SETA researchers: Promoters of the Ottoman project in Libya
Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan supports the
Brotherhood government in Libya not out of love for it or its leader, Fayez al-Sarraj,
but rather to ensure his interests in the Middle East. To this end, Ankara has
exploited Libyan and Tunisian researchers to promote the Turkish military interference
in cooperation with the Turkish Foundation for Political, Economic and Social
Research (SETA), including by recently attempting to send trained Tunisian
technical engineers to these centers to support the Sarraj government.
Salah al-Bakoush
Through conferences in Libya, Turkey and Tunisia, as well as
articles and blogs, some Libyan researchers promote Erdogan's policies toward
Libya in support of Turkish interests, interfering in the Arab Maghreb
countries, and promoting the Ottoman caliphate.
Dr. Salah al-Bakoush, a Libyan political analyst, activist
and advisor to the former Libyan High Council of State, has appeared at SETA conferences
with other researchers to support the Turkish vision. Bakoush praised the role
of Qatar and Turkey in Libya, adding that Turkish assistance to the Libyan Government
of National Accord (GNA) has created a balance of forces against the Libyan
National Army (LNA) led by Khalifa Haftar. He pointed out in an interview on
the Brotherhood channel Libya Al-Ahrar in December 2019 that Erdogan says that
power is an extension of politics that can be used or brandished and that he is
now waving his strength, hoping that he uses it and sees Turkish forces on
Libyan soil soon, noting that the transfer of Turkish forces and weapons will
take some time to reach Libya.
Mehdi Thabet
Mehdi Thabet, a Tunisian researcher and Libyan affairs
specialist, is also considered a supporter of the Turkish vision, even if he
tries to be objective. But he participates in SETA conferences in Tunisia and
became the head of the Libyan file unit at the Center for Strategic and
Diplomatic Studies, which supervised the training of technical engineers and
sent them to Libya in cooperation with SETA. He uses his appearances in
Tunisian media to support the Turkish military intervention in Libya, claiming
that it will tip the scales in favor of the GNA and that it would be more
beneficial to Tunisia and Algeria for Turkey to have a pivotal role in the
region, especially as he views that Tunisia tends toward international legitimacy
not to support the LNA, believing that the Turkish-Qatari solution in Libya is
the best way to achieve stability in Libya and the success of the transitional
phase. He has steadfastly promoted views supportive of Turkey through seminars and
symposiums on the Libyan conflict.
Senussi Bsaikri
Libyan researcher Senussi Bsaikri is a prominent member of
the Libyan Brotherhood, a writer for Qatar’s Al-Jazeera, and the director of
the Libyan Research and Development Center, which collaborates with SETA. He
also attacks the LNA in the media. In the footsteps of the Brotherhood, he has described
Haftar’s LNA as anti-democratic and called for the recruitment of the youth in
Tripoli and the western region to fight against the LNA.
Turkey uses these researchers and politicians to spread its
ideas and justify its interference in Libyan affairs, along with other names
such as Zubair Khalafallah, head of the Ottoman Documentation Center in
Tunisia, and Rafik Abdel Salam, head of the Center for Strategic Studies in
Tunisia, who collaborate with SETA s mere soldiers of the Turkish regime in the
Middle East.




