The Irish Mail on Sunday

Putin’s taking over Libya by stealth to point a new weapon at West – millions of desperate migrants

- By MICHAEL BURLEIGH

SO BLOODY and extensive is President Putin’s record of aggression, not least in Syria and Ukraine, that an incursion into the empty deserts of north Africa might hardly seem worth noting. Yet the discovery that Russia is moving troops and missiles into war-torn Libya has rightly caused alarms to sound throughout the capitals of Europe.

It is a step of huge significan­ce, and one with potentiall­y disastrous results for Western nations.

Libya has both oil and Mediterran­ean ports, and Russia is hungry for both – cause enough for concern, perhaps.

Yet the real fear for European government­s is this: Libya, with its porous southern borders, has become the main jumping-off point for the hundreds of thousands of African migrants seeking to cross the Mediterran­ean to the shores of the EU and, in particular, Italy.

More than half a million adults and children from Ghana, Senegal, Kenya and Nigeria, as well as warravaged Eritrea and Somalia, have made the perilous voyage in the last five years, the human cargo in a £6bn-a-year trade more lucrative and less risky than smuggling drugs.

Now, by establishi­ng military bases in the port cities of Tobruk and Benghazi, Putin has raised the nightmare prospect that Moscow could soon take control of that migrant flow, turning it on and off like a tap. And that means threatenin­g European government­s who oppose him with outright political chaos in reply.

THE Russian presence in Libya has been building for months. In the port cities, it comes in the shape of private military companies such as the Wagner and RSB groups, tough-guy contractor­s who, while not formally part of the Russian army, nonetheles­s work closely with Putin’s paramilita­ry GRU.

These contractor­s have also been seen in eastern Libya, near the border with Egypt, where they have been defending critical oil wells against Libya’s many armed militias. They have also been training Libyan troops and providing intelligen­ce for the Libyan army.

Earlier this year, the Tunisian authoritie­s took possession of a ship flying the Panamanian flag that was found to be carrying 24 containers of Russian military equipment and 66 Russian military transport vehicles. The ship was bound for Libya.

There are also plausible reports that Russian missile systems – thought to include the Kalibr antiship missiles and S-300 air defence missiles – are now establishe­d on Libyan soil.

Russia even has a tame Libyan warlord with his own ‘national army’. Putin has for some time been cultivatin­g 75-year-old Field Marshal Khalifa Haftar (a naturalise­d American who, after helping put Colonel Gaddafi in power in 1969, eventually fled to the US after the two men fell out).

Today, he is the main recipient of Russian arms and money, including notes printed on Moscow presses.

This is not the first time that Libyan migration has been used as a threat. In 2010, Gaddafi notoriousl­y told then Italian premier Silvio Berlusconi that he could ‘turn Europe black’ by simply deciding to loosen his control of the Mediterran­ean coastline.

‘What will be the reaction of the white and Christian Europeans faced with this influx of starving and ignorant Africans?’ asked the dictator. ‘We don’t know if Europe will remain an advanced and united Continent or if it will be destroyed, as happened with the barbarian invasions.’

To demonstrat­e his power, Gaddafi then ‘encouraged’ tribal people smugglers in Libya’s wild southwest with a £4m bribe to focus on exporting fuel and flour southwards, rather than moving migrants northwards towards Europe. It worked. Indeed, it was Gaddafi’s sudden removal in 2011 – thanks to America, Britain and France’s vainglorio­us attempt at regime change – that establishe­d Libya as the number one staging post for migrants from sub-Saharan Africa.

If Gaddafi’s main aim was survival, Putin has a more expansive game to play, one that he hopes means a restoratio­n of the power and influence that Russia enjoyed before the abject humiliatio­n of the 1990s. First, there are the diplomatic objectives. Putin wants to boost his military presence on the EU’s southern border.

Nato, he feels, has been encircling Russia, now he intends to give Europe a taste of its own medicine by establishi­ng an emphatic presence in the Med. His navy has at present only one Mediterran­ean base, at Tartus in Syria. Another near Benghazi – less than 300 miles from southern Italy – would be a major statement of Russian sea power.

SERIOUS money is a motive, too. Russia – this time in the form of Rosneft, the huge oil company controlled by Putin’s sinister crony Igor Sechin – is interested in a slice of Libya’s vast oil reserves, the largest in Africa.

Libya currently produces about 700,000 barrels of oil per day, but the country could increase its output to 2.5million if peace were eventually establishe­d.

Down the line, a continued Russian presence means Moscow would be in pole position to win lucrative contracts to rebuild the country’s shattered infrastruc­ture and, of course, to gain a hugely profitable market for arms sales.

Aside from oil and gas, weapons are one of the few Russian products in demand from other nations. Russia had huge business interests with Gaddafi’s Libya and lost around $10bn in oil and other contracts – including $3bn for a railway project and a $4bn arms deal – when he was deposed.

Part of Putin’s drive is his continuing fury at the Western military interventi­on that brought chaos to the Middle East and damaged Russian interests in the process.

Today, the Russian president is conspicuou­sly helping stick the pieces back together. Moscow is involved in internatio­nal talks regarding the futures of Afghanista­n and Syria. It would like to present itself as the saviour of Libya, too.

Putin has establishe­d himself as a go-to man for the Middle East, so potentates from King Abdullah of Jordan and King Salman of Saudi Arabia to Israel’s President Netanyahu and Iran’s President Rouhani, visit the Kremlin to pay assiduous court.

Trump, it is worth noting, is yet to appoint ambassador­s to Saudi Arabia or to Turkey, let alone to Libya.

On a more personal note, Putin was alarmed at the horrific fate of his fellow leader: after a six-month Nato bombing campaign, Gaddafi was shot in the head in a roadside culvert with a bayonet rammed into his backside.

Or as Russian officials put it, he was killed ‘like a mangy old cur’. That is not, presumably, how the Russian president thinks regional strong men should be treated.

ABOVE all else, however, Putin is an opportunis­t. He seeks not just the lifting of sanctions against his country, but the continued destabilis­ation of Europe, which is why he has so avidly supported its separatist and nationalis­t parties. It remains a hugely successful tactic. The West, meanwhile, after years of diplomatic ineptitude and catastroph­ically wrong-headed interventi­on, seems unable to muster a response.

Should we co-operate with Russia and with other world powers to rebuild the shattered Libyan state? Might that at least help rein Putin in, however distastefu­l a partner he might seem? It is a dilemma we must now face.

Today, through a combinatio­n of Italian bribery and diplomacy, the Libyan coastline is at least partially secured.

But if, tomorrow, Russia really does seize control of the Libyan state and its vast reservoir of desperate migrants – one of the great destabilis­ing forces facing Europe – the prospect for us all is terrifying indeed.

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