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File photo: Egyptian air force planes parade during the inauguration ceremony of the new Suez Canal in Ismailia, Aug. 6, 2015. Image Credit: AP

Cairo: Egypt said on Thursday its air force had hit 10 four-wheel-drive vehicles carrying arms, ammunition and contraband at Egypt’s western borders with Libya.

Egyptian security forces have been battling an insurgency by Daesh that was until recently concentrated in the Sinai Peninsula but has extended to other parts of the country.

“A number of criminals gathered and prepared to sneak into the Egyptian border, using a number of four-wheel-drive vehicles,” the Egyptian military said in a statement that gave no details of casualties.

Six US air strikes on a Daesh desert camp in Libya killed 17 militants and destroyed three vehicles, the US military said earlier this week, the first American strikes in Libya since President Donald Trump took office in January.

US Africa Command said in a statement that strikes on Friday targeted a camp 240 kilometres southeast of Sirte, a city that was once the Daesh stronghold in Libya. The camp was used to move fighters in and out of Libya, plot attacks and store weapons, the statement said.

“ISIS [Daesh] and Al Qaida have taken advantage of ungoverned spaces in Libya to establish sanctuaries for plotting, inspiring and directing terror attacks,” the statement said.

A US official, speaking on condition of anonymity, said the strikes were carried out by armed drones.

The last-known US strike in Libya was on January 19, a day before Trump’s inauguration, when more than 80 Daesh terrorists, some believed to be plotting attacks in Europe, died in US air strikes on camps outside Sirte.

That strike was led by two B-2 bombers, which dropped about 100 precision-guided munitions on the camps.

Daesh took over Sirte in early 2015, turning it into its most important base outside the Middle East and attracting large numbers of foreign fighters to the city. The group imposed its hard-line rule on residents and extended its control along about 250 kilometres of Libya’s Mediterranean coastline.

But it struggled to keep a footing elsewhere in Libya and was forced out of Sirte by last December after a six-month campaign led by brigades from the western city of Misrata and backed by US air strikes.

Daesh terrorists have shifted to desert valleys and inland hills southeast of Tripoli as they seek to exploit Libya’s political divisions after their defeat in Sirte.

The statement said the strikes were carried out in coordination with Libya’s Government of National Accord.

The United Nations launched a road map on Wednesday for a renewed international effort to break a political stalemate in Libya and end the turmoil that followed the country’s 2011 uprising.

The UN-backed Government of National Accord established under a December 2015 deal never fully materialised in Tripoli, leaving Libya with three competing governments aligned with rival armed alliances.