Western war on Libya

Another war to involve the US and its allies is looming in the Middle East. Libya appears to be heading toward a military confrontation between forces loyal to the UN-sponsored Government of National Agreement (GNA) and the Libyan National Army (LNA) headed by General Khalifa Haftar.

US-Led Military Intervention Looms in Libya
http://www.strategic-culture.org/news/2016/09/23/us-led-military-intervention-looms-libya.html

On September 12, the US and its major European allies - France, Germany, Italy, Spain, and the United Kingdom - condemned the LNA offensive against a string of oil ports in eastern Libya, raising fears of a major outbreak of fresh violence in the chaos-ridden country. As a result of the offensive, Haftar has established control over most of Libya’s oil with the ports of Ras Lanuf, Es Sidra, and Zueitina seized by his forces.

The advance into Libya’s «oil crescent» is the first time his forces have come into direct conflict with GNA supporters since the unity government started work in Tripoli in March. The assault on the ports came as pro-GNA forces, including oil installation guards, have been battling for months to oust the Islamic State (IS) from the coastal city of Sirte.

The major Western powers believe that the oil terminals should be administered by the UN-backed, Tripoli-based Government of National Accord (GNA).

Haftar has been named a military commander by a rival, parallel authority based in eastern Libya - the House of Representatives (HoR), the parliament seated in Tobruk, and the government headed by Abdullah al-Thinni seated in al-Bayda. Backed Egypt and the UAE, the well-trained and equipped LNA forces control large parts of the eastern part of the country.

The seizure of the ports deals a heavy blow to the unity government, depriving it of a key source of income. The prospect of Haftar-led forces obtaining a stranglehold on Libya’s main export has raised renewed fears of a permanent east-west split or civil war. The GNA can ask for external help.

UN Security Council Resolution 2278 «condemns attempts to illicitly export crude oil from Libya, including by parallel institutions which are not acting under the authority of the Government of National Accord» and sets up a mechanism by which the GNA can ask for external help in enforcing this rule.

The oil can only be sold legally by the National Oil Company (NOC). Haftar's forces said they would hand over management of the ports to the NOC to resume exports. The NOC is split into two rival branches, however, one allied to the GNA and the other to the administration that Haftar supports. Oil is Libya's main natural resource with reserves estimated at 48 billion barrels, the largest in Africa. Since the war started in 2010, the production has plummeted. In late July, the GNA agreed to resume oil exports out of Ras Lanuf and Al-Sidra - which together have a capacity of 700,000 bpd - after a months-long closure following jihadist attacks.

It should be noted that the US Special Forces and drones have been operating in the country for a long time. On August 1, the Air Force launched the operation dubbed Operation Odyssey Lightning. The «2001 Authorization for the Use of Military Force» (AUMF) was used for legal justification for the President’s decision to intervene. But the authorization (Public Law 107-40) limits the president to use force only against «those nations, organizations, or persons he determines planned, authorized, committed, or aided the terrorist attacks that occurred on September 11, 2001».

The Islamic State group did not exist those days. The US Constitution ascribes to Congress the sole authority to declare wars. The 1973 War Powers Resolution restrains the administration’s ability to independently wage war. According to the document, «President in every possible instance shall consult with Congress before introducing United States Armed Forces into hostilities».

It specifically states the appropriation of funds does not constitute approval for the use of force. It makes the US operations in Libya illegal even if the Congress approves the expenditure. They also breach international law. The United Nations Security Council (UNSC) must approve any foreign military intervention to combat Islamic State in the North African state. Despite the disastrous consequences of the 2011intervention launched in violation of domestic and international law, the US administration has once again used force in Libya without permission from the Congress and the UN.

The military operation in Libya gives the US a more prominent role in war-torn Libya and opens a new front less than five months before President Obama leaves office. Libya is now the fourth country – including Afghanistan, Iraq and Syria – in which the US military is targeting Islamic State militants from the air. Despite the fact that the US attacks IS targets at the request of the GNA, many Libyans view the attacks as a foreign intervention.

The government is still not recognized as a legitimate government by many powerful eastern tribes and rival governments that control substantial parts of Libya: the General National Congress and the self-declared National Salvation Government in Tobruk controlled by General Khalifa Haftar, who opposes meddling in Libyan affairs from outside. The very need for intervention in Libya is a result of the 2011 NATO operation going beyond the UN resolution to overthrow the government and plunge the country into chaos. According to the US president, it was a mistake. Now it looks like the mistake is going to be repeated again.

In Libya, a UN-supported international operation would be much more efficient than a unilateral action undertaken by the US and its allies. With all the differences to cause tensions in the relations between Russia and the West, in Libya, as well as in Syria, they face a common enemy - the IS. Despite all the snags on the way, Russia and the West coordinate their activities in Syria to give a chance to the UN-sponsored process. Russia and the US have just reached an agreement on cooperation. They can do it in Libya too. Libya is the place where Russia and the West could join forces and cooperate in the fight against the common enemy. Under the circumstances, Moscow is in the position to effectively mediate as it enjoys good relations with General Haftar who visited Moscow this summer.

Moscow also has close relationship with Egypt and good working relations with the UAE and the Libyan rival governments.

The Rome international conference on Libya, held in December 2015, was a start of the peace making process that should be revived to bring together the pertinent actors.

A UN-sponsored negotiation process can be launched to work out terms for peaceful transition. True, today Libya is in a rough place and needs nearly complete rebuilding, not only at a social and political level, but also in terms of infrastructure. Although it’s been in decline for years, the exploitation of oil and gas in Libya has enormous potential. A larger military intervention by the US-led coalition could spoil the things to drag the country into a drawn-out conflict. Instead, a multinational effort based on international law could stabilize the country and do away with the very causes that make it a breeding ground for Islamic terrorism.
 
Another headache to US?

East Libya's General Asks Russia for Weapons, Military Support Against Daesh

https://sputniknews.com/world/20160928/1045772910/libya-russia-military-support.html

Libya's Gen. Khalifa Haftar, who leads forces loyal to the Tobruk-based Council of Deputies, has requested Russia to end its arms embargo on Libya and begin supplying weapons and military equipment to eastern Libyan forces, a Russian diplomatic source said Wednesday.

