Turkey in Libya…Sabotaging, chaos and seeking a goddamn legacy
The process of sending foreign terrorists to Libya
under the supervision of Turkey has not stopped since 2011.
Erdogan's dreams are causing him to clash head-on
with regional states. Libya has fallen in the heart of
Erdogan's expansionist strategies.
Erdogan's goals in Libya were not political and
military only. The Turkish ruler also had economic goals he wanted to achieve
in the North African state.
The more the army makes progress in place, the more
the Turkish support for terrorists will increase; Turkey has pushed more
terrorists from Syria.
Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan is trying to
pursue a new foreign policy in order to extend Ankara's influence to the
countries of the eastern Mediterranean, and to gain strategic and economic
gains as well, through political Islam groups with an ideological background in
line with Turkey.
In this context, the Turkish government continues to
support the hard-line militias in the Libyan capital of Tripoli, supplying them
with mercenaries and arms. All to obstruct the advancement of the Libyan
national army led by Khalifa Haftar against the militias that are being
supported by Turkey and Qatar, especially with the collapse of the Muslim
Brotherhood organization in Egypt, Syria and Sudan.
Turkey’s support for Libya’s internationally-backed
government aims to salvage billions of dollars of business contracts thrown
into limbo by the conflict and secure more leverage in the scramble for oil and
gas in the Mediterranean.
Turkey’s main goal in backing the Tripoli-based
government of Fayez al-Sarraj is to ensure it will eventually be able to resume
construction projects.
Restoring calm and keeping Sarraj’s government in
place would also make it easier to demarcate maritime borders, helping Turkey
expand its exclusive economic zones and strengthen its hand in the competition
for control of energy resources and supply routes in the eastern Mediterranean.
Turkey is vying with Cyprus for control of potential
offshore energy finds and wants to become the main conduit to Europe for
natural gas supplies from the eastern Mediterranean.
Turkey wants to repeat what happened in Syria again
in Libya, and seeks to have negotiations for the division of Libya, and to have
a role in these negotiations. Turkey considers Libya an empty space that can be
used in military exercises and war games.
Turkey supports Islamists groups in Libya for its
own interests, including the possession of Libyan oil and all the
reconstruction projects. Turkey is increasing the complications of crises in
the regions, such as supporting militias of al-Sarraj government, so that
Ankara would have a seat at the international negotiations table regarding
regional cases.
The Turkish intervention in Libya is due to the help
of the Muslim Brotherhood, which is allied with the Libyan Presidential Council
and governs largely in the capital Tripoli. The Libyan army threatens the
Brotherhood on which Turkey depends to control the Arab countries, so Turkey is
working to provide them with the necessary support so as not to make them lose
control of Tripoli in any way.
Ankara wants to compete with France and Italy to
impose influence in the Libyan territory, stressing that Turkey opposes Egypt
and the United Arab Emirates because they help the Libyan national army led by
Marshal Khalifa Hafter in his fight against terrorism.
Turkey wants to make Tripoli a fortified fortress in
front of the progress of the Libyan army, and for that it supports the militias
Al-Sarraj by aircrafts and heavy artillery.
Turkey's ruling Justice and Development (AK) Party,
said more than once that political Islamists groups is one of Turkey’s tools to
improve its image in front of the world, as Ankara uses that to project itself
as the first defender of everything that is “Muslim”, with an intention to
trick all Muslims into being loyal to the country.
For the Turkish ruler, Libya is a good place for
regrouping and regaining power, Sending special combat
troops to Libya is not foreign to Ankara which sent similar troops to Syria in
the past.
The battle in Tripoli is a profitable market for
Turkey to dispose of some of its military exports, adding that its consensus
with Libya’s Muslim Brotherhood makes the battle in Tripoli fateful for Ankara.
Until 2011, Turkey invested $38.9 billion in Libya.
Around 25,000 Turkish nationals also worked in Libya. Erdogan was dreaming of
laying his hands on Libya's huge natural gas production.
In February 2019, the head of the Muslim
Brotherhood-controlled National Accord Government Fayez al-Sarraj welcomed
Turkish investments back to his country, especially in the areas controlled by
his government.
A conference on Turkish development and investments
was also held in Istanbul. The conference called for the formation of a joint
Turkish-Libyan panel to organize Turkish investments in Libya.
Nevertheless, the ongoing march by the National
Libyan Army towards Libyan capital Tripoli has confused Turkish calculations.
The campaign has threatened Turkish aspirations in Libya, which is why Erdogan
is publicly opening a new front against the National Libyan Army.
However, this showdown is causing harm to Turkish
companies operating in Libya which have become a main target for the army. This
is especially true with these companies becoming main supporters of Turkish
action in Libya.
Erdogan's policies are causing untold losses to the
Turkish companies. Turkish companies invest now around $19 billion in Libya
The collapse of economic activities and the
suspension of the activities of Mitiga International Airport also caused
economic losses to Turkey. The airport used to stand at the center of economic
activities worth $3 billion every year.
Turkish investors are no longer wanted inside Libya.
Libyan companies have lost overdue money of around $1 billion, according to the
official Turkish news agency Anadolu.
The economic crisis in Turkey compounds the effects
of the losses Turkey is sustaining in Libya. The Turkish minister of trade
expressed hopes a few weeks ago that his country's trade relations with Libya
would return to normal.
Erdogan puts his full weight behind the Muslim
Brotherhood whose militias fight side by side with the troops of the National
Accord Government, led by Fayez al-Sarraj.
Turkish support to the Brotherhood reflects the
calamity of the Islamist organization, both at the political level and in the
field. This calamity is especially true in the light of determination by the
Libyan National Army to bring down the expansionist project of the group.
Erdogan's arming of the terrorist militias in Libya
violates a United Nations arms embargo on the North African state. The Turkish
ruler sent shipments of arms and ammunitions to Libya, along with drones in a
desperate attempt to make the balance of power to tip in favor of Sarraj.
UN report finds Turkey violated Libya arms embargo. Turkey
has regularly violated the UN arms embargo imposed on Libya since 2011,
according to a confidential report by UN experts.
Ankara "routinely and sometimes blatantly
supplied weapons with little effort to disguise the source," a summary of
a year-long study by UN experts said.
The 85-page document and a more than 300-page annex
includes pictures, maps and copies of ship manifests of cargos delivered to
Libya by sea.