By Benoît Faucon 

Oil guards in Libya are getting ready to take on suspected Islamic State militants, their commander said Wednesday, following a third attack on oil fields overnight.

In recent weeks, the North African country's oil industry--once the lifeblood of its economy--has been in the cross hairs of an armed conflict.

Colonel Hakim Maazab, who heads the brigade that is in charge of guarding oil fields in central Libya, told The Wall Street Journal that the Dahra oil field, about 500 kilometers southeast of Tripoli, was attacked Tuesday night by suspected Islamic State militants, hours after two other oil facilities were targeted by the same group.

Col. Maazab said his brigade had sent reinforcements to the nearby Zella airport and a military aircraft had arrived to assist them. "We will go to Dahra today," he said.

A Libyan oil official familiar with the situation in the fields said the militants were already moving toward a fourth oil field.

Separately, the oil ministry in Tripoli said on its Facebook page that airstrikes against ISIS were being planned near central oil fields.

Mabruk and Bahi, two of the oil fields in central Libya that had been attacked last month, were stormed again by unknown gunmen Monday and Tuesday, a spokesman for the National Oil Co. said Tuesday.

The Mabruk oil field, that once produced 30,000 to 40,000 barrels a day and is operated by a Libyan joint venture with French oil major Total SA, was occupied again overnight Tuesday by militants; a group claiming to represent Islamic State killed nine guards there last month.

The Bahi and Dahra fields are operated by a partnership with U.S. oil companies Marathon Oil Corp., Hess Corp. and ConocoPhillips.

Col. Maazab said the gunmen had inflicted heavy damage on the facilities, destroying oil tanks and the control room at Mabruk. "Daesh blew up a lot of equipment," he said, using the Arabic acronym for Islamic State.

Libya, which is home to Africa's largest oil reserves, has been mired in violence and political divisions since longtime dictator Moammar Gadhafi was killed in an uprising in 2011. A civil war has broken out between the internationally recognized government--based in the country's east--and a rebel faction known as Libya Dawn that controls the country's capital of Tripoli.

Both sides have recently come under attack from the Libyan branch of Islamic State, an extremist militant movement that has overrun parts of Syria and Iraq.

Write to Benoît Faucon at benoit.faucon@wsj.com

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