Turkish legislators to sign off on Libya military support deal

Tripoli could request vehicles, equipment and weapons for use in army, navy and air operations as well as intelligence.

Turkey has moved closer to providing military support for Libya‘s internationally recognised government after a bilateral deal was sent to the Libyan parliament. The agreement includes provisions for launching a “quick reaction force” – if requested by Tripoli.

Late last month, Ankara and Tripoli signed an expanded security and military accord and, separately, a memorandum on maritime boundaries that Greece said violated international law.

President Recep Tayyip Erdogan said on Sunday that Turkey was ready to provide Tripoli any military support it needed after Ankara and Libya’s internationally recognised government signed the deal.

“We will be protecting the rights of Libya and Turkey in the Eastern Mediterranean,” he said on A Haber TV. “We are more than ready to give whatever support necessary to Libya.”

While the maritime accord has been sent to the United Nations for approval, the military deal has been presented to Turkey’s Parliament.

“Parliament will enter it into force after approval,” Minister of Foreign Affairs Mevlut Cavusoglu said.

It was unclear when a vote would take place in the Parliament controlled by Erdogan‘s ruling AK Party.

Khalifa Haftar, who leads forces in eastern Libya, “is not a legitimate leader … and is representative of an illegal structure,” Erdogan said after meeting in Istanbul with Fayez al-Sarraj, the prime minister of Libya’s internationally recognised Government of National Accord (GNA).

Haftar, who is the head of the self-styled Libyan National Army (LNA) urged on Thursday his forces to advance towards the centre of Tripoli in what he said would be a “final battle” after an offensive against the government that began in April but has stalled.

The agreement, which would allow Turkey to backstop Libya’s police and military, is Ankara’s latest move in the Eastern Mediterranean that has raised tensions with Greece and other nations.

Athens, which expelled the Libyan ambassador over the maritime boundary pact, has also condemned new Turkish gas exploration off the coast of the divided island of Cyprus.

According to the text of the agreement sent to Turkish legislators, Tripoli could request vehicles, equipment and weapons for use in army, navy and air operations. It also makes provision for new intelligence sharing.

‘Zero hour’

Days after Haftar declared a “final” and decisive battle for Tripoli, heavy fighting raged for a 24-hour period between his troops and militias loosely allied with the internationally recognised government.

The fighting came after Haftar, leader of the LNA, said the “zero hour” of his battle for Tripoli had begun, nearly eight months after he began an offensive to take the capital from the GNA, which is supported by the UN.

The LNA’s media office shared images of reinforcements arriving in Tripoli, including ground troops and pick-up trucks with mounted machine guns and of clashes in southern parts of the city. Haftar’s forces took control of the town of al-Tawghaar, just south of Tripoli, the LNA said.

But Tripoli-based forces disputed that claim.

The fighting has threatened to plunge Libya into another bout of violence rivalling the scale of the 2011 conflict that overthrew and killed longtime ruler Muammar Gaddafi.

In the chaos that followed Gaddafi’s death, the country was divided into two parts – a weak UN-recognised administration in Tripoli and a rival government in the east aligned with the LNA.

The LNA’s media office said it shot down a Turkish-made drone over the town of Ain Zara south of the capital. Haftar’s forces captured an important military camp from the Tripoli-allied militias and clashes continued around the camp, officials from both sides said.

The LNA also launched air raids overnight against an airbase at the Air Force Academy in the city of Misrata, hitting military warehouses allegedly housing Turkish-made drones used by Tripoli-allied militias, said LNA spokesman Ahmed al-Mesmari.

Misrata, in western Libya, is the country’s second-largest city and home to fierce militias who oppose Haftar and have been extremely important in the government’s defence of Tripoli.

Separately, Egyptian President Abdel Fattah el-Sisi on Sunday told a local broadcaster that al-Serraj’s GNA was being held hostage by “armed and terrorist militias,” an oft-repeated claim by Haftar and his supporters.

“[The GNA] is not able to have a free and real will because they have been taken hostage by armed and terrorist militias there.”

‘Blatant’ weapon supplies

UN experts said in a 376-page report to the Security Council last week that Jordan, Turkey, and the United Arab Emirates (UAE) are supporting Libya’s warring sides and have “routinely and sometimes blatantly supplied weapons, with little effort to disguise the source” in violation of a UN arms embargo.

Libyan and US officials have accused Russia of deploying fighters through a private security contractor, the Wagner Group, to key Libyan battleground areas in recent months.

While Moscow has repeatedly denied any role in the fighting in Libya, the GNA said it has documented between 600 and 800 Russian fighters in Libya fighting with Haftar’s forces.

“The Russian fighters’ toughness, lethal techniques and coordination discipline have instilled fear in the anti-Haftar forces,” said Jalel Harchaoui, a Libya expert at The Netherlands Institute of International Relations.

“Now, Haftar and all foreign states backing him have become dramatically more confident that Haftar’s brigades will enter Tripoli within the foreseeable future.”

Al Jazeera.com

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