ISIS reappearing in southern Libya
The Islamic State of Iraq and Syria (aka ISIS) is reemerging in southern Libya. The Libyan National Army (LNA) has already spotted moves by the terrorist organization in this part of Libya.
LNA Spokesman Ahmed al-Mesmari said on August 27 that ISIS
is especially present in an area called Umm al-Aranib.
ISIS members, al-Mesmari said, move freely in this area,
receiving backing from Chadian mercenaries.
The Turkish newspaper Zaman had previously revealed that Turkish
President Recep Tayyip Erdogan had coordinated the transfer of ISIS members
from Syria and Iraq to Libya.
ISIS redeployed itself in southern Libya in the past few
months. It succeeded in controlling the main road connecting the northern city
of Sirte with the southern city of Sabha.
Deployment
According to AFP, ISIS succeeded in regrouping and forming
different convoys. Each of the convoys contains between five and seven vehicles
that move together in areas where there is no security presence.
Southern Libya is a fertile soil for the presence of ISIS,
AFP said.
It said this part of Libya is controlled by a radical
ideology.
This makes it easy for ISIS members to draw in recruits
from the area or from neighboring states, AFP said.
American journalist Emily Steel said ISIS has become a
formidable threat in southern Libya.
She added in an interview with Fox News that the terrorist
organization wants to control southern Libya and turn it into a launch pad for
its aspired expansion in the region.
Libyan political analyst Mahmud Ismail said Turkey works to
use the security vacuum present in some parts of Libya in transferring ISIS
members to these areas.
ISIS wants to be present in the Libyan desert at any cost,
Ismail said.



