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U.S. special forces have seized a tanker that fled with a cargo of oil from a Libyan port
controlled by anti-government rebels, halting their attempt to sell crude on the global
market. Gunmen demanding regional autonomy and a share
of oil wealth had managed to load the ship, which escaped Libya's navy and triggered a
crisis that prompted parliament to sack the prime minister.
A U.S. SEAL commando team boarded the tanker Morning Glory from a Naval special warfare
rigid inflatable boat as it sat in international waters off Cyprus on Sunday night.
The seizure was approved by U.S. President Barack Obama and requested by the Libyan and
Cypriot governments, Pentagon Press Secretary John Kirby said.
No one was hurt in the under two hour operation, and no shots fired. Two AK47 rifles were found
and the three Libyans holding the ship remained in U.S. control, a U.S. defense official said,
speaking on condition of anonymity. "The Morning Glory is carrying a cargo of
oil owned by the Libyan government National Oil Company. The ship and its cargo were illicitly
obtained" from the Libyan port of Es Sider, Kirby's statement said.
The standoff over Libyan oil and the tanker debacle have deepened the chaos testing Tripoli
since the civil war that toppled Muammar Gaddafi nearly three years ago.
With its army still nascent, a weak government has been unable to impose its will on former
anti-Gaddafi fighters and militias who now use their military muscle to make demands
on the state, often by targeting the vital oil sector.
At least in the short term, the tanker's seizure by U.S. forces is likely to prevent any more
attempted oil sales by the rebels, who in August took control of three export terminals
accounting previously for 700,000 barrels a day of exports.
"Oil is the economy's artery. The government will not allow anyone to fool around with
the assets and resources of the Libyan people," the Libyan government said in a statement.
It was the second time in six months that U.S. forces have become involved in Libya.
A commando team snatched a suspected al Qaeda suspect off the street as he returned home
from prayers in the capital Tripoli in September. The Cypriot foreign ministry said the vessel
was now heading west in the Mediterranean with a U.S. military escort.
An American crew from the USS Stout, a guided missile destroyer, got the tanker underway
toward Libya on Monday. The Stout voyage was expected to take up to four days, the officials
said. The Morning Glory had been North Korean-flagged,
but the government in Pyongyang on Thursday said it had notified Libya and maritime authorities
that it had severed all ties with the ship because of the vessel's contraband cargo.