Turkey renews military pledge to Libya as threat of Mediterranean war grows
The threat of a military clash in the Mediterranean
has drawn nearer following talks in which Turkey has underlined its willingness
to send troops to Libya to defend the country’s UN-recognised government.
The government of national accord in Tripoli, or
GNA, is facing what is billed as a decisive assault by General Khalifa Haftar,
the eastern Libyan military warlord.
Turkey, already at loggerheads with the US Congress
and EU on multiple fronts, last week signed a military co-operation agreement
with GNA that enables it to request troops from Turkey. The agreement, sent to
the Turkish parliament on Saturday, provides for a so-called quick reaction
force for police and military in Libya, as well as enhanced cooperation on
intelligence and defence.
Turkish support for the GNA government led by Fayez
al Serraj has until now been limited to drones and armaments, and it would be a
major escalation to send ground troops to defend Tripoli.
Turkey’s foreign minister, Mevlüt Çavuşoğlu,
and its defence minister, Hulusi Akar met with Serraj on the sidelines of a
major diplomatic conference in Doha, Qatar at the weekend. Çavuşoğlu,
speaking in Doha, said no formal request for troops has yet been made by the
GNA, but added “sending troops is the easiest way”.
Haftar’s airforce, backed by the United Arab
Emirates and Egypt, has already bombed the airport of the Libyan coastal town
of Misrata in a warning to Turkey not to send troops or further supplies.
Turkey, along with the UAE, was formally found by
the UN to be breaking the UN arms embargo, but the Turkish government seems
determined not to let Tripoli to fall into hands of the UAE-backed Haftar.
Haftar claims to be removing Islamist terrorists
from Tripoli. His opponents describe him as a war criminal who will snuff out
any chance of democracy in Libya.
Haftar’s assault was launched in April, but until
now has been bogged down in the suburbs of the capital.
The already multi-layered conflict has been made
more complex by the arrival of 200 Russian mercenaries backing Haftar, an
intervention that Serraj is highlighting to drum up support for his government
in Washington.
Serraj met the the influential Republican senator
Lindsey Graham, a confidante of president Donald Trump, on the sidelines of the
Doha conference to warn about Russian intervention. The Turkish president Recep
Tayyip Erdoğan has also urged Putin to order
the troops to withdraw.
As part of a binding together of Turkey and the
Tripoli government, the two sides have also drawn up a memorandum of
understanding to carve out drilling rights in the Mediterranean that has
infuriated the European Union, and in particular Greece. Athens says the
exclusive economic zone agreement in effect blocks Greece from drilling around
Crete and is illegal.
It has already expelled the Libyan ambassador to
Greece but not yet broken off diplomatic relations.
Ankara’s actions risk an anti-Turkish coalition
forming comprising Greece, Cyprus, Egypt, Israel, Jordan and Italy. These
countries came together under the umbrella of the eastern Mediterranean gas
forum – an outwardly energy-related but ultimately military partnership from
which Turkey was excluded. The natural gas reserves in the region are estimated
to be around 122 trillion cubic meters in total.
Turkey has warned the EU it has no right to declare
its agreement with Libya unlawful.
In the third Turkish foreign policy flashpoint with
the US, Çavuşoğlu
also said Turkey would not rescind its deal with Russia over the S-400 missile
defence system. He said “it is a done deal. We cannot cancel this. This is for
sure, whatever the consequences, this is the situation”.
The US Congress, also angry Turkish intervention in
Syria, has said the use of the S-400 defence system is incompatible with
Turkey’s membership of Nato, and called for sanctions. Graham warned in Doha
“if there was a vote in the senate for sanctions it would receive 90% support,
and be veto-proof. The one thing that Erdoğan
did that no one else could do is to unite the Republicans and Democrats”.
Çavuşoğlu
responded: “Sanctions
and threatening language never work. But if sanctions are placed, Turkey has to
reciprocate.
“We are very desperate for an air defence system.
From the last 10 years, we tried to procure it from the US and others, but it
didn’t work. The Russians gave us the S-400 and it was the best deal”.
The US approved the sale of the Patriot missiles
last December in the hope that Turkey would tear up the deal for the rival
Russian surface-to-air missiles. But the Russian deliveries went ahead and the
US said in August that its offer was off the table.
The US has started unwinding Turkey from their joint
program to build F-35 fighters and has threatened it will not sell the jets to
Ankara for fear the technology could be compromised by the proximity to Russian
technicians servicing the S-400.
In a sign of the deteriorating relations between
Turkey and the US Congress, if not the White House, the Senate on Thursday
unanimously passed a resolution officially recognizing the Armenian genocide,
joining the House in condemning Turkey’s mass slaughter of 1.5 million people
early last century.
The move follows a Wednesday vote in the Senate
armed services committee to impose sanctions on Turkey over its recent purchase
of a Russian missile system and its offensive against the Kurdish minority in
Syria.
The Turkish foreign minister said Turkey was willing
to set up a joint working group including scientists historians and
anthropologists to open the archives.