Haftar has addressed the request to both Russian President Vladimir Putin and Russian Defense Minister Sergei Shoigu via his special representative Abdel Basset Badri, who also serves as Libya's ambassador to Saudi Arabia. Badri visited Moscow on Tuesday, meeting with Russian Deputy Foreign Minister Mikhail Bogdanov, the Russian Izvestia newspaper reported, citing a diplomatic source familiar with the situation.

"The meeting really did take place. Badri came to Moscow for one day. During talks with Bogdanov, they discussed the issue of lifting the embargo on arms supplies. Libyans are asking us to send them small arms, but also equipment, including planes. Also, they asked Moscow to start an anti-Islamist military operation in Libya that is similar to the one in Syria," the source told the newspaper.

Haftar visited Russia in late June, discussing a number of issues, including weapons deliveries, with Shoigu and Russia's Security Council Secretary Nikolai Patrushev.

Russia joined the UN Security Council arms embargo on Libya in 2011, when the country was gripped by an uprising against longtime leader Muammar Gaddafi, who was overthrown the same year after several months of civil war. The country was later contested by two rival governments, the internationally-recognized Council of Deputies and the Tripoli-based General National Congress.

On March 31, the long-anticipated UN-backed Government of National Accord in Libya started to perform its duties. The government has so far failed to unite the country.

Daesh, which is a militant jihadist organization outlawed in many countries, including Russia, also maintains significant presence in the country, especially in and round Gaddafi's hometown of Sirte.
 
Russian Deputy Foreign Minister Mikhail Bogdanov said that the representatives of leading political forces, tribal groups and regions of the country should be engaged in formation of national public authorities in Libya.

All Political Forces Should Take Part in Libyan Authorities' Formation
https://sputniknews.com/africa/20161001/1045906555/russia-un-libya.html

Russia insists on the need to form national governing bodies in Libya with the participation of all leading political forces, tribal groups and regions of the country, Russian Deputy Foreign Minister Mikhail Bogdanov said on Saturday in a phone conversation with UN Special Envoy for Libya Martin Kobler.

"During the exchange of views on the situation in Libya, the main focus was put on the implementation of the inter-Libyan political agreement, signed under the auspices of the United Nations in the Moroccan city of Skhirat on December 17, 2015. The Russian side confirmed the need to engage the representatives of leading political forces, tribal groups and regions of the country in the formation of national public authorities in Libya," the Foreign Ministry said in a statement.

The two sides also reiterated the importance of maintaining active contacts on the Libyan issue between Russia and the United Nations.


Russian Institute for Strategic Studies (RISS) Director Leonid Reshetnikov stated that within this year the majority of Daesh militants will leave Syria and Iraq for Libya.

Majority of Daesh Militants to Leave Syria for Libya by End of 2016
https://sputniknews.com/world/20160930/1045863239/syria-libya-daesh.html

The major part of Islamic State (ISIL or Daesh) militants will leave Syria, including the city of Aleppo and its stronghold of Raqqa, and relocate to Libya until the end of the year, Russian Institute for Strategic Studies (RISS) Director Leonid Reshetnikov told Sputnik on Friday.

"I think that within this year the majority of militants will leave for Libya. They will flee from Aleppo and Raqqa. They would have to leave for Libya, maybe some of them will stay in Iraq," Reshetnikov said in an interview.
 
Press TV is reporting that Yemeni forces have fired rockets at a (Saudi) United Arab Emirates’ Navy ship - destroying it.

Yemeni forces destroy UAE vessel with rockets
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wXw8bKzxocg

Published on Oct 1, 2016

Fighters of the Yemeni Ansarullah movement and their allies have struck an Emirati vessel off the coast of Ta’izz province.

A military source says the Yemeni forces fired several rockets at the ship and destroyed it early Saturday. The vessel, owned by the United Arab Emirates’ Navy, is reportedly a high-speed logistical ship capable of locating mines, controlling military operations and transporting troops and equipment. The ship formerly belonged to the US Navy. Ansarullah fighters working in tandem with the Yemeni army have so far destroyed several hostile warships and boats. The UAE is part of the Saudi-led coalition in the war against Yemen which has left thousands dead in the impoverished country.

Another website has this for comment:
http://www.whatreallyhappened.com/content/spearhead-sinks-fight-over-control-yemen-yemeni-forces-houthi-have-sunk-us-proxy-united-arab#comments

This is a USA ship, and NOT a UAE ship, but it's being called a UAE ship for political purposes. (See that the ship is NOT listed here: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/United_Arab_Emirates_Navy )

This is the ship: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/USAV_Spearhead_(TSV-X1)

Not to be confused with: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/USNS_Spearhead_(T-EPF-1)

The ship was sunk with a salvo of 6 "Grad" type unguided missiles (These cost as little as $600 to produce, and their characteristics can be seen here: http://tipings.com/en/pages/22994 )
 
Libya's military leader Khalifa Haftar, the commander of the Libyan National Army loyal to the Tobruk-based House of Representatives (HoR), has requested Russia to end its arms embargo on Libya and begin supplying weapons and military equipment to eastern Libyan forces.

Russia Asked to Intervene in Libya: Gaining Clout in Middle East
http://www.strategic-culture.org/news/2016/09/30/russia-asked-intervene-libya-gaining-clout-middle-east.html

According to Russian newspaper Izvestia, Abdel Basset Badri, Haftar’s special representative who also serves as Libya's ambassador to Saudi Arabia, visited Moscow on September 27 to deliver the request addressed to both Russian President Vladimir Putin and Russian Defense Minister Sergei Shoigu.

Mr. Badri held talks with Russian Deputy Foreign Minister Mikhail Bogdanov, Russian newspaper Izvestia reported, citing a diplomatic source familiar with the situation.

The agenda included the prospects for lifting the embargo on arms supplies, including warplanes. More importantly, General Haftar asked Russia to start an anti-Islamist military operation in Libya similar to the one in Syria.

The toppling of long-term leader Muammar Gaddafi in 2011 led to a power vacuum and instability in Libya, with no authority in full control. The country is divided between two governments: the HoR in the east of the country and the Gov­ernment of National Accord (GNA), which moved to Tripoli in March 2016 and set up its headquarters in a heavily-guarded naval base.

