The Independent

Egypt threatens to enter Libya conflict – risking regional clash with Turkey

Heart of the battle moves to hometown of Colonel Gaddafi

- BORZOU DARAGAHI INTERNATIO­NAL CORRESPOND­ENT

The ongoing war in Libya appeared as if it were heading towards a direct confrontat­ion between regional powers Turkey and Egypt over control of the hometown of former leader Muammar Gaddafi.

Over the weekend, Egypt’s president Abdel Fattah el-Sisi, a backer of eastern Libyan warlord Khalifa Haftar, threatened to deploy troops to halt an advance by fighters loyal to the internatio­nally recognised Government of National Accord (GNA) in Tripoli on the coastal city of Sirte as well as a key airbase in the

southern town of Jufrah.

“The preparedne­ss to fight has become inevitable and necessary amid the prevailing instabilit­y and turmoil in our region,” Mr Sisi said in a speech to military officials.

The GNA, backed militarily by Turkey, called Mr Sisi’s threat a “declaratio­n of war,” and refused to halt its offensive. “We reject this, condemn it and consider it an act of aggression, a blatant interventi­on, which amounts to a declaratio­n of war,” the GNA said in a letter on Sunday.

The Arab League is scheduled to discuss the confrontat­ion in Libya during an emergency session today, but Tripoli is boycotting.

“We urge parties to commit to a ceasefire and resume negotiatio­ns immediatel­y,” the US Embassy declared in a tweet, but efforts at diplomacy appeared to be failing.

Turkey and its allies appear confident of a win and in no mood for a deal, and Mr Haftar and his supporters abroad, humiliated in weeks of battlefiel­d advances, are reluctant to give any concession­s from a position of weakness.

“The Turks had a point,” said one western diplomat involved in Libya affairs. “They had to establish deterrence. Now they are acknowledg­ing that they want to take control of the whole territory. They are saying Haftar has to go.”

Libya’s civil war has been deadly, disruptive and gruesome. Hundreds of thousands have been displaced and hundreds killed. Last week came the discovery of mass graves filled with scores of bodies in the city of Tarhouna, where a militia loyal to Mr Haftar was pushed out last month by GNA forces.

“Civilians in Libya continue to suffer disproport­ionately,” Stephanie Williams, the acting UN envoy to Libya, said last week in a presentati­on. “One million people are now in need of some form of humanitari­an assistance.”

Sirte, a city of some 50,000 people, is significan­t as the last major urban cluster before a set of crucial Libyan oil facilities and depots located on Libya’s eastern Mediterran­ean shore and controlled for now by forces loyal to Mr Haftar. It is home to a local population filled with supporters of Gaddafi who are allied with Mr Haftar and remain intensely hostile to the Islamist-tinged government in Tripoli.

It was controlled by militias loyal to the GNA until earlier this year, and both Ankara and the Tripoli government have said they would halt their offensive and be open to peace talks once it and Jufrah are under their control.

Egypt boasts significan­t air and ground forces which could boost Mr Haftar in the battlefiel­d and challenge any forces Turkey and the GNA could muster.

But Marsa Matrouh, the last city at the Egyptian border where its troops are garrisoned, is some 15 hours away from Sirte. Meanwhile, Turks and allied GNA militias have a strong presence in Misurata, which lies less than three hours from Sirte, and Ankara has been flooding western Libya with military material and personnel for months.

“Egypt’s political will to enter a physical contest with the Turkish-backed GNA coalition is not big,” said Jalel Harchaoui, a North Africa specialist at the Clingendae­l Institute in the Netherland­s. “Turkey and the GNA forces are ready to move forcefully into both Sirte and Jufrah any day now.”

Mr Sisi has appeared disappoint­ed in Mr Haftar’s failures but is also under pressure from financial backers in the UAE and Saudi Arabia, who are hostile to the GNA’s inclusion of populist Islamist factions and see Turkey as a strategic threat. Egypt also views events in Libya with grave concern, worried troubles could spill over into its borders.

“I believe the assertive language is serious and could lead to some form of action or military deployment even if largely symbolic,” said one Egyptian military analyst. “It appears Egypt’s intent is to force ceasefire negotiatio­ns by acting as counterbal­ance to Turkish and GNA strength on the ground.”

The conflict in Libya has drawn in various internatio­nal powers and their local backers. On the one side is Mr Haftar, the eastern commander and former CIA asset who is supported by the United Arab Emirates,

Egypt, Russia and France.

On the other side is the GNA in Tripoli, which in addition to Ankara has begun to receive the implicit blessing of Italy, Germany and the UK.

Backed by UAE air power and Russian and Sudanese mercenarie­s, Mr Haftar launched an ill-fated offensive to take control of Tripoli last year. All of his gains were wiped out in a few extraordin­ary weeks after Turkey forcefully intervened, dispatchin­g drones, anti-aircraft machinery, military personnel, and Syrian mercenarie­s to back the GNA forces.

After initially supporting Mr Haftar, the White House under president Donald Trump appears to have settled into indifferen­ce. Yesterday, GNA prime minister Fayez Serraj and high-profile interior minister Fathi Bashagha reportedly received a delegation of US military commanders from Africom, the US military force in Africa, amid concern about the deployment of Russian fighter jets in Jufrah.

“I don’t think the Trump administra­tion is willing to be associated with someone who’s losing and also a war criminal,” Mohammed Ali Abdallah, a GNA envoy to the US, said in an interview.

 ?? (AFP/Getty) ?? Members of Libyan National Army gather in the city of Benghazi
(AFP/Getty) Members of Libyan National Army gather in the city of Benghazi
 ?? (AFP/Getty) ?? Egyptian president Abdel Fattah el-Sisi (above) meets a member of the security forces during a visit to the Sinai Peninsula; (below) Turkish president Recep Tayyip Erdogan (left) shakes hands with Turkish commander Ismail Metin Temel in Hatay province
(AFP/Getty) Egyptian president Abdel Fattah el-Sisi (above) meets a member of the security forces during a visit to the Sinai Peninsula; (below) Turkish president Recep Tayyip Erdogan (left) shakes hands with Turkish commander Ismail Metin Temel in Hatay province

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom