Ankara continues to sink in quagmire as Turkish soldiers mobilize in western Libyan
At a time when the Libyan crisis seems to be heading for a
breakthrough, Ankara continues to send hundreds of soldiers to western Libya to
fuel the conflict, in addition to withdrawing nearly 1,500 mercenaries in an
attempt to delude the international community that it is complying with their
decisions.
Sending the military
Earlier this week, Turkey pushed hundreds of its soldiers to
western Libya, in the area controlled by the Government of National Accord
(GNA) and its affiliated militias, in order to intensify its military presence
after withdrawing 1,500 mercenaries from there.
Recent days have witnessed the operation of nearly 36 Turkish
military flights, which was monitored by air traffic monitoring sites. Those
flights carried a number of soldiers and in return transferred mercenaries from
Libya to Azerbaijan to support it in its war against Armenia.
The withdrawal of mercenaries comes as a step by Ankara to
delude the international community that it is complying with their decisions to
withdraw mercenaries from Libya, while strengthening its presence with regular
soldiers in greater numbers. This also comes as these mercenaries have caused
armed clashes between the militias loyal to the GNA in western Libya for moral
and financial reasons, which prompted Turkey to transfer them outside Libyan
territory for fear of weakening its front in western Libya after they carried
out many terrorist operations without prior coordination with the Turkish
intelligence on timing and objectives. This caused an embarrassment for the
regime of Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan in front of some international
forces supporting its presence in Libya.
Al-Watiya air base is witnessing high fortification,
including the Turkish military securing the perimeter of the airport in
anticipation of the presence of mines, amid reports that six warplanes will
soon arrive, along with other reports related to attempts by GNA Prime Minister
Fayez al-Sarraj to bring Pakistani pilots to western Libya.
Burdened by mercenaries
Ankara's mercenaries caused embarrassment to the Turkish
regime because of their actions in western Libya and fueling the conflict
between the armed militias loyal to the Sarraj government, while Tripoli
witnessed terrorist operations by these factions, including a suicide bombing
near the headquarters of the UN mission in the Janzour region, west of Tripoli,
in early September.
According to the interpretations of Libyan security sources,
such incidents prompted the Turkish intelligence to expel mercenaries from
Libya, but at the same time they brought in a greater numbers of soldiers.



