Published on Alternet (http://www.alternet.org)
The
US-NATO Invasion of Libya Destroyed the Country Beyond All Recognition
By Vijay Prashad [1] / AlterNet [2]
March 22, 2017
On
Friday, March 17, hundreds of Libyans came into Tripoli’s Martyrs’ Square. They
wanted to make a simple statement: end the rule of militias. Since the NATO war
of 2011, Libya has been ruled by a patchwork of rival heavily armed gangs that
have sown terror in the population. Gunfights are common – as had been
experienced these past ten days across Tripoli. The Rixos Hotel – which had
served as the government’s building – faced heavy shelling, with tanks and
snipers racing to destroy this beautiful city. Burning cars blocked roads, as
children stayed home from school and shops were shuttered. The protesters came
to say – enough. They wanted the fighting to end. It was inevitable that
gunfire would scatter them into nearby buildings, Libyan flags fluttering above
them in the breeze. These militias – now entrenched across the country – are
not going to be easy to dismantle.
Frustrated
Libyans in Tripoli point across the country towards the eastern city of
Benghazi and vest their hopes in General Khalifa Haftar. ‘He can save us’, said
an old friend who has weathered the violence and chaos since NATO’s war of
2011. It meant little to this man that General Haftar had lived for twenty
years in the shadow of the CIA’s offices in Virginia after he had defected from
the Libyan Army. It meant even less that he had arrived in Benghazi during the
early days of the 2011 war in Libya and that he had sought leadership of the
rag-tag army – backed by NATO. My friend is an old socialist with fond memories
of the high point of the Qaddafi era. Haftar, whom Qaddafi once called a ‘son’,
had betrayed his leader in the aftermath of Libya’s defeat in the 1987 Toyota
War against Chad and defected to the United States. But this meant nothing.
Times are different now. Even Haftar, the leader of the self-styled Libyan
National Army (LNA), has come to promise hope against the archipelago of
militias. Haftar hastily went on television right after the gunfire at Martyrs’
Square. ‘Your armed forces will not abandon you,’ he said ceremoniously, ‘and
we will be by your side until Tripoli is returned to the homeland.’
Over
the past few years, Haftar – ensconced in Benghazi – has fashioned himself as a
strongman, a military man with no patience for either the al-Qaeda linked Ansar
al-Sharia or the Muslim Brotherhood. Ignored by the United States – his early
patron – Haftar has turned to Egypt, the United Arab Emirates and Russia for
support. There was room there for eager ears, since those powers are partial to
Haftar’s self-image as the strongman. Haftar does not look back to the secular
nationalism of Gamel Abdul Nasser for inspiration, but resembles the farcical
patriotism of Abdel Fattah el-Sisi. Russia looks fondly on both these men –
Haftar and Sisi – for both promise military-style stability that would crush
any whiff of political Islam.
But
for all Haftar’s braggadocio, it is important to recognize that his LNA has had
only mixed results in the battlefield. In May 2014, Haftar’s LNA opened up a
war against the various extremist groups in Benghazi. The battle was called
Operation Karama (Dignity), a sly allusion to the early days of the ‘Arab
Spring’ when dignity was the cry on the lips of the protestors. But Operation
Karama, despite the LNA’s superior firepower (including Egyptian and Emirati
fighter jets) has not been able to trounce the Revolutionary Shura Council of
Benghazi (whose main component is the al-Qaeda backed Ansar al-Sharia). The day
after last Friday’s fracas in Tripoli, the LNA was able finally to oust the
Shura Council fighters from the southwest of Benghazi. The Shura Council’s
fighters still hold key northern parts of the city – namely the areas of
al-Sabri and Souq al-Hout – not far from Benghazi’s port. It will not be easy
for the LNA to remove the Shura Council from these congested areas without a
great many civilian casualties.
Not
far from Benghazi, along Libya’s coastline, a battle has raged over the oil
installations that are key to the wealth of this oil-rich country. Over the
past few years, thousands of fighters in the Petroleum Facilities Guard have
held the oil terminals in Ras Lanuf, Sidra and Zueitina. They were led by
Ibrahim Jadran, a former car thief who has now styled himself as a leader of
the secessionist movement for eastern Libyan (called Cyrenaica after its old
Roman name). But Jadran’s aims are more prosaic. He has tried to sell the oil
by himself, and has run afoul of the United States and of the UN-recognized
government that sits in Tripoli. Haftar’s LNA pushed Jadran’s forces out of
these key positions in September last year. It was this thrust along the
coastline that earned Haftar’s LNA a great deal of respect in the country, and
much delight in Cairo and in Abu Dhabi.