A large part of Tripoli is still held by Islamists. The division prompted the Unit­ed Nations to launch negotiations aimed at forming a unified gov­ernment and army to face the growing threat of terror groups. In September, Libya's rival governments were reported to have reached a "consensus" on the main elements of a political agreement.

Parts of Libya are outside of government's control, with various Islamist, rebel, and tribal militias administering some cities and areas. The existence of two competing governments and the lack of stability allow militants, including the Islamic State (IS) group, to operate on Libyan soil.

In March, 2015, the HoR appointed General Haftar commander of the Libyan National Army (LNA). The military leader has been part of the Libyan political scene for about half a century. Around 1990 he went into exile to the United States after a failed attempt to overthrow Muammar Gaddafi. In the 1970s, Haftar received military training in the Soviet Union. The general speaks Russian language. After the start of the uprising against Gaddafi in 2011, the general returned to Libya where he became a key commander of the makeshift rebel force in the east.

The military leader is known as an «anti-Islamist general» for his tough stand against Muslim fundamentalists. This year the forces under his command pushed the Islamist militants out of much of Benghazi. In 2014 General Halifa launched Operation Dignity and vowed to oust all extremist terrorist groups in the country. In September 2016, the LNA seized from the Petroleum Facilities Guard - an armed group aligned with the UN-brokered Government of National Accord (GNA) - the country’s key oil terminals.

In recognition of this, the speaker of the HoR and supreme commander of the armed forces, Agilah Saleh, promoted Haftar from lieutenant-general to field marshal. The major Western powers believe that the oil terminals should be administered by the UN-backed GNA.

Speaking at a ministerial meeting on Libya in New York where the 17st session of the UN General Assembly is underway, Russia’s Deputy Foreign Minister Gennady Gatilov said it would be wrong to disregard the Libyan National Army that has been fighting terrorists in the eastern part of Libya. The minister said Western air strikes and activities of special operations teams in certain areas of Libya exacerbate the situation in the country. Russia considers the parliament in Tobruk as the legitimately elected legislative body.

Anvar Makhmutov, a member of Russian State Duma’s committee on international affairs, and Vyacheslav Matuzov, a former diplomat and scholar, supported the idea of sending arms and military instructors to support the LNA.

The UN imposed an arms embargo on Libya in 2011. In August 2014, after violence had flared up in Libya, Security Council Resolution 2174 required that any supplies of arms and related materiel to Libya must be approved in advance by the Sanctions Committee.

With a national unity government established, the ban on arms supplies will be eased or lifted. Major world powers have been mulling the possibility of lifting the arms embargo against Libya in recent months. The request to at least partially lift the embargo has been made by the GNA, which says it needs the weapons to fight the Islamic State group.

Last year, Jordan circulated a draft resolution at the Security Council proposing to lift the embargo, among other urgent measures. The weapons supplies could start as soon as the embargo is revoked. Ivan Molotkov has recently said that Moscow would be ready to supply the legitimate Libyan government with weapons as soon as the arms embargo against the country is lifted.

The most important thing is that it is Russia - not the US, France or any other Western state involved in the Libya conflict - that the Libyan military leader has asked for help. Libyans remember well the NATO intervention of 2011 and don’t trust the West, especially in view of its failure to achieve any positive results in Syria. Russia’s operation in that country has changed the political landscape and strengthened Moscow’s standing among the region’s powers. The collapse of the recent Russia-US agreement on Syria and the following tragedy in Aleppo confirms the fact. Besides, unlike the US, Russia enjoys a good relationship with Egypt and good working relations with the UAE – the countries that back General Haftar.

The request to help and intervene in Libya testifies to the fact that Russia’s clout is growing in the Middle East, while the West is displaying unwillingness to play a responsible role in the region. The operation in Syria was followed by a host of tangible Middle East policy successes. Russia has special relationship with Iran, Turkey, Egypt, Iraq, Jordan, Israel and the Persian Gulf states. King Salman of Saudi Arabia is planning a trip to Moscow soon. Russia is strongly back in the region with its clout growing by leaps and bounds, while the US appears to have lost its way in the regional maze of overlapping problems and complexities.

According to Foreign Policy, «Across the eastern Mediterranean and Levant, through Turkey, Iran, and the broader Gulf region, the trend line is obvious to anyone with eyes to see it: Russia’s star is waxing while America’s wanes».

«From Israel to Saudi Arabia, from Egypt to Turkey, traditional US partners are also increasingly compelled to curry favor with Moscow», the magazine adds.

Resurgent Russia is asserting itself in the Middle East as a big an important international player and it is only natural that its Moscow the Libyan leader approached to save his country mired in turmoil.


Sniper fire has claimed a Dutch journalist who was covering clashes between UN-backed Government of National Accord (GNA) troops and Daesh in the coastal city of Sirte.

Dutch journalist killed by Daesh sniper fire in Libya’s Sirte
http://www.presstv.com/Detail/2016/10/02/487376/daesh-libya-sniper-dutch-killed

Jeroen Oerlemans was "shot in the chest by a Daesh sniper while covering battles in Sirte" on Sunday, said Dr. Akram Gliwan, the spokesman for a hospital in Misrata, the town where the photographer’s body was taken to.

Oerlemans worked for several organizations in Libya, including the Belgian weekly Knack magazine, which has also confirmed his death.

The weekly posted a message on their website wishing “his family much strength."

One of Oerlemans’ co-workers also confirmed his death on Twitter, "Jeroen Oerlemans was shot dead by a sniper in Sirte. He was wearing a vest but the bullet struck him in the side and hit his heart," tweeted Jan Eikelboom.

"Rest in Peace. Your photographs of #Sirte #Libya and other places will live on forever,'' tweeted the Dutch ambassador to Libya, Eric Strating.

The UN-backed government in Libya started a large-scale military operation in May to purge Daesh from Sirte, which is the hometown of the country's former slain dictator, Muammar Gaddafi.


At least 18 people have been killed in clashes between Daesh Takfiri terrorists and forces loyal to Libya’s UN-backed Government of National Accord (GNA) in the coastal city of Sirte.

18 killed in fresh clashes between GNA forces, Daesh in Libya's Sirte
http://www.presstv.com/Detail/2016/10/02/487351/Libya-GNA-Sirte-Daesh

GNA military sources said the violent clashes broke out as the terrorists were withdrawing from their besieged stronghold in the city on Sunday.

The GNA said in a statement that at least 10 terrorists had been killed in the volatile city, which is located about 450 kilometers east of the capital, Tripoli.

"Our forces exterminated a group from the Daesh gang that were trying to escape," the statement read.

Pro-government forces said they were "progressing" in Sirte, forcing some Daesh terrorists to try to escape.

According to the Facebook page of a field hospital set up by GNA forces in Sirte, eight soldiers loyal to the government were killed during the clashes. At least two dozen members of pro-GNA forces were also wounded and transferred to the main hospital in the nearby city of Misrata.
 
angelburst29 said:
Sniper fire has claimed a Dutch journalist who was covering clashes between UN-backed Government of National Accord (GNA) troops and Daesh in the coastal city of Sirte.

Dutch journalist killed by Daesh sniper fire in Libya’s Sirte
http://www.presstv.com/Detail/2016/10/02/487376/daesh-libya-sniper-dutch-killed

Jeroen Oerlemans was "shot in the chest by a Daesh sniper while covering battles in Sirte" on Sunday, said Dr. Akram Gliwan, the spokesman for a hospital in Misrata, the town where the photographer’s body was taken to.

Oerlemans worked for several organizations in Libya, including the Belgian weekly Knack magazine, which has also confirmed his death.

The weekly posted a message on their website wishing “his family much strength."

One of Oerlemans’ co-workers also confirmed his death on Twitter, "Jeroen Oerlemans was shot dead by a sniper in Sirte. He was wearing a vest but the bullet struck him in the side and hit his heart," tweeted Jan Eikelboom.

"Rest in Peace. Your photographs of #Sirte #Libya and other places will live on forever,'' tweeted the Dutch ambassador to Libya, Eric Strating.

The UN-backed government in Libya started a large-scale military operation in May to purge Daesh from Sirte, which is the hometown of the country's former slain dictator, Muammar Gaddafi.

Thanks angelburst29 for picking that up.

Confirmation:
http://www.dutchnews.nl/news/archives/2016/10/dutch-photo-journalist-jeroen-oerlemansshot-dead-by-sniper-fire-in-libya/
http://www.nltimes.nl/2016/10/03/killed-war-zone-journalists-colleagues-mourn-passing/

An overview of some of his work (Dutch captions): http://nos.nl/artikel/2135724-in-beeld-de-onuitwisbare-erfenis-van-jeroen-oerlemans.html

EDITED to add wiki-page: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jeroen_Oerlemans

Oerlemans had been scheduled to return home Monday, but was shot dead by snipers attached to the Libyan arm of Islamic State. He was taken to a hospital but doctors could do nothing for him.
[...]
The only consolation is that he was immediately dead, he did not suffer in any case.
 
Libya: France Accused of Playing Double Game Amid Split in EU Policy

https://sputniknews.com/middleeast/201610111046233790-libya-france-policy-split/

While there have been calls in recent times for greater EU defense cooperation, concerns are growing over a divide in the union in regards to its policy in Libya, with France accused of undermining international efforts and offering support to both rival governments in the country.

The EU has been central to the international campaign aimed at ending Libya's five-year long conflict and political crisis, giving support to the UN-backed unity government, also known as the Government of National Accord (GNA).

While the Tripoli-based GNA was set up this year under the leadership of Fayez al-Sarraj to try and unify the country politically, parliamentarians in Libya's rival Tobruk-based legislature rejected its legitimacy, recently voting in a motion against the recognition of the GNA.

French 'Ambiguity'

Officially the EU supports the GNA, however France has been accused of undermining Brussels' approach and offering support to Khalifa Ḥaftar, the leader of the Tobruk-based government, which had long been Libya's internationally recognized parliament.

"We are concerned about French ambiguity but Paris is a strategic partner in Libya," Nicola Latorre, chairman of the Italian senate's defense committee, told POLITICO.

The comments come amid speculation that France has been playing a double game by offering political support to the GNA, but also military encouragement to the Tobruk-based government.

French officials have dismissed the criticism, saying the government's actions are in Libya are in line with the actions of other European partners, adding that it is pushing for stability in the country that has been devastated by five years of civil war.

Paris moved further to dispel rumors that it is backing both sides in Libya, with GNA chief Sarraj invited for talks in September with French President Francois Hollande, who said the Tripoli-based unity government had Paris' "full backing".

Despite these public shows of support, some commentators have suggested that France's actions have exposed a divide in European policy on Libya.

Libya is currently split between the GNA in Tripoli and the Tobruk-based parliament, who have both been fighting parallel campaigns against Daesh and other jihadist groups.

Tensions in the country have been on edge since Tobruk forces captured several oil ports from the GNA-aligned groups last month, amid fears violence could spill over in the country.
 
At least 14 servicemen were killed and over two dozen were injured during fighting with militants from the Daesh terrorist group for the Libyan city of Sirte, a spokesperson for the Libyan operation said.

14 Libyan Soldiers Dead, Over Two Dozen Injured in Clashes With Daesh
https://sputniknews.com/middleeast/201610151046354128-libyan-soldiers-clashes-daesh/

Anti-Daesh fighting in Sirte resumed on Friday morning, the spokesperson said as cited by the Al Arabiya broadcaster on Saturday, adding that fourteen Libyan soldiers were killed and 33 were wounded.

The Libyan forces discovered four espionage planes used by Daesh at one of the group’s headquarters in Sirte, according to the spokesperson. In addition, computers and documents were found at the location, although no further details regarding the Daesh documents were provided.
 
Attempted Coup in Libya - by former members of Libya's General National Congress (GNC) and local militias. I may be mistaken but I believe this group was loyal to Muammar Gaddafi and wants to reinstate Gaddafi's Son/Daughter - as heads of Government?

A group of former members of Libya's GNC declared themselves in power after taking over the premises previously held by the congress in the country's capital, local media reported.

Libyan Former Officials, Militias Attempt Coup in Tripoli
https://sputniknews.com/middleeast/201610151046357711-libya-coup-tripoli-attempt/

A group of former members of Libya's General National Congress (GNC), accompanied by local militias, declared themselves in power after taking over the premises previously held by the congress in the country's capital, local media reported.

