Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

U.S. says Russians laying mines to aid Libya militia

- SAMY MAGDY

CAIRO — The U.S. military on Wednesday accused Russian mercenarie­s fighting on the side of eastern Libya forces of planting land mines and improvised explosive devices in and around the Libyan capital, Tripoli.

U.S. Africa Command said verified photograph­ic evidence shows “indiscrimi­nately placed booby traps and minefields” around the outskirts of Tripoli and all the way east toward the strategic coastal city of Sirte since midJune.

There was no immediate comment from Russia or the Wagner Group, a Kremlin-backed private security company that has been implicated in the conflict in the North African country. Moscow has repeatedly denied playing any role on Libya’s battlefiel­ds.

U.S. Africa Command said that it assessed that the Kremlin-backed company introduced the weapons into Libya. It posted photos of improvised explosive devices and a concealed anti-personnel mine, reportedly found in a residentia­l area in Tripoli.

“Imagery and intelligen­ce assessment­s show how Russia

continues to interfere in Libyan affairs. Wagner Group’s reckless use of landmines and booby traps are harming innocent civilians,” said Rear Adm. Heidi Berg, the U.S. missions’s director of intelligen­ce.

Libya was plunged into chaos when a NATO-backed uprising in 2011 toppled longtime dictator Moammar Gadhafi who was later killed. The country is now split between a government in the east, allied with military commander Khalifa Hifter, and one in Tripoli, in the west, supported by the United Nations.

Hifter’s self-styled forces opened an offensive to capture Tripoli last year, clashing with militias loosely allied with the government there. Hifter is backed by the United Arab Emirates, Egypt and Russia, while the Tripoli forces are aided by Turkey, Qatar and Italy.

In the past three months, Hifter’s forces have lost almost all areas taken in the offensive on Tripoli as Turkey stepped up military support for his rivals and brought Syrian mercenarie­s, including militants, to fight in Libya.

Last month, the U.S. military accused Moscow of deploying 14 Mig-29s fighters to Libya to support Russian mercenarie­s aiding Hifter’s forces. Russia called the claim “disinforma­tion.”

“The Wagner Group’s irresponsi­ble tactics are prolonging conflict and are responsibl­e for the needless suffering and the deaths of innocent civilians,” said Marine Maj. Gen. Bradford Gering, director of operations at U.S. Africa Command.

U.N. experts have said the Wagner Group provided 8001,200 mercenarie­s to bolster Hifter’s offensive on Tripoli, paying some fighters up to $1,500 a month.

Both sides in Libya’s civil war have been mobilizing for weeks to battle for the city of Sirte. Hifter’s forces took Sirte, Gadhafi’s birthplace and a former stronghold of the Islamic State group, in January.

Retaking Sirte would give Tripoli forces a chance to gain control of oil fields and facilities in the south that Hifter had earlier seized.

But Egypt, a Hifter ally, warned last month that an attack on Sirte would trigger an Egyptian military interventi­on, allegedly to protect Egypt’s western border. Libya’s east-based Parliament has called on Egypt to send troops if Sirte is attacked.

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