Reports shed light on mercenaries, terrorists sent by Turkey to Libya
In a development that is bound to cause alarm in
Tunisia and other North African nations, Turkey is reported to have dispatched
to Libya during the last few months thousands of Islamic extremists, including
2500 Tunisian ISIS members.
The ISIS extremists were sent to back other
militants and mercenaries dispatched by
Ankara to fight on the side of the Libyan Government of National Accord (GNA).
According to the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights
(SOHR), “Turkish intelligence have transferred Jihadist groups and Islamic
State (ISIS) members of different foreign nationalities, from Syria to Libya in
the past few months.” These, according to SOHR, included “over 2,500 Tunisian
ISIS members” out of thousands of other ISIS-affiliated Tunisians operating in
Syria.
If confirmed, the transfer of Tunisian extremists
from the remote Syrian battlefield to neighbouring Libya is bound to spark
serious concerns in Tunis. The small
North African country has suffered major terrorist attacks in 2015 perpetrated
by Tunisian ISIS-affiliated extremists after they spent time in Libya. Since the attacks, which caused the death of
scores of civilians and foreign tourists, Tunisia has built a 200-km sand
barrier and electronic fence on its border with Libya.
SOHR said Friday the most recent batch of jihadist
fighters was sent to Libya “a few days ago”.
According to the watch group, “the number of
recruits who arrived in Libya rose to 16,100 Syrian mercenaries, including 340
children under the age of 18.”
A new report published Thursday by the Pentagon said
Turkey has sent between 3,500 and 3,800 Syrian mercenaries to back the Libyan
Government of National Accord (GNA) over the first three months of the year.
The report, published by the US Defense Department’s
inspector general, does not detail the nature of mercenary contingents
dispatched by Turkey after the end of March even though Ankara has intensified
its intervention in Libya since then.
During the last few weeks, the US military seemed to
green-light the Turkish military intervention in Libya over growing concerns
about Russia’s influence in the North African country, where hundreds of
Russian mercenaries were said to be stationed. The White House has however
distanced itself earlier this week with Ankara over Turkish naval moves in the
Mediterranean denounced as “aggressive” by France.
The quarterly report on counter-terrorism operations
in Africa by the Pentagon’s internal watchdog, published Thursday, says Turkey
paid and offered citizenship to thousands of mercenaries fighting alongside
militias aligned with the GNA, headed by Prime Minister Fayez Sarraj, against
troops of the Libyan National Army (LNA) led by Field Marshal Khalifa Haftar.
Despite widespread indications of many of the
fighters’ extremist links, the report says the US military found no evidence to
suggest the mercenaries were affiliated with the Islamic State (ISIS) or
al-Qaida terrorist groups. The US report says the fighters were “very likely”
motivated by generous financial packages offered by Ankara.
Later reports by regional sources, including the
SOHR watch-group, did however document
the presence of Islamic extremists among the
fighters sent by Turkey.
The report covers only the first quarter of the
year, until the end of March — two months before a string of Turkish-backed
advances by the GNA-allied forces in the capital’s suburbs, the stronghold at
Tarhuna and a key western airbase.
Haftar’s setbacks trained the spotlight on Turkey’s
deepening role in the Libyan war.
The latest report says the Turkish deployments
likely increased ahead of the GNA advances in late May. It cites the US Africa
Command as saying that 300 Turkish-supported Syrian rebels landed in Libya in
early April. Turkey also deployed an “unknown number” of Turkish soldiers
during the first months of the year, the inspector general adds.
To the consternation of regional rivals and NATO
allies like France, Turkey is staking its hopes for greater leverage in the
eastern Mediterranean on the Islamist-controlled government in Tripoli.
Ankara’s open military intervention stands in contrast to covert support from
foreign backers on the other side of the conflict.
The Pentagon inspector general had reported in its
last quarterly review that Russia brought in hundreds of mercenaries to back
Haftar’s months-long siege of Tripoli. A private Kremlin-linked military
company known as the Wagner Group first introduced skilled snipers and armed
drones last fall, inflicting “significant casualties” on GNA-allied forces.
SOHR puts the number of Turkish-backed Syrian
mercenaries who were killed in the Libyan war at about 470, including 33 minors
and a number of group commanders.