Kuwait Times

US stealth bombers kill more than 80 IS fighters in Libya

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WASHINGTON: More than 80 Islamic State militants were killed in a US aerial blitz on training camps in Libya, including fighters involved in plotting attacks in Europe, Defense Secretary Ashton Carter said Thursday. The Pentagon made the highly unusual decision to conduct the air strikes with a pair of B-2 stealth bombers that flew to North Africa on a 34-hour mission from their base in Missouri in America’s Midwest.

The last time the distinctiv­e, bat-shaped planes were used in Libya was in 2011 during the mission that led to the ouster of longtime leader Muammar Gaddafi. Wednesday’s massive strike saw the B-2s and Reaper drones unleash about 100 bombs on the IS training camps - equating to more than one bomb per militant that was killed. The camps were located about 45 km southwest of the coastal city of Sirte, Gaddafi’s former home town that IS for a time turned into a stronghold as it attempted to expand its presence in Libya.

Speaking on his last day in office, Carter said the targets “certainly are people who were actively plotting operations in Europe, and may also have been connected with some attacks that have already occurred in Europe.” The air assault came a month after the United States had officially wrapped up its military operations in and around Sirte. The Pentagon launched that mission, Operation Odyssey Lightning, on August 1 and it comprised about 500 strikes.

When operations concluded last month, following Sirte’s “liberation”, the Pentagon left open the possibilit­y of conducting additional anti-IS attacks if Libya’s Government of National Accord asked for help in doing so. Wednesday’s strike was conducted in full coordinati­on with the GNA, Pentagon spokesman Peter Cook said, noting the operation had been authorized by outgoing President Barack Obama. He displayed brief footage taken ahead of the strike showing a group of men standing by two camouflage­d pick-up trucks and unloading what appeared to be bombs or rockets. Officials said no civilians were thought to have been killed and no women or children were present during the massive strike.

15 air tankers

Cook would not discuss why the Air Force chose to use the B-2s, or whether it was a show of force as Obama leaves the White House ahead of President-elect Donald Trump’s inaugurati­on yesterday. “The use of the B-2 demonstrat­es the capability of the United States to deliver decisive precision force to the Air Force’s Global Strike Command over a great distance,” Cook said. The United States has 20 B-2 bombers and the Air Force needed to fly 15 air tankers to ensure refueling over the course of the lengthy mission, Air Force spokesman Colonel Pat Ryder said. — AFP

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