Mahmoud bin Rajab: Brotherhood candidate to lead Libyan National Guard
At a time when Turkey is seeking to impose its control and
hegemony in Libya and its desperate attempts to install its hidden arms in
Tripoli, the Libyan Brotherhood, backed by Turkey and loyal to the Fayez
al-Sarraj’s Government of National Accord (GNA), nominated the terrorist
Mahmoud bin Rajab, a leader in the Libyan Islamic Fighting Group (LIFG), to
head the Libyan National Guard.
The Brotherhood promoted the idea of a national guard
through its political arm, the Justice and Construction Party (JCP). After the
2014 Libya Dawn war and the coup against the elected parliament, a group of
remnants of the National Congress, represented by the Brotherhood and
extremists, issued the National Guard Law in 2015 regarding a political body whose
legitimacy had expired.
At the same time, Turkey is trying to impose its dangerous
terrorist candidate, LIFG military commander Khalid al-Sharif, who is loyal to
al-Qaeda, to take over the intelligence leadership in the Sarraj government. The
Brotherhood is strongly pushing for Bin Rajab’s appointment to head the Libyan National
Guard at the GNA Ministry of Interior.
Turkey, in cooperation with the Brotherhood, is trying to
give terrorists new roles in the North African country, with the aim of
implementing their agenda in full support of terrorist groups.
Mahmoud bin Rajab, whose nickname is Abu Qatada, hails from the
terrorist group led by Abu Ubaidah al-Zawi. He is wanted internationally on
charges of involvement in terrorist operations and is considered one of the
most dangerous terrorists in Libya. However, he also works as a first
lieutenant in the GNA Interior Ministry and is a field commander of an armed
militia in the city of Zawiya.
Bin Rajab is considered the primary person responsible for
the kidnapping of Egyptian diplomats in Libya in 2014, when he participated in
this operation in response to Zawi’s arrest in Alexandria.
He also worked as a field commander for an armed group
affiliated with Operation Libya Dawn and participated in the fighting in the
area of Warshefana, where he carried out assassinations and burned and destroyed
homes. He also participated in the battle for Tripoli International Airport.
In June 2017, Saudi authorities arrested Bin Rajab, along
with Mohammed Hussein Al-Khadrawi and Hassan Zayat, while performing the Umrah
rituals, due to his links to terrorism and ISIS.
The three are members of the Libyan militia in Zawiya and
close to Zawi, who is responsible for the Libya Revolutionaries Operations Room
in the country’s Western Region.
Likewise, Bin Rajab has a strong relationship with LIFG
leader Abdelhakim Belhaj, a terrorist and warlord residing in Turkey. They
share an extremist upbringing and combat experience, as well as their dark
history full of crimes and abuses in Libya.
Bin Rajab also supported the terrorist Benghazi Liberation
Brigades and its elements fleeing to the Western Region.
At the beginning of the year, the GNA began promoting the
establishment of a national guard after the dismantling of the armed militias,
amid great controversy over the goals of this project and fears that it would
represent a legal cover for armed militias and terrorist groups, as well as a
tool in Turkey's hand to strengthen its military presence in Libya and its control
over Libya’s security institutions, especially after the circulation of videos
of Syrian mercenaries receiving military training and talking about the existence
of a plan to integrate them into Libya’s official security and military
services.
The Islamic Movements Portal stated in a previous report
that the Brotherhood’s terrorist vision of integrating armed militias
constitutes the nucleus for establishing a Revolutionary Guard in Libya and the
emergence of more than one military body, while threatening the Libyan state’s
stability and securing the interests of the Brotherhood, Qatar and Turkey.
Observers have warned that the Brotherhood’s vision
regarding the transitional phase, the militias and the Libyan National Guard
maintains political and security instability in the country and makes the
Libyan state and its institutions prey to the Brotherhood’s ambitions and
terrorism.
The Turkish-backed GNA is witnessing a state of division
between its wings due to conflicts and internal weakness, which the Brotherhood
is exploiting to control its military joints.
Despite the GNA’s attempts to appear internally cohesive,
evidence of the contrary could be witnessed when GNA Presidential Council Vice
Chairman Ahmed Maiteeq requested the military prosecutor to take action against
Major General Abdul Basit Marwan, one of the most prominent GNA military
leaders.
Sarraj’s loyal Tripoli Protection Force also launched an
attack against the Libyan Brotherhood, describing them as a tumor in the
country corrupting the land and penetrating the joints of the state in order to
destroy it.
The Tripoli Protection Force added that the Libyan
Brotherhood is a lost group and continues to sabotage and fabricate crises to
stifle the homeland and citizens and to stir up strife for the benefit of their
Turkish backers at the expense of the Libyan people.