The Libya Herald newspaper reported on Friday that Khalifa Ghwell, who was the head of one of the country's governments that emerged after the overthrow of Muammar Gaddafi, supported by several members of the GNC seized key state buildings and a TV station in Tripoli.

The newspaper added that Ghwell along with his supporters called on other powers in the country to join him and to create a national unity government.

The former member of the GNC also accused the Presidency Council, which was expected to meet soon in Tunis, of negative impact on the national unity and said that all the officials appointed by the Presidential Council were dismissed, the media outlet added.

Reportedly, the UN-backed Government of National Accord (GNA) has ordered to arrest those behind the coup attempt.

Libya has been in a state of turmoil since 2011, when a civil war began in the country and Gaddafi was overthrown. In December, Libya’s rival governments — the Council of Deputies based in Tobruk and the Tripoli-based General National Congress — agreed to create the GNA, to form the Presidency Council and to end the political impasse.


Back dated September 28, 2016
Libya's Gen. Khalifa Haftar, who leads forces loyal to the Tobruk-based Council of Deputies, has requested Russia to end its arms embargo on Libya and begin supplying weapons and military equipment to eastern Libyan forces, a Russian diplomatic source said Wednesday.

East Libya's General Asks Russia for Weapons, Military Support Against Daesh
https://sputniknews.com/world/201609281045772910-libya-russia-military-support/

Haftar has addressed the request to both Russian President Vladimir Putin and Russian Defense Minister Sergei Shoigu via his special representative Abdel Basset Badri, who also serves as Libya's ambassador to Saudi Arabia. Badri visited Moscow on Tuesday, meeting with Russian Deputy Foreign Minister Mikhail Bogdanov, the Russian Izvestia newspaper reported, citing a diplomatic source familiar with the situation.

"The meeting really did take place. Badri came to Moscow for one day. During talks with Bogdanov, they discussed the issue of lifting the embargo on arms supplies. Libyans are asking us to send them small arms, but also equipment, including planes. Also, they asked Moscow to start an anti-Islamist military operation in Libya that is similar to the one in Syria," the source told the newspaper.

Haftar visited Russia in late June, discussing a number of issues, including weapons deliveries, with Shoigu and Russia's Security Council Secretary Nikolai Patrushev.

Russia joined the UN Security Council arms embargo on Libya in 2011, when the country was gripped by an uprising against longtime leader Muammar Gaddafi, who was overthrown the same year after several months of civil war. The country was later contested by two rival governments, the internationally-recognized Council of Deputies and the Tripoli-based General National Congress.

On March 31, the long-anticipated UN-backed Government of National Accord in Libya started to perform its duties. The government has so far failed to unite the country. Daesh, which is a militant jihadist organization outlawed in many countries, including Russia, also maintains significant presence in the country, especially in and round Gaddafi's hometown of Sirte.
 
Clashes erupted in the Libyan capital between militias loyal to a UN-backed government and those supporting a rival administration that had ruled Tripoli until March this year, Libyan security officials said Sunday.

Clashes Erupt in Libyan Capital
http://en.farsnews.com/newstext.aspx?nn=13950725001397

The clashes followed Friday night's takeover by armed people of the offices of the UN-backed National Accord government, Gazette reported.

The sites captured included a residential compound for some 145 members of a consultative chamber formally called the Supreme State Council.

The council issued a statement condemning the takeover of its offices, describing the move as "a desperate and bizarre attempt to confuse the political landscape and derail efforts to bring stability to the country."

In a separate statement, the UN-backed government said it had instructed law enforcement authorities to identify and arrest those behind the takeover which, it said, wanted to create "parallel" institutions.

The rival General National Congress government has said it intends to seize all other state facilities in Tripoli, including the Central Bank and ministries. It also declared it was now the government in charge, seven months after it stepped aside in favor of the UN-backed government.

There was no information immediately available on any casualties from the clashes. The Friday takeover, which came after an hours-long standoff, did not involve any violence, according to the officials, who spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to brief the media.

The takeover adds a new layer to the chaos and violence prevailing in Libya since the 2011 ouster and death of Moammar Gadhafi in a popular uprising that morphed into a civil war.

Libya has had two parliaments and two rival governments, effectively dividing the country into Eastern and Western sections. The parliament and interim government in the East of the country are refusing to endorse the UN-backed administration in Tripoli, in the West.
 
Italian Mafia Trades Weapons for Looted Art from ISIL in Libya

http://en.farsnews.com/newstext.aspx?nn=13950728000997

According to La Stampa newspaper, Italian Interior Minister Angelino Alfano confirmed the report on Monday, adding that the Italian government is acutely aware that the illegal ring of art-for-arms funds terrorism in nearby Libya.

“We have studied the ‘GDP of terror’ and we know that one of the components is the commercialization of stolen art,” he told reporters. “The stolen artifacts feed ISIS (ISIL) and contribute to the GDP of terror.”

The Italian criminal gangs reportedly acquire the artifacts from tomb raiders in Libya in exchange for a wide range of weaponry, including Kalashnikov rifles and rocket-propelled grenades that the Camorra have in great supply from a long-standing arms-trafficking racket with Russia, Moldova and the Ukraine.

The weapons are either smuggled back to Libya on the same container ships or left in Europe to be picked up by foreign fighters.

In September, Italy’s financial police discovered what they called “a veritable arsenal of the Camorra” in a stolen car in an abandoned parking lot in a slummy suburb of Naples. In the trunk, divided among duffel bags, were eight pistols, four sub-machine guns, an assault rifle, and 650 rounds of ammunition along with silencers for the weapons. The serial numbers had been scratched off all the weapons, according to police sources. The car was left unlocked, the weapons apparently ready for pickup by someone who could have easily smuggled them into Northern Europe.

Once the art-for-weapons exchange is made, the artifacts are sold on the black market to art collectors who don’t care about provenance. According to Italy’s patrimony police, the bulk of the loot stolen from Libya ends up in private collections in Russia, China and Japan.
 
Death of Muammar Gaddafi - 20 October 2011
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Death_of_Muammar_Gaddafi

Muammar Gaddafi, the deposed leader of Libya, died on 20 October 2011 during the Battle of Sirte, aged c. 69. Gaddafi was found hiding in a culvert west of Sirte and captured by National Transitional Council forces. He was killed shortly afterwards. The NTC initially claimed he died from injuries sustained in a firefight when loyalist forces attempted to free him, although videos of his last moments show rebel fighters beating him and one of them sodomizing him with a bayonet before he was shot several times as he shouted for his life.


