Forces from Libya's east- and west-based administrations participated in U.S. special forces exercises in the central city of Sirte on Tuesday in the first such joint military event including the former civil war rivals.
Libya has been divided since 2014 when war broke out in the wake of the uprising that overthrew longtime leader Muammar Gaddafi three years earlier.
The fighting culminated in 2019-2020 when military commander Khalifa Haftar's Libyan National Army, or LNA, based in the eastern city of Benghazi, tried to take the capital Tripoli.
Tensions have cooled considerably since then, and the two sides last week agreed to the first unified budget in more than a decade to determine how to spend the billions of dollars of oil revenues the country earns each year.
The "Flintlock" special operations exercises, run by the United States Africa Command, known as AFRICOM, opened in Sirte on Tuesday including forces from both the LNA and the U.N.-recognised Government of National Unity, which is based in Tripoli.
Haftar's son, Saddam, who serves as the LNA's deputy commander, said in a speech that the exercise "reaffirms Libya’s position as a reliable partner in supporting regional and international peace and security."




