Turkey, Russia seen hampering settlement process in Libya
Turkey and Russia are moving counter the international
efforts led by the United States to impose a new political settlement in Libya,
which brings the spectre of war to the fore again about a month and a half
after the rival parties in the conflict announced a ceasefire following a year
and a half of war on the outskirts of Tripoli.
Since the ceasefire was announced, Turkey has not
stopped supplying weapons to the militias allied to the Islamist-dominated
Government of National Accord (GNA), according to Itamilradar, a website
specialising in monitoring military aircraft movements.
The site stated yesterday, Thursday, that “despite
the commitment in the Caucasus and the tensions with Greece, the Turkish
involvement in Libya does not diminish and the air bridge between Turkey and
Libya continues.”
“A few minutes ago a pair of Turkish Air Force
Airbus A-400Ms (15-0051 & 16-0055) left Misrata to return to Turkey after
traveling the opposite route last night,” the site added.
Such moves, coupled with previous statements by the
Syrian Observatory for Human Rights confirming Ankara’s withdrawal of a number
of Syrian mercenaries from Libya. show that Ankara has no intention to calm
things down in Libya.
Turkey is covering up its
political-process-threatening moves by claiming that they come within the framework
of training, assistance and consultations in the military and security fields.
On Thursday, Turkish Defence Minister Hulusi Akar
discussed with his Libyan counterpart Salah al-Din al-Nimroush the latest
developments in Libya.
A statement issued by the Turkish Defence Ministry
stated that the meeting took place at the ministry’s headquarters in the
capital, Ankara.
Akar stressed during the meeting that Turkey will
continue its support to its Libyan brothers in the fields of training,
assistance and military and security consultations.
Despite the launching of a series of inter-Libyan
talks in a number of Arab and Western capitals, the parties to the conflict on
the ground have not stopped brandishing the threat of war.
The air force of the Libyan National Army, led by
Field Marshal Khalifa Haftar, announced, on Sunday, that it had completed the
maintenance work on the MiG-23BN bombers squadron.
On Sunday, the spokesman for the armed forces, Major
General Ahmed al-Mismari, confirmed, through his Facebook page, that the army’s
MiG-23BN bombers are ready to carry out combat missions, which raised questions
about whether these aircraft were the same that AFRICOM (US Africa Command) had
claimed were deployed by Russia in al-Jufra Base in central Libya.
Last week, the Government of National Accord
announced that Salah al-Din al-Nimroush, accompanied by Chief of the General
Staff, Lt. Gen. Muhammad al-Haddad, and the heads of the general staff, visited
the Sirte-Al-Jufra operations room and the battle fronts.
In a statement published by the page of the
so-called Operation Volcano of Anger, the GNA forces carried out military
training exercises for artillery and tanks with live ammunition east of Misrata
on Wednesday morning, which carried messages threatening to violate the
ceasefire.
These developments reinforce the accusations
levelled by French Foreign Minister Jean-Yves Le Drian against Russia and
Turkey, accusing them of obstructing the political process in Libya.
According to press statements made by Le Drian to
the French newspaper Le Parisien, restoring peace to Libya can be summed up in
three steps, including “converting the current truce into a ceasefire, resuming
the oil economic activity and starting a political process that leads to
elections.” He added, however, that “the process is being hampered by the
intervention of foreign powers (Turkey and Russia), which support one side or
the other by bringing in Syrian fighters.”
Le Drian called for the necessity of breaking the
process of the “Syrianisation of the Libyan conflict” “through dialogue with
all the Libyan actors directly involved in the conflict.”
He considered the European position on Libya
“coherent”. “We agree with the Germans and the Italians on the need for
everyone, including (Khalifa) Haftar, to realise that there will be no military
solution,” Le Drian explained, which supports reports about the European Union
overcoming its differences on Libya.
Le Drian’s statements reflected the existence of a
US-European understanding to end the Russian and Turkish presence in Libya
through the political track.
The United States rejects any Russian role in Libya
and ignored Moscow’s calls for dialogue, while France rejects any Turkish
presence in Libya and the Mediterranean.
The increased Russian and Turkish interventions in
Libya since the end of last year have raised fears of the “Syrianisation” of
the Libyan conflict.
The United States accuses Russia of deploying
mercenaries belonging to the Wagner Group in the Libyan oil fields and ports,
while western Libyahas become under Turkey’s control, amid European attempts to
reduce that control, a trend that Washington appears to support.
Turkey is trying to pressure the President of the
Presidency Council, Fayez al-Sarraj, to complete the process of signing a
number of projects, foremost of which is the establishment of Turkish naval
bases in the ports of Misrata, Tripoli and Khums, and this before the election
of a new government.
European countries, led by France, are predictably
trying to hinder these projects, according to previous statements by Libyan
sources to The Arab Weekly.