Last Message From Muammar Gaddafi
https://libyadiary.wordpress.com/2011/10/23/last-message-from-muammar-gaddafi/

Muʿammar al-Gaddāfī
June 1942 – 20 October 2011


This is my will.

I, Muammar bin Mohammad bin Abdussalam bin Humayd bin Abu Manyar bin Humayd bin Nayil al Fuhsi Gaddafi, do swear that there is no other God but Allah and that Mohammad is God’s Prophet, peace be upon him. I pledge that I will die as a Muslim.

Should I be killed, I would like to be buried according to Muslim rituals, in the clothes I was wearing at the time of my death and my body unwashed, in the cemetery of Sirte, next to my family and relatives.

I would like that my family, especially the women and children, be treated well after my death.

The Libyan people must protect our cultural identity, our achievements, our history and the honorable lineage of our ancestors and heroes.

The Libyan people must not permit themselves to be subjugated under foreign rule and they must remember the sacrifices of the martyrs who have fought and died for our freedom. Do not let their sacrifice be in vain.

I call on the people of Libya to continue the resistance and fight any foreign aggressor that moves against Libya, today, tomorrow and forever.

Let the people of the world know that we could have compromised our sovereignty and freedom but we chose instead to resist the foreign invaders, the mercenaries, the traitors, the terrorists and murderers. It was our duty and honor to defend our great nation.

Even if we do not win immediately, we will triumph in the end, and by our example, offer a lesson to the world and future generations that choosing to protect the nation is an honor and selling it out is the greatest betrayal, a betrayal that history will remember forever, despite the attempts of the deceivers to tell you otherwise.

Peace be upon you all.
 
Libyan revolutionary and politician Muammar Gaddafi, commonly known as Colonel Gaddafi, who was the de facto ruler of Libya for nearly 42 years, was killed exactly five years ago, along with his son, Mutasim.

Fifth Anniversary of Murder of Libyan Leader Muammar Gaddafi
https://sputniknews.com/africa/201610201046527928-gaddafi-death-anniversary/

A politician and military officer, the former de facto head of the Great Socialist People's Libyan Arab Jamahiriya (1969-2011), Muammar Gaddafi (full name Muammar bin Muhammad Abu Minyar Abdel Salam bin Hamid al-Gaddafi), is believed to have been born in Tripolitania, Libya, in 1942. The exact date of his birth is unknown, with many of his biographers claiming that the year of his birth is 1940. Gaddafi himself wrote that he was born in a Bedouin tent some 20 miles south of Sirte, Libya, in the spring of 1942.

While at school, Gaddafi organized an underground youth cell designed to topple the existing regime in the country (after receiving independence from Italy in 1949, Libya was ruled by King Idris I). The young Gaddafi's political views were influenced by Egyptian leader Gamal Abdel Nasser, a socialist and champion of Pan-Arabism. Gaddafi organized anti-government rallies and was expelled from school. He continued his education in Misrata.

As a student, he created a clandestine organization, the Free Officers Movement, which, like Nasser's Free Officers, sought to seize power in the country.

In 1969, Gaddafi was appointed a Signals Corps aide-de-camp, and headed one of the conspiracies hatched in the Libyan armed forces at the time. On September 1, 1969, a group of insurgents led by Captain Gaddafi seized the royal palace, government buildings, radio and television, and declared that King Idris was deposed. Gaddafi proclaimed Libya a republic. He became the head of the Revolutionary Command Council and commander-in-chief of the armed forces. Since that time he served as the de facto ruler of the country, holding a number of official posts.

The regime he created in Libya was based on people's committees and assemblies. In March 1977, he proclaimed a "people's republic," known as the Great Socialist People's Libyan Arab Jamahiriya. As its president, Gaddafi banned all political organizations, with the exception of his own Arab Socialist Union.

In 1979, Muammar Gaddafi resigned his presidency under the pretext that he intended to work for a "continuation of the revolution". Officially he was now titled the Leader of the Revolution. Libya's political structure now included revolutionary committees designed to pursue revolutionary policies via a system of people's congresses. Even after resigning all of his government posts, Gaddafi remained head of state, or Brotherly Leader of the Revolution and Brother Colonel, as he was called.

Mass protests erupted in Libya in mid-February 2011, with protesters demanding that Muammar Gaddafi, who by that time had ruled the country for over 40 years, step down. Later the protests grew into an armed confrontation between government forces and the opposition.

The hostilities resulted in Gaddafi's opponents imposing control over almost the entire Libya. In August, with NATO air support, they seized the capital, Tripoli.

Muammar Gaddafi was killed in the environs of Sirte on October 20, 2011, along with his son Mutasim. Trying to slip out of encircled Sirte, his motorcade came under a NATO air attack. Wounded Gaddafi hid inside a nearby drainage facility but his hideout was discovered by a unit of the National Transitional Council and he was taken prisoner. Muammar Gaddafi and Mutasim are believed to have been tortured before they were killed.

For almost four days, Gaddafi's body was publicly on display inside an industrial refrigerator in Misrata. He and his son Mutasim were buried in the desert. The location of his grave is kept secret out of fear that it may attract his supporters.

Following Gaddafi's death, a power struggle erupted at state and regional levels between various clans and armed factions. The situation in the country effectively escalated into a civil war.


The son of Libya’s overthrown leader Muammar Gaddafi, Saif, had a plan for democratization of the country, which was eventually rejected by the Western powers that chose to bomb the nation, according to an email archive of former US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, released by WikiLeaks.

Clinton's Emails: US Rejected Gaddafi Son’s Plan for Libya Democratization
https://sputniknews.com/politics/201603181036537982-clinton-email-libya/

Back dated March 18, 2016 - Libya has been in a state of turmoil for years after the Arab Spring protests in early 2011 led to a civil war and the overthrow of long-time leader Muammar Gaddafi in October of the same year.

Saif’s [Gaddafi] plan suggests governing Libya under a constitutional democracy, in which he would serve as a transitional leader until formal elections could be held," the email, sent to Clinton in April 2011, stated.

