Ali dwells on Libya, Turkish interference in interview with Atlantico
CEMO Chairman says Egypt not to allow Libya to be controlled by Brotherhood, Turkey
Chairman of the Board
of the Center for Middle East Studies in Paris (CEMO), Abdel Rahim Ali, gave an
interview to the news site, Atlantico, about the situation in Libya and its
effects on the Middle East region.
Ali also focused in the
interview, conducted by the site's managing editor-in-chief, Alexandre del
Valle, on the positions of Egypt, the United Arab Emirates and France to
Turkish interference in the region and the support Turkish President Recep
Tayyip Erdogan gives to Islamists and mercenaries who had fled Syria, with
support from Qatar.
Here is the text of the
interview that was published in Atlantico:
Interview by: Alexandre
del Valle
Following years of
civil fighting induced by the French, British and American interference that
toppled the regime of longstanding Libyan ruler Muammar Gaddafi in 2011, Libya
is sinking into chaos and partition into two rival sections.
One of the resultant
sections acts against Islamists and is led by Gen. Khalifa Haftar whose forces
receive support from the authorities in Benghazi, and the Tobruk-based
parliament.
The other section is
ruled by the Government of National Accord which is backed by the Muslim
Brotherhood. This government is based in Libyan capital Tripoli and is backed
by Qatar and Turkey.
On October 23, the
United Nations started enforcing a ceasefire throughout Libya. Rival parties in
the war-torn country also agreed to start peace talks under Egyptian and United
Nations sponsorship.
Elections will likely
be held at the end of next year. Rival Libyan parties also agreed that foreign
militias, including those backed by Russia and Turkey, would leave Libya along
with jihadists and African mercenaries, within months.
Del Valle: Sir, Egypt is a
neighboring country of Libya. Some Egyptian nationals had been killed by
jihadists in the neighboring country. Egyptian President Abdel Fattah al-Sisi
warned several times that he would not allow the Muslim Brotherhood or Turkey
to control Libya. What is the official Egyptian position to Turkish presence in
Libya and support to the Muslim Brotherhood in Tripoli?
Ali: Egypt aims primarily
to reach a political settlement to the conflict in Libya. This is why it
contacts all parties to the conflict. It also works to neutralize parties
working to sabotage any potential agreements.
This was why Sisi drew
a red line around Sirte and Al-Jufra. The red line aims to keep Turkey and the
troops it backs away from the two cities because this will worsen the situation
in Libya.
Meanwhile, Egyptian
diplomats contact all parties to the conflict in Libya to encourage them to sit
on the negotiating table and start real dialogue. The aim here is to open the
door for a new political body that is approved by all parties. This body will
manage the transitional period and prepare for general and presidential
elections.
Del Valle: Turkey keeps sending
arms and jihadists to Libya with the aim of protecting the pro-Muslim
Brotherhood government in Tripoli. The forces of this government succeeded in
stopping the advance of the troops of Gen. Haftar towards Tripoli. Is there
anything new in this regard?
Ali: Turkey uses the
Americans' preoccupation with the presidential elections and the Russians
preoccupation with the war between Azerbaijan and Armenia and Europe's
preoccupation with the new wave of the
coronavairus and tries to complicate the situation in Libya. It does this by
sending mercenaries and arms to the country. This paves the road for a real
war, to which Egypt will most likely be a main party. The fact is that Egypt
will not allow unrest to reign in everywhere in Libya. Egypt and other
countries help Haftar to stand against all the challenges he is facing.
However, they do not send arms or fighters to him. They only do this by
preventing the flow of arms to Libya. They also try to unify regional states
against Turkish interference in Libya. Nonetheless, the possibility of war
between Egypt and Turkey is there while the whole world is looking somewhere
else.
Del Valle: This is very
dangerous. Do you think Egypt and the United Arab Emirates which fight the
Muslim Brotherhood and the new Ottoman imperialism will offer support to the
Armenians in their war against Azerbaijan?
Ali: The Armenian president
has already contacted Egypt and the United Arab Emirates. Some Arab countries,
I think, are moving to back Armenia. These countries just believe that Turkish
support to Azerbaijan is not separable from Erdogan's ambitions in the region.
Del Valle: How do you respond to
media outlets that claim that Egypt and the United Arab Emirates had already
stopped backing Haftar? The same media claims that the two countries put
pressure on the Libyan general to approve the presence of the Muslim
Brotherhood and Turkey in western Libya.
Ali: I think all this
is baseless. What is being said in this regard is so detached from reality. The
coming days will prove my point of view true.
Del Valle: There are fears in
some Arab states that a suspension of Egyptian and Emirati support to Haftar
would give the Muslim Brotherhood and jihadists to gain new ground in Libya.
Ali: Neither did Egypt or
the United Arab Emirates stop supporting Haftar. They might have a different
vision for Haftar's project when it comes to giving him the chance to become
the new president of Libya. This will hamper any peace talks in the future.
Turkey and its militias will also use this to advance their project in the
country. Egypt and the United Arab Emirates want to ensure that Haftar will be
part of any political equation in Libya as a commander of the Libyan army. I
think they prefer that a civilian would mount the Libyan saddle.