World rising up against Erdogan
Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan will send troops and battle-hardened jihadists to Libya with the aim of sabotaging attempts to stabilize the country and end the control of terrorist militias on it.
Nonetheless, his plan faces internal opposition. Erdogan's plan, the
Turkish opposition says, will cause the shedding of Muslims' blood. It rejects
a repetition of the Syrian scenario in another country.
The same plan faces international opposition. The European Union will
likely impose sanctions on Turkey as a growing number of countries call for
settling the Libyan crisis in a negotiated manner, away from Turkish
interference.
Meanwhile, the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights revealed that
Turkey had already sent 300 militants to Libya. Some of these militants, the
observatory said, received training at Turkish military camps in Syria before
travelling to Libya.
The Turkish parliament convened on January 2, instead of January 8, to
approve a request by the Turkish president to send troops to Libya.
All-out resistance
Several countries declared their opposition to the Turkish plan. The
same countries are harrowing to prevent Erdogan from carrying out this plan.
Political action
France, Germany, the UK and Italy will hold a conference on Libya in
Berlin, Germany, to find political solutions to the Libyan crisis.
On December 5, Greece declared the Libyan ambassador in Athens a
"persona non grata". The foreign ministers of the European Union held
consultations on means of curbing the negative effects of the deals Turkey
signed with the Tripoli-based Government of National Accord (GNA).
On October 8, an Egyptian-Greek, Cypriot summit was held in Cairo to
discuss the protection of the rights of the three states in the Eastern
Mediterranean region. They also discussed support to effort made by Cyprus to
reach a settlement to the Cypriot crisis in the light of the resolutions of the
United Nations Security Council. The three states also declared their
opposition to Turkish moves in the Eastern Mediterranean, especially in the
Cypriot economic zone.
Military action
The Eastern Mediterranean region has been the scene of a series of
naval drills aiming at countering growing threats in it.
Egypt held joint military drills with Greece. Greece also participated
in military drills in Egypt in 2017 and 2018 at the Mohamed Naguib Military
Base in the Egyptian Western Desert.
On November 2019, Egypt declared the launch of joint air and naval
drills with Greece and Cyprus. The drills aim at countering potential threats.
The drills came at a time of high tension between Greece and Cyprus, on one
hand, and Turkey, on the other, over natural gas exploration in the Eastern
Mediterranean region.
Economic action
There appeared a series of economic measures to penalize Turkey for
its negative policies in the region. US sanctions were some of the most
outstanding measures in this regard. The US imposed sanctions on Turkey for
allowing the Nord Stream pipeline to pass through its territories on the road
from Russia to Germany.
Turkey is in a real crisis. It will anger the US if it does not
succumb to American demands as far as the pipeline is concerned. It will anger
Russia if it succumbs to the American demands. Russia can also impose economic
sanctions on Turkey.
On November 11, 2019, European foreign ministers signed a legal
framework that will open the door for imposing European sanctions on Turkey
against the background of its exploration activities in the Eastern
Mediterranean region.