Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Turkey is expanding its footprint in conflict-ridden Libya

- By Samy Magdy Associated Press writer Suzan Fraser in Ankara, Turkey, contribute­d. Samy Magdy covers the Middle East for the AP.

CAIRO — When Turkey’s president signed a security deal last year to back one of the sides in Libya’s civil war, another agreement was waiting to be signed by his new proteges the same day: a memorandum redrawing the two countries’ maritime borders.

In Recep Tayyip Erdogan’s memo, Turkey and Libya lay claim to large areas of the Mediterran­ean Sea and the potential natural gas deposits under it. The deal achieved a longtime goal of Turkey — finding a partner to back its claims.

Officials in Libya’s U.N.supported government in the capital, Tripoli, have disclosed for the first time to The Associated Press the deliberati­ons that resulted in Turkey becoming a major broker in the war, opposite Russia. They describe the relationsh­ip as necessary, and say Turkey’s foray into the conflict goes hand-in-hand with its economic designs.

Several officials say their side entered the deals with Turkey reluctantl­y, late last year, believing they had no choice. They desperatel­y needed an ally as their opponent in the war, Libyan commander Gen. Khalifa Hifter, bore down on Tripoli with his forces, strengthen­ed by Russian, Emirati and Egyptian backing.

“It was like a give-andtake game,” said one official in Tripoli-based Prime Minister Fayez Sarraj’s office. “They took advantage of our weakness at the time.” He and other officials spoke on condition of anonymity, fearing for their safety in a country largely ruled by an array of militias.

In the end, Turkey sent troops and thousands of Syrian mercenarie­s and other military support that helped pro-Sarraj forces repel Gen. Hifter’s assault this spring, preventing the collapse of the Tripoli-based administra­tion and shifting the tide of the war.

But Ankara’s role is just one side of how outside powers are exploiting and fueling the civil war in the oilrich North African nation.

Russia has sent weapons, air defense systems and mercenarie­s to Libya’s front lines to back Gen. Hifter’s offensive, launched last year and aimed at capturing Tripoli. That help has continued even after Gen. Hifter’s withdrawal, though Russia has denied any role in the Libyan conflict.

The interventi­ons are deepening a civil war born after a NATO-backed uprising in 2011 toppled and killed longtime dictator Moammar Gadhafi. Gen. Hifter controls eastern and southern Libya. Mr. Sarraj’s government controls Tripoli and its surroundin­gs, in the west.

Mr. Erdogan has only acknowledg­ed sending highlevel advisers to help proSarraj forces. In reality, Ankara deployed a few hundred troops and an estimated 3,500-3,800 Syrian mercenarie­s over the first quarter of the year, a recent Pentagon report said. Turkey also sent weapons, military equipment and air defense systems.

Mr. Sarraj’s office didn’t answer several calls seeking comment on the relationsh­ip with Turkey.

One Libyan official acknowledg­ed to the AP the Tripoli government’s “full reliance” on Turkey. However, “we would not have reached this point” if not for Gen. Hifter’s offensive, he said.

The officials said Turkey pushed the government for over a year to approve the maritime deal, but Mr. Sarraj resisted. In part, he felt he did not have the authority to strike internatio­nal agreements, being head of a transition­al government. He also may have been wary of making Mediterran­ean claims certain to be rejected by the Europeans.

“It was a relentless pressure,” one official said, adding that Islamists inside Mr. Sarraj’s administra­tion also wielded influence in support of Ankara. “Turkey was the only country that promised support, and we agreed only after all other doors were closed.”

The security and maritime deals were signed in late November. Under the accord, Libya and Turkey claim adjoining parts of the Mediterran­ean and exploratio­n rights there. Greece disputes the deal, considerin­g the waters part of its continenta­l shelf. The EU said it violates internatio­nal law and poses a “threat to stability.”

‘Tearing up maps’

Turkey has long wanted to alter the old boundaries and its drive gained urgency as Egypt, Israel and Cyprus moved to exploit newly discovered natural gas fields in their waters.

“We are tearing up maps of the East Mediterran­ean that were drawn up to imprison us on the mainland,”

Erdogan deputy Fuat Oktay said.

Turkey’s moves, particular­ly its claim on Greek waters, have heightened tensions between the two NATO members, who openly clashed 46 years ago in the conflict over Cyprus.

The maritime claims give Turkey “pressure points” to apply against other nations around the Eastern Mediterran­ean, said Oded Berkowitz, an Israeli security analyst who specialize­s in the Libyan conflict. It can aim to block Egypt, Israel and Cyprus from directly exporting natural gas to Europe and to influence migrant traffickin­g.

Turkey has long had interests in Libya, mainly constructi­on and energy projects. It has also been pressing for new business opportunit­ies and recouping losses sustained since Ghadafi was pushed from power. The Turkish Contractor’s

Associatio­n estimated that in 2011, just after the country’s popular uprising, Turkish companies had more than $18 billion in contracts in Libya. Many of those were lost in the ensuing chaos and war.

In June, a Turkish delegation including the foreign and finance ministers, met Tripoli officials and presented bills for $2 billion owed to Turkish firms, another official said. Tripoli agreed to pay back that and $1.7 billion in other debts and compensati­on for machinery and equipment lost in the war, he said. The agreement still needs final approval from Mr. Sarraj.

Libyan officials have said Turkey is building a naval base as part of Misrata’s port and a base at the al-Waitya air base in the desert southwest of Tripoli.

A Turkish government official told the AP that the

“issue of bases is not on the agenda.” He spoke on condition of anonymity in line with regulation­s.

Meanwhile, Turkish and pro-Sarraj forces are preparing an operation to retake the coastal city of Sirte and the inland Jufra air base, which Gen. Hifter’s ally Egypt has said would prompt it to deploy troops to Libya.

But it’s only a part of the bigger picture, said Jalel Harchaoui, a research fellow specializi­ng in Libyan affairs at the Clingendae­l Netherland­s Institute of Internatio­nal Relations.

“Control over that territory isn’t so much about Libya’s oil itself as it’s about the natural gas under the Mediterran­ean Sea,” he said.

 ?? Associated Press ?? Turkey’s President Recep Tayyip Erdogan, right, and Fayez Sarraj, the head of Libya’s internatio­nally recognized government, pose for photograph­s in late July before their talks in Istanbul.
Associated Press Turkey’s President Recep Tayyip Erdogan, right, and Fayez Sarraj, the head of Libya’s internatio­nally recognized government, pose for photograph­s in late July before their talks in Istanbul.

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