REUTERS
Egyptian and Libyan officials said strikes had been launched on camps and ammunition stores belonging to the Derna Mujahideen Shura Council (DMSC). Areas targeted include the western entrance to Derna, Dahr al-Hamar in the south, and al-Fatayeh, a hilly area about 20 km (12 miles) from the city.
Egypt says it does not target specific groups but that it goes after all militants who could be a threat to its security. A military spokesman told state media on Monday that all the groups targeted have the same ideology as those who carried out the Minya massacre, which is reason enough to bomb them.
CAIRO (Reuters) - Egyptian President Abdel Fattah
al-Sisi was quick to launch air strikes on militants in Libya in
response to a deadly attack on Coptic Christians in Egypt - but the
attacks do not seem to be targeting those responsible.
The
response was popular with many Egyptians. The country's state-owned and
private news media celebrated it as swift justice, but the president
has been vague about exactly who he is attacking.
The
strikes have been directed at Islamist groups other than Islamic State,
which claimed responsibility for Friday's massacre of dozens in the
southern province of Minya, and seem to be intended to shore up Sisi's
allies in eastern Libya.
"The attacks in Minya
were claimed by Islamic State, and there are Islamic State elements
active in Libya, but the reports coming indicate Cairo is targeting
other groups," said H.A. Hellyer, senior nonresident fellow at the
Atlantic Council.
In any case, analysts say
the strikes will not do much against Islamists in Cairo, Sinai and Upper
Egypt, where they have had a stronghold since the 1990s and have been
attacking tourists, Copts and government officials.
Bombing the camps in Libya is seen as a diversion for a failure to defeat Islamists inside Egypt.
"It's
easier to strike a terrorist camp in Libya by air than it is to clean
up serious problems inside Egypt; sectarianism, radicalization, that led
to this and other attacks," said Michele Dunne, director of Carnegie's
Middle East program.
"All the horrific
terrorism that is happening inside Egypt has purely domestic drivers and
probably would be happening if Islamic State did not exist. It is not
all that different from the home-grown terrorism Egypt experienced in
the 1990s, before Al Qaeda or Islamic State even existed," she said.
Libyan Ally
Egyptian and Libyan officials said strikes had been launched on camps and ammunition stores belonging to the Derna Mujahideen Shura Council (DMSC). Areas targeted include the western entrance to Derna, Dahr al-Hamar in the south, and al-Fatayeh, a hilly area about 20 km (12 miles) from the city.
Yet the DMSC has never
been involved in attacks outside Libya and in fact mostly limits its
activities to Derna, rarely fighting in larger conflicts within Libya,
according to Mohamed Eljarh, an Atlantic Council political analyst in
Libya.
The group has denied taking part in attacks inside Egypt.
In
fact, many suggest the air strikes had been planned in advance to shore
up support for Sisi's main Libyan ally, Khalifa Haftar and his
self-styled Libyan National Army (LNA), and that the Minya massacre was
used as a pretext to launch them.
Forces loyal
to Haftar, a military strongman like Sisi, have long been fighting the
DMSC, cutting off supply routes to the city and hitting it with
occasional air strikes. Despite the LNA's siege, the military situation
in Derna has been in stalemate for months.
Egypt
has also carried out strikes in Jufra, where the LNA has been fighting
Islamists who fled Benghazi as well as forces linked to the U.N.-backed
government in Tripoli.
The LNA lost dozens of men there in a surprise attack on an air base earlier in May, but has since consolidated control.
The
Minya attack was a catalyst for those inside the Egyptian government
and military who are in favor of military intervention in Libya, said
Mokhtar Awad, who researches extremism at George Washington University.
"This
is Egypt taking action not because of the Minya attack but ... to drive
out as many extremists as possible from the east," he said.
'They Are All Terrorists'
Egypt says it does not target specific groups but that it goes after all militants who could be a threat to its security. A military spokesman told state media on Monday that all the groups targeted have the same ideology as those who carried out the Minya massacre, which is reason enough to bomb them.
"Names are not important
for us, they are all terrorists. Those who carried out the Minya
operation do not necessarily have to be in these camps but their
followers are," an Egyptian intelligence source told Reuters.
Eljarh
also said it was likely the air strikes has been planned in advance and
that the Minya attack was an opportunity to carry them out, as part of a
larger policy towards supporting Haftar, with Egypt bombing groups that
constitute the strongest opposition to him.
Egypt
sees any militant activity in eastern Libya, which is near its border,
as a threat to its national security. One of the reasons Sisi has
supported Haftar since 2014 is to ensure that all Islamists are driven
out of eastern Libya.
Sisi is getting more
involved now because of improved relations with Washington, Eljarh said.
He believes U.S President Donald Trump has given him the green light to
fight jihadists in Libya and elsewhere.
When Sisi announced the first round of air strikes on television on Friday, he implored Trump to support him.
Trump, who has made a point of improving relations with Cairo, said his country stood with Sisi and the Egyptian people.
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