The U.S. Department of Defense has published details of the U.S.-led coalition's latest strikes against the IS group in Iraq and Syria.
There was one strike in Syria, on an IS headquarters near the group's stronghold of Raqqa.
There were 19 strikes in Iraq including near Haditha, where there have been heavy clashes between IS and Iraqi security and tribal forces over the past three days. Eight strikes were carried out near Ramadi, where Iraqi forces have been clearing out IS militants after retaking the city center.
Libya's National Oil Corporation has also issued a statement on its website condemning the attacks by the IS group on Sidra and Ras Lanuf in the country's oil crescent on January 4 and 5.
The National Oil Corporation, Tripoli, represented by its board of directors and on behalf of its affiliates and employees:
Condemns, in the strongest terms, the vicious attacks on the oil crescent area over the last two days and deplores the loss of life and the damage caused to tanks at Ras Lanuf and Es Sidar. Mourns the loss of life, wishes a speedy recovery to those who have been wounded and commends the efforts made to repel the attack and the efforts of the fire fighters.
Reaffirms its independency and impartiality as well as its determination to preserve the resources and assets of our country for the benefit of all the people of Libya.
Calls on all political and military entities in Libya to put aside their differences and unite against this common enemy. Calls also upon the citizens of Libya to do their utmost to protect their patrimony and to unite to repel the aggression.
Urges the swift formation of a national unity government and the establishment of a unified force structure capable of bringing peace and protecting Libya’s natural resources.
The chairman of Libya's National Oil Corporation (NOC) has issued a statement via the company's website condemning the attacks by the IS group on NOC facilities at Sidra.
"I hope this appalling violence will lead political leaders on all sides in Libya to understand the magnitude of the threat we face. I encourage them urgently to put aside their differences. We need to unite against this common enemy, not tomorrow or next week, but now," Mustafa Sanalla said.
"I urge the swift formation of a national unity government and the establishment of a unified force structure capable of bringing peace to this country and protecting its natural resources. Libya’s oil belongs to all of Libya’s people and must be protected. Security and stability can only be attained by all our communities working together. Political leaders in Libya must face up to their responsibilities and confront the threats that Libya faces."
The Wall Street Journal is reporting that seven oil tanks are now on fire in Libya's eastern oil ports and says there are fears that the IS assault on Sidra and Ras Lanuf will inflict long term damage on Libya's oil industry.
Five of the seven tanks are ablaze at Sidra and two at Ras Lanuf. Firefighters have been unable to enter the facilities because of the potential danger.
A spokesman for Libya's Petroleum Facilities Guard (PFG), which protects Libya's national oil installations, has said that there is no coordination with Libya’s Gen. Khalifa Haftar, who leads forces allied to the country’s recognized government, over air strikes against the IS group around Sidra, according to the Al Wasat news site.
IS attacked Libya's oil facilities including in Sidra, on January 4 and 5.
PFG commander Ibrahim Jadhran criticized Haftar on January 5, saying that he and IS are "two faces of the same coin."
Fires caused by fighting between Islamic State militants and guards near Libya's biggest oil ports have now spread to five oil storage tanks, a Petroleum Facilities Guard spokesman has said, Reuters is reporting.
Four oil storage tanks were reported as being on fire earlier today.
The President of Libya's House of Representatives, Aqila Saleh, has called on the international community to end an arms embargo to help fight the IS group and other Islamist miilitias.
Saleh's request came after the IS group attacked Libya's largest oil port of Sidra on January 4 and 5.
Libya's Gen. Khalifa Haftar, who leads forces allied to the country's recognized government, also called for an end to an arms embargo on December 17 after holding talks with the U.N. envoy on a peace agreement.
Iraq may be celebrating Army Day, but Iraqi officials have said that the IS group has increased its attacks on the western town of Haditha, where 45 Iraqi security forces and Sunni tribal fighters have been killed in clashes with the extremists over the past three days, AP reports.
Khalid Salman, a provincial councilman from Haditha, said Wednesday that another 30 pro-government fighters have been wounded. Shaalan al-Nimrawi, a local tribal sheikh, confirms the casualty figures.
The IS attacks on Haditha come a week after Iraqi forces backed by U.S.-led airstrikes pushed the extremists out of central Ramadi, the capital of the sprawling Anbar province, which includes Haditha.
Brett McGurk, the U.S. Special Presidential Envoy for the Global Coalition to Counter IS, has tweeted that Iraq is celebrating Army Day today.
Abdel Moneim Dwillah, the 15-year-old Tripoli teenager thought to be one of the suicide bombers used by IS to attack the oil port of Sirta on January 4, was recruited in a mosque in Tripoli, Libya's Al-Wasat is reporting, citing the pan-Arabic Al Hayat newspaper.
Al Hayat quoted security sources as saying that Abdel Moneim's cellphone had shown he was in Al Khums, a city on the coast east of Tripoli. The phone was later turned off and after a time Abdel Moneim called his brother in Tripoli and told him he was in Sirte, "waging jihad" with IS.