US ends anti-Daesh operation in Libya’s Sirte

Body bags are seen on the ground after being pulled from under the rubble by the Libyan Red Crescent in Sirte on Dec.20, 2016, after pro-government Libyan forces drove the Daesh group out of its Libyan stronghold earlier this month. (AFP / MAHMUD TURKIA)

WASHINGTON: The US military has officially ended operations in a former Daesh bastion in Libya, officials announced.
The Pentagon had launched Operation Odyssey Lightning to help local forces push the militants from the coastal city of Sirte on Aug. 1.
“In partnership with the Libyan Government of National Accord, the operation succeeded in its core objective of enabling GNA-aligned forces to drive Daesh out of Sirte,” the US military’s Africa Command said in a statement.
US drones, gunships and warplanes had hammered Daesh positions, conducting a total of 495 strikes.
“We are proud to have supported this campaign to eliminate ISIL’s hold over the only city it has controlled outside Iraq and Syria,” Pentagon press secretary Peter Cook told reporters.
Officials said the United States would continue to strike Daesh militants if the Libyan unity government asked for help in doing so.
Unity government leader Fayez Al-Sarraj on Saturday announced that military operations in Sirte were done, but Daesh still has fighters in Libya and on Sunday conducted a suicide attack in Benghazi.
The fall of Sirte — Qaddafi’s home town located 450 kilometers (280 miles) east of Tripoli — is a major setback for Daesh, which has also faced military defeats in Syria and Iraq.
Libya descended into chaos following the NATO-backed ousting of former ruler Muammar Qaddafi in 2011, with rival administrations emerging and well-armed militias vying for control of its vast oil wealth.