Saudi
Arabia arrived on the scene to block the ambitions of Haftar and his backers.
The Kingdom had its own proxies, mainly refracted through the repellent Grand
Mufti of Tripoli, Sadeq al-Ghariani. It was the Saudi-backed groups that
created the Benghazi Defense Brigade militia in June of 2016 – an extremist
group set up to fight Haftar’s LNA and provide space for the Kingdom to assert
itself in Libya’s dangerous battlefields. ISIS fighters, expelled from the city
of Sirte, are now fighting alongside the Shura Council in their northern
redoubts of Benghazi, while Shura Council fighters have joined the Benghazi
Defense Brigade and some militias from the western town of Misrata – both
groups in and outside Benghazi battling Haftar’s LNA. These Brigades have taken
refuge in the district of Jufra, south of the oil installations, lashed by dust
storms that pay no heed to the petroleum beneath the desert. Saudi Arabia’s
proxies have blocked the LNA advance to the southern city of Sabha and provided
problems in the oil areas. For ten days in March, the Benghazi Defense Brigades
seized the oil installations from Haftar. But Haftar’s forces – strengthened by
air cover – took them back on March 13. Little gain for Saudi Arabia in this
feint. But this battle is far from over.
Enter
the Russians.
Haftar
dashed off to see the Russians about weaponry and assistance. He has
fair-weather friends amongst the Europeans. Occasionally the Italians have
provided Haftar with intelligence, but their allegiance remains with the
UN-backed government that appears more and more like a shadow of its
expectations. The Russians were pleased to receive Haftar aboard their aircraft
carrier – Admiral Kuznetsov – in January. From the ship, Haftar spoke to the
Russian defense minister Sergey Shoygu. Haftar had been in Moscow last
November, when it was reported that he had discussed arms deals. It was during
the conversation with Shoygu that Haftar was able to get Russian confirmation
for a $2 billion arms deal. These weapons will give the LNA much greater firepower
than possessed by the Shura Council, the Benghazi Defense Brigades and other
militia groups.
Russia
has said repeatedly that it wants to see a ‘strong power’ emerge in Libya. This
has been taken to mean that they would like to see Haftar establish a Sisi-type
state in the country. Last December, Russia’s Deputy Foreign Minister Gennady
Gatilov said, ‘We believe that the Libyans have to find a compromise on
Haftar’s participation in the new Libyan leadership.’ At that time the UN’s
envoy to Libya – Martin Kobler – called upon UN member states not to ‘strike
separate deals with parts of the Libyan political establishment behind the back
of other influential players.’ Everyone knew that Kobler meant the Russians and
Haftar. But by February Kobler was singing a different tune. ‘The single most
important topic is the construction of a Libyan united army with a clear chain
of command, where General Haftar must have a role,’ he told Reuters. It appears
that Haftar has now arrived.
Strikingly,
reports now come that the Russians have deployed forces into Egypt – with bases
established in Sidi Barrani (about 60 miles from the Egyptian-Libyan border)
and Marsa Matruh – both fabled sites of battles between the Allies and the Axis
during World War II. The Egyptians have, of course, officially denied the
Russian presence, but well-informed people say that it is likely to be true.
Last October, Russian and Egyptian forces began to conduct joint military
exercises, and Russian military officials have indicated that they would like
to have access to a base in Egypt. This suggests that it might not be
impossible that Russian forces are inside Egypt, ready to assist Hafter if the
need arises.
A dent
in Haftar’s fortunes came this week when video was released of LNA fighters
exhuming the bodies of their adversaries from the Benghazi Defense Brigades.
These gory videos show the LNA fighters mutilating the bodies not only of
fighters, but also of civilians. Denunciations by the LNA hierarchy could not
erase the images of brutality. Hard to position oneself as the savior of the
nation if this is the caliber of the soldiers.
The
UN’s Martin Kobler warned of a ‘dangerous escalation’ in Libya. That phrase
sounds shopworn. It has been used so often. There is no end to the war. Like a
moving kaleidoscope the fighters change sides. Their loyalties are hard to
read. It is even harder to understand the suffering of the people. At NATO headquarters
they still smirk about their successful war in Libya. It is a war that broke
this country.
Vijay
Prashad is professor of international studies at Trinity College in Hartford,
Connecticut. He is the author of 18 books, including Arab Spring,
Libyan Winter (AK Press, 2012), The Poorer Nations: A Possible
History of the Global South (Verso, 2013) and The Death of a
Nation and the Future of the Arab Revolution (University of California
Press, 2016). His columns appear at AlterNet every Wednesday.
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