libya, and international allies such as France and Italy to help lead any operations there.

In December, the Pentagon acknowledged that a group of U.S. special operations troops who had traveled to Libya to “foster relationships” was kicked out of the conflict-torn country soon after they arrived.

Additionally, the United States has already taken some action in Libya. In November, it launched an air strike killing top ISIS leader Abu Nabil, an Iraqi also known as Wissam Najm Abd Zayd al-Zubaydi.

ISIS is reported to have at least 3,000 fighters in Libya.


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