DO YOU NO YOU CAN STUDY FIRE, SECURITY AND INTELLIGENCE MANAGEMENT FROM INDIAN BEST INTELLIGENCE INSTITUTE ONLINE?ALL AT VERY REDUCED COST.FOR FREE FORM, MAIL sylvapower2000@gmail.com
Number of fighters has reportedly dropped in iraq and syria while gaining “more ground and influence” in libya.
ISIL fighters have streamed into Libya in recent months, heightening
fears the fighters are gaining ground and influence in the divided north
African country.
About 5,000 Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant fighters are now in
Libya – double earlier estimates – while the number in Iraq and Syria
has dropped, a security analyst said on Thursday.
The updated figures come as the US administration of President Barack
Obama faces growing calls for the American military to step up action
against ISIL in Libya, where fighters have already seized the city of
Sirte and an adjoining length of Mediterranean coastline.
Patrick Skinner, a former CIA case officer now with The Soufan Group
consultancy, said the US has few good Libya options, but there is
growing consensus something must be done.
“They are just terrified of it getting much worse, fast,” Skinner told the AFP news agency.
“Once [ISIL] takes something, it’s really hard and really bloody and really expensive to take it back.”
NATO defence ministers are meeting in Brussels next week to evaluate
the ongoing US-led campaign against ISIL and to discuss ways of
redoubling efforts.
No large-scale US military action is contemplated in Libya, senior US
administration officials told the Associated Press news agency.
Military options under consideration include raids and advisory
missions by US special operations forces and air strikes, the officials
said on condition of anonymity.
“The last thing in the world you want is a false caliphate with
access to billions of dollars of oil revenue,” John Kerry, the US
secretary of state, said on Tuesday.
Meanwhile, the US now says that there are between 19,000 and 25,000
ISIL fighters in Iraq and Syria – down from a previous count of about
30,000.
But there are growing fears about the fate of Libya, which has been
in chaos since the NATO-backed ousting of long-time dictator Muammar
Gaddafi in 2011, thanks largely to its air power. Since 2014, Libya has
been split between two rival authorities, each backed by different
militias and tribes.
Skinner pointed to the irony that Western leaders are now scrambling for solutions in Libya.
“The international coalition is going to air strike its way out of
the chaos created by air strikes,” he said. “That’s actually what people
are considering. Something has to be done. The horrible reality is:
what is that something?”
Leadership
No comments:
Post a Comment