Questions about Moscow’s role in the Libyan crisis
Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov will today
hold talks in Moscow with his Algerian counterpart, Sabri Boukadoum. The
meeting will focus on bilateral relations and long-term joint initiatives
between the two countries.
Moscow and Algiers had signed a Declaration on
Strategic Partnership in 2001 to establish a practice of joint development,
which culminated in a 2019 turnover of $3.4 billion through economic, military
and technical collaboration. Russia—which supplied the Algerian military with
approximately two-thirds of its weaponry between 2014 and 2018—views Algeria as
an increasingly important partner vis-à-vis trade and regional stability, and
will seek to maintain long-term influence within its borders.
Expect Russia to pursue a renewal of its arms
contracts and similarly bankable investment opportunities. Algeria’s domestic
energy and automotive industries could be the focus of future strategic
partnerships, given the history of joint pipeline development between leading
Russian energy companies and Algeria’s state-controlled hydrocarbons company,
Sonatrach.
Both Moscow and Algiers will likely leverage their
mediating potential to push for progress on the Libyan front, as securing the
600-mile-long border between Libya and Algeria has proved exceedingly costly
during COVID-19 and the correlated shortfall in oil revenues.



