Daily Sabah (Turkey)

Russia sends more troops, weapons to aid Haftar

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is sending reinforcem­ents to Libya to help warlord Khalifa Haftar, according to a report published Monday.

The Wall Street Journal said that according to European and Libyan officials, private military contractor­s from Russia helped forces loyal to Haftar take control of Libya’s largest oil field last week.

With Russian cargo planes regularly shuttling between a Russian airbase in Syria and Libya in recent weeks, U.S. military officials said Moscow could deliver weapons or troops to strengthen the warlord, the report said.

It added that Russia has also dispatched MiG-29 fighter jets and an advanced radar

RUSSIA

system. The planes could be piloted by inexperien­ced contractor­s who will not adhere to internatio­nal law, warned Marine Corps Brig. Gen. Bradford Gering, director of operations for the U.S. Africa Command.

It also noted that Russia’s Foreign Ministry did not respond to a request for comment about the military support as they have said in the past that the military contractor­s do not represent the Russian government.

Over the weekend, the Libyan government complained about the existence of Russian mercenarie­s in the country, saying that they occupy the main oil fields and the government aims to clear foreign forces soon. Libyan Army Spokespers­on Muhammed Qanunu said Sirte, a focal point of criminal provisions and Russian mercenarie­s, who were defeated in Tripoli and Tarhuna, had become the most dangerous place for Libya’s peace and security, according to a statement issued by the press office of Operation Volcano of Rage.

The Wagner mercenarie­s had turned the Jufra base and airport into a command center to take control of southern oil fields. “We are determined to save these cities through either peaceful or military means,” he said.

Russia’s Wagner Group is one of the most controvers­ial mercenary groups in the world.

It is owned by Yevgeny Prigozhin, a businessma­n with close links to Russian President Vladimir Putin.

According to previous media reports, the Wagner Group has brought over 1,000 militias to Libya, including Russian pilots who trained troops loyal to Haftar. There were also reports of Russian Sukhoi-22 warplanes flying over Libya.

The Mercenarie­s previously had field experience in Ukraine and are now fighting in Libya, according to the media.

On Jan. 11, President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan said more than 2,000 Wagner mercenarie­s were currently fighting in Libya.

On Monday, the United States expressed concern about the Russian mercenarie­s’ interferen­ce in Libya’s energy facilities and oil fields, calling them “a direct assault on Libya’s sovereignt­y and prosperity.”

U.S. State Department Spokespers­on Morgan Ortagus shared a tweet saying: “We share Libya’s National Oil Corporatio­n’s deep concern about the interferen­ce of Russian Ministry of Defense’s proxy Wagner and foreign mercenarie­s against Libyan facilities and personnel at the (ElSharara) oil field. This is a direct assault on Libya’s sovereignt­y and prosperity.”

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