The democratization plan also included freedom of press and internet access, according to the email.


Libya's late leader Muammar Gaddafi and Syrian President Bashar al-Assad warned that terrorism would be on the rise in Europe if Western leaders help to destabilize the two countries, but no one listened. As a result, Libya and Syria have been plunged into chaos and now Europe has to grapple with a string of gruesome terrorist attacks.

Gaddafi, Assad Warned of Terror Epidemic in Europe, But No One Listened
https://sputniknews.com/politics/201603251036952369-gaddafi-assad-terrorist-attacks/

Back dated March 25, 2016 - The latest assault took place on Tuesday as three coordinated bombings rocked the Belgian capital of Brussels, which hosts the headquarters of several international institutions, including the European Union, NATO and the Benelux.

Daesh took responsibility for the attack that claimed 31 lives. The brutal terrorist group was also behind the night of terror in Paris on November 13, a series of coordinated terrorist acts that left 130 people killed.

Evidently, Gaddafi, Assad and others, who shared their concerns, could not predict specific attacks, but they understood regional trends and their implications.

Several months before his death, Colonel Gaddafi warned that unified and stable Libya was the only thing that prevented hundreds of thousands of migrants and terrorists posing as refugees from flooding Europe. "Libya plays a role in security in the Mediterranean," he told the Paris-based France 24 television channel.

Nevertheless, France, several other NATO members and other countries went ahead with the military intervention. The country has been plagued by deadly violence ever since. One of the latest developments has seen Daesh gain a foothold in the divided nation.

In 2013, when Western leaders were contemplating sending weapons to Syrian rebels, Bashar al-Assad warned that it was a dangerous scenario to explore. Access to additional weapons would not only strengthen terrorists in Syria, but also result in "the direct export of terrorism to Europe," he argued. "If the Europeans deliver weapons, the backyard of Europe will become terrorist and Europe will pay the price for it," he said.

In early 2015, Ahmed Gaddaf al-Dam, Gaddafi's cousin and former intelligence official, predicted that a terrorist act, comparable to the 9/11 attacks in the US, would take place in Europe "within one or two years."


The overthrow of Libyan President Muammar Gaddafi during the 2011 US intervention led to the country's disintegration as a state, Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said Monday, commenting on US President Barack Obama’s admission of failure.

Kremlin: Libya 'Failed State' After Overthrow of Gaddafi, US Intervention
https://sputniknews.com/politics/201604111037812188-gaddafi-libya-kremlin/

Back dated April 11, 2016 - Obama said on Sunday that the biggest mistake of his presidency was failing to plan the aftermath of the NATO-led intervention to the crisis-torn Libya

"I want to refer to [Russian President Vladimir Putin], who has repeatedly expressed regret in connection with the very consequences we are now seeing in Libya, the consequences of the steps taken. What is meant is the military operation and the elimination of Gaddafi. We see that now Libya is unfortunately a failed state," Peskov told reporters. The spokesman added that Putin has "repeatedly expressed regret at the fact that this is a direct consequence of actions in a number of countries." The Obama administration backed the use of NATO air power in Libya to ensure that rebels topple the then leader after a 2011 revolt. Since Gaddafi’s death the influence of extremist Islamist groups in the country has steadily grown.
 
The Italian Coast Guard has saved more than 3,300 migrants making their way to Italy from Libya, local media reported.

Italy Saves Over 3,300 Migrants Off Libyan Coast
https://sputniknews.com/europe/201610221046607691-italy-saves-migrants-libyan-coast/

According to ANSA news agency, seven migrants were found dead by the coast guard during rescue operations.

Italy is one of the most popular countries among migrants fleeing North Africa and seeking asylum in Europe, which is trying to cope with a massive refugee crisis. According to the International Organization for Migration, Italy saw the arrival of over 145,000 migrants and refugees since the start of the year and up until October 19, while the total number reaching Europe was almost 320,000.


Five years after Libya’s longtime leader Muammar Gaddafi was cold-bloodedly murdered right in front of mobile phone cameras and with the full backing of the Western nations participating in the 2011 military campaign against Libya, Sputnik talked to Abdel Baset bin Hamel, a journalist who was close to the late Libyan leader.

Domino Effect: Gaddafi’s Murder Unleashed Terror
https://sputniknews.com/africa/201610211046578923-gaddafi-murder-terrorism/

“The reforms in education, health care and infrastructure Muammar Gaddafi carried out in Libya for 43 years will forever remain part of this country’s history. The current crisis results from the fact that the changes, which have been taking place here [since 2011], are implemented by foreigners and with international support. All this has been the work of the great powers pursuing their own goals,” Abdel Baset bin Hamel said.

He added that in 2011 everyone was talking about protecting the people’s rights and that a pertinent resolution adopted by the UN Security Council allowed 43 countries to use military force to topple Gaddafi and his government. “That the large-scale military operation against Libya was not meant to solve the crisis is fully evident now that people in Sirte and Benghazi are being slaughtered like cattle and billions of dollars have been stolen from the Libyan people,” Abdel Baset bin Hamel said.

He added that the 2011 Western military operation was meant to get rid of Gaddafi, not to solve the country’s problems.

“Gaddafi was the only one who pitched the idea of a united Africa and a single African army. Back in those days, Libya was the most independent country in the region, but the big powers, led by the US, got a pretext for 'protecting civilians and spreading democracy' in Libya. They used the young Libyans’ legitimate demands for better living conditions and new jobs to stoke up the conflict and Hillary Clinton was actively involved in the Western effort to topple Gaddafi,” Abdel Baset bin Hamel noted.

“It was not a revolution we had in Libya, it was a national catastrophe that has turned Libya into a failed state,” he added.

Abdel Baset bin Hamel said that Muammar Gaddafi had managed to avoid the problems Libya is facing today because he was perfectly aware of his country’s specifics and the nature of relations existing between its various tribes.

We had no conflicts within our society and tribes and between our political factions. Gaddafi always managed to find a compromise to keep the nation together under one flag. He was a born leader and this is how people viewed him, rather than a top-level official. A real phenomenon, that’s what he was,” Abdel Baset bin Hamel said in conclusion.

Gaddafi’s murder and the crisis in Mali

Meanwhile, the same state of chaos Libya has been living through since Gaddafi’s murder is now evident also in Mali where French troops are currently deployed as part of Operation Barkhane, which Prime Minister Manuel Valls has promised will continue as long as it takes to eliminate the “Jihadist threat.”

