US Special Forces repulsed in Libya: report
Frustratingly vague accounts indicate that a contingent of US Special Forces sent to fight ISIS in Libya were chased off by a local militia. The troops chose to leave "in an effort to avoid conflict," a US Africa Command spokesman told the BBC, but doesn't tell us much about the hostile militia. Stars & Stripes says the US troops were sent to an airbase near the ISIS-held town of Sabratha, in Libya's west, but doesn't tell us which of the country's rival regimes controls the base. Libya Herald names the base as al-Wattiyah, controlled by forces loyal to the government of Prime Minister Abdullah al-Thinni. That is the internationally-recognized government, based in the eastern city of Bayda, with its parliament in Tobruk. Sabratha and al-Wattiyah are actually west of Tripoli, seat of the Libya Dawn coalition that controls most of the country's west, but appears to be a western pocket loyal to the Thinni government—now threatened by ISIS. It appears uncertain if the hostile militia was ostensibly loyal to the eastern regime. Representatives of the rival regimes signed a deal in Morocco on this week, agreeing to form a national unity government—but the incident at al-Wattiyah indicates how tenuous their actual control of ground forces is, even in areas ostensibly under their control.
Catholic Online meanwhile reminds us that Sabratha is the site of a third-century Roman amphitheater and UNESCO World Heritage Site, raising fears that it could be destroyed or plundered by ISIS forces.
Recent Updates
12 min 27 sec ago
48 min 27 sec ago
1 hour 16 min ago
1 hour 27 min ago
1 hour 36 min ago
1 hour 49 min ago
2 days 16 hours ago
1 week 3 days ago
1 week 3 days ago
2 weeks 2 hours ago