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US air strikes hit Isis camps in Libya US air strikes hit Isis camps in Libya after Barack Obama uses last days as President to authorise mission
(35 minutes later)
American forces have bombed two Isis camps in Libya as jihadis continue to battle for territory in the country. American forces have bombed two Isis camps in Libya as jihadis continue to battle for territory in the country. 
Peter Cook, the Pentagon press secretary, said the operation was carried out around 25 miles southwest of the group’s former stronghold of Sirte on Wednesday night. Peter Cook, the Pentagon press secretary, said the operation was carried out around 25 miles southwest of the group’s former stronghold of Sirte on Wednesday night. 
More to follow Militants had gathered there after fleeing the US-backed assault that drove them out of the coastal city “in order to reorganise”, he added.
“They posed a security threat to Libya, the region, and US national interests,” Mr Cook said. 
“While we are still evaluating the results of the strikes, the initial assessment indicates they were successful.
“We are committed to maintaining pressure on Isil (Isis) and preventing them from establishing safe haven.”
The mission was authorised directly by Barack Obama in his last days as President, having given military support to Libyan militas’ effort to retake Sirte last year.
His successor has been unclear on his position over Libya, hitting out at America’s support for British and French-led efforts to oust Muammar Gaddafi.
“We would be so much better off if Gaddafi would be in charge right now,” Donald Trump said on the campaign trail last year.
But in 2011 he claimed he would have authorised strikes to “knock this guy out very quickly…to save lives”. 
The US carried out several rounds of air strikes targeting Isis in Libya since receiving a request from the country last year.
Two Serbian embassy employees being held hostage by the militants were killed by an American bombing raid near Sabratha in February.
Isis’ Libyan branch was formed in 2014 by local militants who pledged allegiance to Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi, later being bolstered by leading Iraqi and Saudi members of the terrorist group.
The country has since been used as a training ground for Isis militants and terror attackers, with areas along its coastline including the city of Sirte temporarily taken under the group’s control in 2015.
An engineer who fled the city told The Independent how jihadis had arrived masked in a convoy of cars before seizing control and imposing the group’s bloody interpretation of Sharia law.
 
 
“They kill people and then they hang their bodies up in the streets so people can see them, as a lesson to others. The shut everything down,” Yahia bin Yahia said. “I couldn’t stay there.”
Libya has been in a state of conflict and lawlessness since Gaddafi was killed in the 2011 civil war, with the fragile new Government of National Accord struggling to exert control over swathes of the country still controlled by a plethora of warring militias.
The situation has fuelled the refugee crisis, allowing thousands of migrants to be imprisoned, tortured and forced into labour or prostitution before being put on unseaworthy boats over the Mediterranean Sea.
It has also continued to destabilise northern and western Africa, allowing the free flow of weapons to rebels and extremists in countries including Mali and Sudan.