The Manila Times

RUSSIA HELPING LIBYAN REBELS – US

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NEW YORK: The United States military on Tuesday (Wednesday in Manila) accused Russia of deploying fighter jets to Libya in support of Russian mercenarie­s operating there.

“US Africa Command assesses that Moscow recently deployed military fighter aircraft to Libya in order to support Russian state-sponsored private military contractor­s operating on the ground there,” the US military’s Africa Command said in a statement. It also said the aircraft were painted “to camouflage their Russian origin.”

Over the weekend, roughly 1,200 mercenarie­s employed by private Russian contractor Wagner Group pulled back from parts of the country where they had been fighting alongside forces loyal to renegade General Khalifa Haftar, sources said.

Russian contractor­s have been flying out of the town of Bani Walid over the last three days and there have been six to seven flights out per day, Salem al-Nuwairy, the mayor of Bani Walid, told CNN by phone. There were still some Russian fighters in the town, he said.

Russia sent two MiG-29 fighterbom­bers from Syria to Libya to protect and secure the retreat of the forces, according to a Western diplomatic source.

A source also said a Russian flying hospital known as “the scalpel” had arrived earlier in Libya to treat wounded Wagner contractor­s. A detailed look at flight data shows Russian Air Force IL76 ‘hospital aircraft’ flying into and leaving Benghazi last week.

The US has long accused Moscow of using Russian mercenarie­s to bolster its preferred side in Libya’s civil war, the forces led by Gen. Khalifa Haftar, with the aim of securing access to Libya’s vast energy deposits while also establishi­ng a position on the North

Atlantic Treaty Organizati­on’s (NATO) southern flank.

A United Nations (UN) report in early May confirmed the Wagner Group’s presence in Libya, including details such as the deployment of snipers and other specialize­d combat units.

But the Kremlin consistent­ly denies it uses private military contractor­s in conflicts abroad, and says mercenary groups do not represent the Russian state. The Russian Ministry of Defense did not respond immediatel­y to a request for comment.

Earlier this month, the Russian Air Force jets flew from Russia to Khmeimim Air Base in Syria, where the MiG-29 jets were repainted to remove national markings, a US defense official told CNN.

The newly unmarked jets then departed Syria, escorted by Russian fighter aircraft based in Syria and flew to Libya, landing in Eastern Libya near Tobruk for fuel, according to the official. The warplanes were then delivered to Al Jufra Air Base in Libya, closer to the front lines of the country’s civil war.

Since 2011, following the NATObacked uprising that overthrew the regime of Moammar Gadhafi, Libya has seen factions sparring over control of the oil-rich country.

The conflict intensifie­d in 2014, splitting the country and its political structure between east and west with a contested election and a military operation led by Haftar on behalf of the eastern government hardening the divide.

Haftar’s forces have suffered some tactical setbacks in recent days as the UN-recognized government in Tripoli has received backing from Turkey, including armed drones, enabling it to push Haftar’s troops farther from the capital.

More than 2,000 cases are still being reported daily.

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