(Reuters) - The
United States has increased the number of Marines and aircraft stationed
in Sicily who could be called upon to evacuate Americans from the U.S.
embassy in Tripoli as unrest in Libya grows, two U.S. officials said on Monday. About 60 more Marines
and another four Osprey aircraft, whose tilt-rotar engines allow it to
land like a helicopter but fly like an airplane, were being sent to
Naval Air Station Sigonella in Sicily from their base in Spain. That
brings the total number of Marines stationed as a precaution in Sicily
to around 250, the two officials said, speaking on condition of
anonymity. Their location in Italy moves them closer to Libya, speeding response times. One U.S. official added that forces at Sigonella were on heightened alert. Heavily
armed gunmen stormed Libya's parliament on Sunday and gunfire erupted
across Tripoli, where rival militias clashed in some of the worst
violence in the city since the end of the 2011 war against Muammar
Gaddafi. Saudi Arabia
closed its embassy and consulate in the Libyan capital and withdrew all
of its diplomatic staff on Monday due to security concerns. Underscoring
the turmoil, the commander of Libyan army special forces said on Monday
he had allied with renegade general Khalifa Haftar in his campaign
against militant Islamists. Haftar has been denounced by the Tripoli
government as attempting to stage a coup. The
Marines in Sigonella are part of a crisis response unit focused on
embassy security that was created after the attack on the U.S.
diplomatic compound in Benghazi, Libya, on September 11, 2012, that
killed U.S. Ambassador Christopher Stevens and three other Americans. The
Pentagon has in recent months made similar, temporary moves of Marines
from the Special Purpose Marine Air-Ground Task Force-Crisis Response. Last
October, about 200 Marines from the task force also flew to Naval Air
Station Sigonella in Sicily for several weeks after U.S. special
operations forces captured a senior al Qaeda figure in Libya, triggering
unrest.
U.S. moves more forces closer to Libya as unrest grows
Reuters
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