2020: Libya responds to Erdogan's thuggery and his mercenaries’ terror
Since 2011, the situation in Libya has not been stable, and
it has been in a fluctuating state between setbacks, wars and interventions
from various parties, which allowed the militants of terrorist militias to take
control of the country, integrate them within the joints of the state, and
spread their weapons on a large scale. This made the North African country,
which is burdened with conflicts, easy prey for exacerbating political,
security and economic crises.
At the end of 2020, Libya witnessed the utmost economic
poverty, which was left by repeated terrorist operations. It incurred losses of
about $492 million annually, according to the index issued by the Australian
Institute of Economics and Peace in cooperation with the American Union for the
Study of Terrorism at the University of Maryland.
Libya ranked sixth in the Arab world in the list of
countries with terrorist activity for the year 2020, and in contrast, the
government treasury lost about $4.9 billion over the past 12 years, while 1,923
attacks were counted that resulted in 1,876 deaths, in addition to material
losses in infrastructure.
Libya a year ago
It was an eventful year in the fight against terrorism on
the Libyan lands, as the Libyan National Army (LNA) did not hesitate to
confront the extremist militias and mercenaries whom Turkish President Recep
Tayyip Erdogan pushed to complete his fascist plans and blatant interventions
in the region. The LNA inflicted heavy losses upon them after it fought strong
battles and cleansed and restored security throughout the country, as well as
securing oil areas and strategic sites.
At the beginning of 2020, the LNA entered the former ISIS stronghold
in the coastal city of Sirte, located 450 kilometers east of Tripoli, and on
January 6, the LNA imposed its control over the airport of Al-Qardabiya base,
which changed the course of affairs, and it subsequently opened the largest and
most important cities in support of terrorist militias, most notably Buqrin,
Al-Heisha, and Al-Wasika, east of Misrata, which contains two sea and air ports
that are used to bring weapons and mercenaries from Turkey.
The LNA Air Force targeted a number of sanctuaries for
terrorist militias in all the axes of the capital, including sites for storing
weapons, ammunition and vehicles, and a transport bus containing a number of
Syrian mercenaries was targeted while transporting them from the Maitika
military base, killing 16 Turkish soldiers participating in the operations in
Libya, in addition to 105 mercenaries brought by Ankara.
Consecutive losses
The defeats of the terrorist militia continued throughout,
and in February, the losses reached more than 370 people, including 130 of
different nationalities, most of them Syrians, in addition to more than 470
wounded, most of them from extremist elements of African and Syrian
nationalities, in addition to the destruction of more than 180 armed vehicles
aand downing more than 40 Turkish drones.
In March, the air force and artillery targeted several
Turkish sites, including radars and missile systems east of Misrata and Mitiga
airport, in addition to targeting a number of leaders of terrorist
organizations, Syrian mercenaries loyal to Turkey, and terrorists fleeing
Benghazi in Tripoli. The LNA managed to take control of the headquarters of the
Fourth Brigade of the Juwaili militia, one of the largest camps in southwestern
Tripoli and Bab Al-Aziziyah.
With the passage of a few days, the LNA had completely
controlled the situation in the city of Tarhuna and Ain Zara after violent
battles with the militias, and 36 mercenaries were taken as prisoners,
including field commanders, while dozens of them were killed.
Pursuit of Turkish weapons
The Turkish president will never cease to ignite the war in
Libya and his endeavor to achieve his strategic goals inside the region by
broadcasting mercenaries and continuing to push weapons in strategic areas. In
return, the LNA pursued those mercenaries and their weapons and tried to
destroy them by striking them, which resulted in losses.
In May, the LNA carried out a qualitative operation east of
Tripoli against Turkish mercenaries it called the “Ababil Birds”, which resulted
in the destruction of a Turkish weapons shipment in the city of Misrata, the
destruction of Zakhira and weapons stores, seizing a number of armed cars, and
killing a number of militia members, in addition to targeting the centers of
the Brotherhood-backed Government of National Accord (GNA) militias in the
Tajoura region and the headquarters of the Rahba militia, which resulted in the
killing of more than 40 militants.
The LNA’s successes in standing up to terrorism and ridding
the country of mercenaries and militias continue.
In June, the LNA Air Force bombed a convoy of Turkish
militias west of the city of Sirte at the axis of Al-Wasaka and completely
destroyed it, in addition to destroying many air defense systems that are
operated by Turkish officers.
Conclusion
At the end of this busy year, the LNA managed to arrest
seven terrorists in a qualitative operation, while targeting one of the
hideouts of al-Qaeda in the Islamic Maghreb (AQIM) in the Ubari region in the
southwest of the country, and confiscating large quantities of ammunition,
weapons and dangerous documents.
Just recently, the LNA succeeded in taking control of the
Commando camp, one of the most important pillars of the GNA militias in the
Ubari area, after it was preparing to use it in the attack on the oil fields in
southern Libya.



