ISIS: Islamic State fighters in Libya doubled but militias check growth

"They are contesting the growth of ISIS in several areas across Libya," Rodriguez said, citing U.S. intelligence assessments for the growth of Islamic State, also known as ISIS.

A Libyan soldier sits in a military vehicle at checkpoint in Wadi Bey, west of the Islamic State-held city of Sirte, February 23, 2016.  A Libyan soldier sits in a military vehicle at checkpoint in Wadi Bey, west of the Islamic State-held city of Sirte, February 23, 2016.  
Islamic State has doubled its fighters in Libya to between 4,000 and 6,000 in the last 12 to 18 months but militias in the North African nation have limited the hardline militants' growth, the commander of U.S. forces in Africa said on Thursday.
Islamic State's stronghold in Libya is the city of Sirte but it also has a presence in Derna and Benghazi in the east and Sabratha in the west, General David M. Rodriguez, head of U.S. Africa Command, told a news briefing.
"In Benghazi and Derna, (Libyan armed groups) have fought back against the Islamic State and made it much tougher for them to operate, as well as in Sabratha," he said.
"They are contesting the growth of ISIS in several areas across Libya," Rodriguez said, citing U.S. intelligence assessments for the growth of Islamic State, also known as ISIS.
The group's growth in Libya has worried Western governments, which fear it will take advantage of persistent political chaos to emulate its success in seizing territory in Iraq and Syria.
Since 2014, loose coalitions of armed brigades have backed rival governments in Tripoli and the east. Western governments back the Government of National Accord, in part as the best chance for uniting armed factions against Islamic State.
"The challenge of the Government of National Accord is to bring them together, one for the future of Libya, but also to get rid of ISIS," Rodriguez said.
He downplayed the possibility Islamic State could strike out from its base and take large portions of territory as it did in Iraq and Syria.
"They don't have the homegrown people that know as much about Libya like they did in Iraq and Syria," Rodriguez said. "The Libyan people are also different in the way they treat and respond to foreigners, so all that has an impact."
U.S. air strikes in Libya have targeted Islamic State, but those efforts are focused on targets posing an imminent threat to U.S. interests and personnel, Rodriguez said.

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