This photo claims to show a fire at Ras Lanuf's tank farm following IS's attack earlier today.
The IS group has made several assaults on Libya's oil infrastructure this month, with analysts suggesting that the militants intend to damage them rather than overrun them.
The Libya Observer news site says that IS attacked the Harouge oil storage tanks and that there have been clashes between IS militants and the Petroleum Facilities Guard (PFG) armed militia -- which protects Libya's oil facilities -- this morning.
IS Threatens More Libya Oil Facility Attacks
IS has threatened attacks on more Libyan oil facilities following an attack earlier today that has caused fires at oil storage tanks near Ras Lanuf, Reuters reports.
The militants posted a video on their Telegram channel in which a miliant said, "Today Sidra port and Ras Lanuf and tomorrow the port of Brega and after the ports of Tobruk, Serir, Jallo and al-Kufra."
The storage tanks hit in this morning's attack by IS militants on the Libyan oil terminal Ras Lanuf belong to the Harouge company.
Harouge's website has a description of the company's facilities at Ras Lanuf.
This from the UN Security Council amid reports that IS has attacked the Ras Lanuf oil terminal and is threatening more attacks on Libya's oil facilities.
A spokesman for Libya's Petroleum Facilities Guard (PFG), the militia protecting Libya's oil facilities, the IS attack this morning caused one oil storage tank at the Harouge company facility at Ras Lanuf and one pipeline to explode.
The Atlantic Council's Mohamed Eljarh offers this snappy analysis of the IS group's attacks on Libya's oil facilities.
Libya's National Oil Company says that IS has attacked oil facilities near Ras Lanuf and that two oil storage tanks are now on fire.
Russia Displays Naval Might Off Syria's Coast
Russia is showing off its naval might in the form of a navy missile cruiser off Syria's Mediterranean coast, AP reports.
Russia took a group of Moscow-based journalists aboard the Varyag cruiser.
The display of Russia's military operations in support of Syrian President Bashar Assad comes ahead of planned peace talks Monday in Geneva, which are meant to pave the way for a political settlement for Syria.
To reach the cruiser, journalists boarded a Russian destroyer in Tartus, where Russia has had a supply and repair facility for its ships in the Mediterranean since Soviet times. It's now the only such support facility outside the former Soviet Union.