In January 2013, less than a month after his election, French President Francois Hollande launched Operation Serval to halt the southwards advance of Islamist insurgents in Mali.

French media were quick to notice a direct link between Gaddafi’s fall in Libya and an increased flow of arms to jihadist militants in Mali. Many experts believed that the arms had come from the armories of the fallen Libyan leader.

In an interview with Sputnik France, retired Brigadier General Dominique Trinquant said that there were more reasons for the current chaos in northern Mali than just arms supplies. ”I think it would be an exaggeration to say that all these Kalashnikov assault rifles and machineguns have come from Gaddafi’s reserves. What is really happening is that the mercenaries, who once served Gaddafi, have been moving over to Mali from southern Libya. Small wonder that the jihadists were so quick to move in and fill the void,” Dominique Trinquant said.

When asked who was now sowing death and destruction and cementing their positions in Syria, while France fought jihadist militants in Mali and elsewhere in the Sahel and Sahara regions, Dominique Trinquant said that Syria was a completely different matter.

“The strategy is changing. France’s virtual absence from what is going on in Syria has slowed the pace of the antiterrorist operation there. We do conduct airstrikes in Syria, but the closure of our embassy in Damascus has seriously hampered our intelligence gathering capability and this has caused a lot of criticism here in France,” he added.
 
End of Civil War in Libya

https://sputniknews.com/africa/201610231046630258-libya-civil-war/

On October 23, 2011, a civil war in Libya officially ended.

The armed conflict in Libya began in February 2011 as a stage in the so-called Arab Spring. Protests erupted in Libyan provinces with demands for the resignation of Jamahiriya leader Col. Muammar Gaddafi, who had ruled the country for over 40 years under a clannish and inter-tribal system. The city of Benghazi became a stronghold of Gaddafi opponents. Armed confrontation between government forces and insurgents began in the country, the course of which was fatefully influenced by direct foreign intervention.

Anti-government protests began on February 15 in Benghazi, the second-largest city in Libya. Demonstrators demanded the release of lawyer and rights activist Fethi Tarbel. When Tarbel was released, the protestors did not disperse but clashed with the police. After that, security forces dispersed several hundred demonstrators who chanted anti-regime slogans. According to Libyan media reports, 14 people were injured in the clashes. By late February, Benghazi passed under the control of Gaddafi opponents. A national council was formed in the city as a revolutionary body whose authority was to be recognized by all cities that had supported the Libyan leader’s opponents. Protests by regime opponents also began in the country’s capital Tripoli. According to international organizations, the authorities relentlessly cracked down on demonstrators.

On February 26, the UN Security Council adopted a resolution introducing international sanctions against the Libyan leadership. The sanctions, designed to stop the killings of regime opponents, provided for an embargo on arms trade with Libya, the freezing of accounts and a ban on trips abroad by the Libyan leader, his family members and his close associates.

By that time, Gaddafi had almost completely lost control over the eastern part of the country.

On February 27, the Libyan opposition announced the establishment of the National Transitional Council as an interim government, and preparations for a presidential election.

On March 17, the United States and its Western partners initiated a UN Security Council resolution introducing a no-fly zone over Libya. Russia and China did not exercise their veto power, believing that the zone was not in conflict with the international community’s efforts to settle the situation in the country. However, in reality, forces of the NATO-led Western coalition exceeded the UN mandate and began delivering airstrikes on the country’s state, civilian and military installations, thus siding with the insurgents.

On March 19, a foreign military operation against the Gaddafi regime began in Libya with the participation of UK, French, US, Canadian, Belgian, Italian, Spanish and Danish armed forces. French combat aircraft that took off from the Saint-Dizier airbase delivered the first airstrike against Libyan military facilities near Benghazi. On March 31, command of the Libya campaign passed completely to NATO. The armed uprising in Libya lasted about nine months. As a result, Jamahiriya leader Muammar Gaddafi was overthrown and on October 20, 2011 killed near his hometown of Sirte, where he was hiding from his opponents.

The oil-producing country suffered enormous economic damage. Precise casualty figures are still unknown. According to official Libyan statistics, 5,500 people were killed in several months of 2011.

On October 23, 2011, the National Transitional Council officially announced the end of the civil war in Libya.

The NATO operation in Libya ended on October 31, 2011.

After Gaddafi’s death, the struggle for power began between various clans and armed groups both at the national and regional level.

On July 7, 2012, parliamentary elections to the General National Congress took place in Libya. The majority of seats went to two competing parties: the National Forces Alliance and the Islamist Justice and Construction Party. The confrontation between the Islamists and moderate forces with support from a segment of the military establishment led to another armed conflict, as a result of which a dual power situation evolved in August 2014. The House of Representatives, recognized by the international community, was based in the city of Tobruk in the east of the country, while the pro-Islamic General National Congress (GNC), which was supported by armed groups, was based in Tripoli. Militia groups that supported the GNC fought incessantly with supporters of a secular development model from Tobruk. In the south, there were constant clashes between tribes, some of which sided with Tobruk and some with Tripoli.

After the overthrow of Gaddafi, members of ISIS (Islamic State, IS) and al-Qaeda (organizations banned in Russia) moved into Libya on a massive scale, teaming up with local terrorist groups and posing a great threat to the very existence of the state.

The international community supported the political process aimed at the formation of a national unity government.

On December 17, 2015, the UN-brokered Libyan Political Agreement was signed in Skhirat, Morocco.

The main point of the agreement, which took the parties to the conflict 14 months to coordinate, was the formation of an interim Government of National Accord, with a view to holding new parliamentary elections within two years.

On December 23, 2015, the UN Security Council passed Resolution 2259 approving the December 17 agreement on the formation of the Government of National Accord. The resolution was unanimously approved by 15 members of the UN Security Council.

On March 31, 2016, the Government of National Accord was formed in Tripoli, led by Prime Minister Fayez al Sarraj.

Islamists from the now defunct GNC joined the High Council of State, a parallel parliament, which, under the UN plan, should perform advisory functions.

The Tobruk parliament did not support the Government of National Accord, rejecting a vote of confidence in the UN-backed government.
 
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