Story highlights
- At least 43 people are dead and 6 wounded in the airstrike, the Sabratha Municipal Council reports
- The U.S. observed advanced training at the site and was worried about an external attack, according to a U.S. official
- Noureddine Chouchane, a senior terror operative, was believed to be among those at the northwest Libya site
(CNN)American warplanes hit an ISIS camp Friday in Libya where foreign fighters had been engaged in special, advanced training -- possibly, a U.S. official said, ahead of a terror attack in Europe or somewhere else outside the North African nation.
Noureddine Chouchane, a senior operative in the terrorist group from Tunisia, was believed to be among those from around Africa and the Middle East who had converged on the site. He is thought to have played an instrumental role in two terror attacks in Tunisia last year, one at Tunis' Bardo Museum that killed 23 people and another at a seaside resort in Sousse that left 38 dead. ISIS claimed responsibility for both massacres.
Friday morning's U.S. strike in the al-Qasser district in Sabratha, a coastal city in northwestern Libya where most residents are from Tunisia, killed at least 43 people and wounded over six others, according to the Sabratha Municipal Council. Libyan Red Crescent spokesman Mohamed al-Misrati has said the death toll will probably rise, as bodies were still buried in the rubble Friday evening.
It was not immediately clear if Chouchane is among the dead.
A Libyan man started to expand a house in Sabratha to several levels last year, security officials in the city said. He'd brought in several groups of fighters over the past few months, including one batch two days ago. That house was struck Friday.
Over the last several weeks, the United States observed militants moving around the targeted site and undergoing what appeared to be special training, according to a U.S. official.
"This was outside the normal training camp scenario," the official said.
The activity raised concerns they might be planning to launch an external attack, though no details were discovered about exactly where or when this might take place.
Sabratha Mayor Hussein al-Thawadi described the site as an ISIS recruitment base for foreigners, mostly from Tunisia. He said a Jordanian woman is among the dead.
The U.S. military has launched hundreds of airstrikes against ISIS targets over the past two years. These have been concentrated in Iraq and Syria, where the Islamist extremist group has established its biggest foothold and has its de facto capital in Raqqa.
But Libya -- a North African nation that's been in turmoil, and a hotbed for some militant groups, since a 2011 revolution that toppled its longtime dictator Moammar Gadhafi -- has been in its crosshairs as well.
ISIS expansion in turbulent Libya
ISIS has emerged as the world's top terror threat, having conducted or inspired about 70 attacks in 20 countries since declaring its caliphate in June 2014. Not including its armed campaigns in Syria and Iraq, these attacks have killed at least 1,200 people and injured more than 1,700 others.
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