Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Egypt OK’d for Libya deployment

Move seen as opening door to confrontat­ion with Turkey

- SAMY MAGDY

CAIRO — Egypt’s parliament on Monday authorized the deployment of troops outside the country, a move seen as potentiall­y escalating the spiraling war in Libya after the Egyptian president threatened military action against Turkish-backed forces in the oil-rich country.

A troop deployment in Libya could bring Egypt and Turkey, close U.S. allies that support rival sides in the conflict, into direct confrontat­ion.

Egypt’s President Abdel-Fattah el-Sissi has called the strategic coastal city of Sirte a “red line” and warned that any attack on the city, which sits near Libya’s main oil-export terminals and fields, would prompt Egypt to intervene to protect its western border.

Turkish-backed forces allied with the U.N.-supported government in Tripoli, the capital, are mobilizing on the edges of Sirte and have vowed to retake the Mediterran­ean city, along with the inland Jufra airbase, from rival forces commanded by Khalifa Hifter and based in the east.

After a closed session in Cairo, Egypt’s House of Representa­tives, which is packed with supporters of el-Sissi, approved plans to send troops to “defend Egyptian

national security in the strategic western direction against the actions of armed criminal militias and foreign terrorists.”

The size and nature of the military deployment was unclear.

Libya was plunged into chaos when a NATO-backed uprising in 2011 toppled longtime dictator Moammar Gadhafi, who was later killed.

Drawn by Hifter’s anti-Islamist stance, Egypt, the United Arab Emirates and other foreign powers have provided his forces with critical military assistance against western militias. Russia has also emerged as a key supporter of Hifter, sending hundreds of mercenarie­s through Wagner Group, a private military company.

Turkey, a bitter rival of Egypt in a broader regional struggle over political Islam, is the main patron of the Tripoli forces, which are also backed by the wealthy Gulf state Qatar.

“Egypt will spare no efforts to support the sister Libya … to overcome the current critical crisis,” the Egyptian presidency said in a statement after a meeting of the National Defense Council on Sunday that was chaired by el-Sissi.

Egypt has been under pressure to act since the collapse this spring of Hifter’s 14-month campaign to oust the U.N.-supported government from the capital. Tripoli forces drove Hifter’s self-styled army from the capital’s suburbs, several western towns and a key air base.

The string of victories provoked fears in Egypt, which sees a Turkish presence on its porous western border as a threat. Relations between the countries have steadily deteriorat­ed since 2013, when el-Sissi led the military overthrow of Mohamed Morsi, an elected Islamist leader who enjoyed Turkey’s support.

Egypt’s state-run Al-Ahram daily reported on Sunday that the vote in parliament was intended to mandate el-Sissi to “intervene militarily in Libya to help defend the western neighbor against Turkish aggression.”

Libya’s east-based parliament, the sole elected body in the country, urged Egypt to send troops. Last week, el-Sissi hosted dozens of tribal leaders loyal to Hifter in Cairo, where he repeated that Egypt will “not stand idle in the face of moves that pose a direct threat to security.”

But el-Sissi has also pushed hard in recent weeks for a cease-fire and political settlement. The Egyptian military, which has for years steered clear of overseas campaigns and focused on fighting Islamic militants in the Sinai Peninsula, may be wary of deep involvemen­t in

Libya’s chaotic conflict.

The “distinct possibilit­y” of direct conflict between Egypt and Turkey, a NATO member, presents a “brand new headache for Washington,” said Jalel Harchaoui, a research fellow specializi­ng in Libyan affairs at the Clingendae­l Institute, an independen­t think tank in the Netherland­s.

The U.S. has sent mixed signals to the rival sides over the course of the war. Although increasing­ly concerned about Moscow’s growing influence in Libya, Washington “doesn’t want to articulate a real, coherent Libya policy,” Harchaoui said, leaving a void that has allowed Russia and Turkey to become major players.

In a call on Monday with President Donald Trump ahead of the parliament vote, el-Sissi said Egypt’s aim is to “prevent further deteriorat­ion of security in Libya,” according to a statement from the Egyptian presidenti­al spokesman. It said the two leaders agreed on maintainin­g a cease-fire and avoiding a military escalation in Libya.

Stephanie Williams, acting head of the U.N. support mission in Libya, on Monday also pushed the warring sides and their foreign backers to pull back from the brink, “to spare the 125,000 civilians who remain in harm’s way.”

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