Erdogan confined by red lines: Turkey fails in Libya following Egyptian warning (Part 3)
Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan has become confined
to the red lines imposed on him by the active states in the region. He has not
moved an inch within Libya after Egyptian President Abdel Fattah al-Sisi warned
him that Sirte and Jufra represent a red line.
Erdogan also failed to achieve his goals in Syria after
Russian warnings that restrained his ambitions there. The same thing was
repeated in the Mediterranean and Greek territorial waters, where the Turkish
leader took a step back after French President Emmanuel Macron sent military aid
to protect the Greek coasts.
In the third and final part of this file, we discuss how
Egypt put the Turkish president in his place and confined him to the red line
imposed by Sisi.
Turning point
Egypt brought Erdogan back to normal size when Sisi announced
on June 20 that Sirte and Jufra represent a red line for Egypt’s national
security, due to the armed militias and illegal Turkish interference. No one,
whether terrorist militias, mercenaries or the invading Turkish forces, have
dared to bypass this red line, even though Ankara was mobilizing all its naval,
air and land forces, in addition to transporting thousands of mercenaries to
Libya in order to invade the two cities.
The targeting of Libya’s Watiya air base southwest of
Tripoli, which is under the control of the Government of National Accord (GNA)
militias and Turkey, constituted a turning point in the Libyan crisis, as it
coincided with Turkish efforts to emphasize Ankara’s great influence in Libya,
as well as in light of the precision of the bombing and the large losses
resulting from it.
According to an analysis published by the Future Center for Advanced
Research and Studies, the strike showed the failure of Turkey, as Ankara was
unable to monitor or respond to it. It also succeeded in limiting Turkey’s
influence and thwarting the de facto policy that the Turkish regime was trying
to impose on the ground. The strike also proved the existence of regional and
international powers capable of changing the balance on the ground at any time,
regardless of Turkey.
The military strike and the Egyptian-imposed red line pushed
a number of mercenaries brought by Turkey to withdraw from Libya. This was
confirmed by the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, which explained that
approximately 5,250 mercenaries returned to Syria out of more than 15,000
mercenaries recruited by Ankara to fight alongside the GNA in Libya.
Erdogan project toppled
The agreement between the Tobruk-based House of
Representatives and the Tripoli-based GNA Presidency Council led by Fayez
al-Sarraj to implement a ceasefire and return to the political path towards
organizing parliamentary and presidential elections next spring has largely toppled
Erdogan’s project, in light of both Libyan parties calling for the exit of
foreign forces and mercenaries from the country, in addition to securing Sirte
and Jufra with regular police forces from different regions of the country.
The ceasefire agreement also stipulated the return of pumping
Libyan oil to foreign markets, provided that revenues are deposited in an
account with the Libyan Foreign Bank (LFB) and remain frozen until a political
solution is reached. This in turn cuts off the financing of outlaw militias,
mercenary groups and terrorists.
Terrible defeat for the Turkish project
The ceasefire agreement represents a terrible defeat for the
Turkish project in Libya. Ankara, which has continued to beat the drums of war
and work to extend its influence over Libya’s areas of wealth, especially the
Oil Crescent, has no choice but to submit to the status quo, as there is no
longer room for attempts to extort the GNA, especially as the agreement has
been achieved under American pressure on both parties and guarantees from
Washington that none of them will go beyond the understandings of the
agreement. This also completely restrains Erdogan’s mercenaries and begins the
process of deporting them and dismantling the militias in the west of the
country. Furthermore, it endeavors to integrate the regular military forces
under the command of the Sarraj government into the Libyan National Army (LNA).
Big slap for the Turkish president
Sarraj’s decision to resign from his post in October
following the conflicts in the western region comes as a major blow to the
Turkish president, because it means that he is losing his primary ally, who had
opened the doors wide to Libya with the maritime border demarcation agreement
between Ankara and the GNA, the expansion of exclusive economic zones in Libya,
and supporting its competition in controlling the sources of energy and supply
in the eastern Mediterranean. This was before Egypt entered and spoiled Turkey’s
plan to rob Libya’s resources and threaten its national security. Cairo
succeeded in imposing a blockade on Erdogan in the Eastern Mediterranean region
and the Middle East when it set a red line that no one dares pass due to the
strength of Egypt and fear of its reaction.



