5Pillars
The countries that colluded in the destruction of Libya are now pretending to be trying to save the country, argues veteran Arab journalist Abdel Bari Atwan.
Nobody is saying it, but it has to be said. The countries currently trying to bring peace to Libya are the same countries that destroyed it ten years ago.
Most of the twelve states that attended Sunday’s Berlin Conference – with the notable exception of Algeria – were and continue to be complicit in that process.
They either contributed directly to Libya’s destruction or indirectly through their silence (and implicit approval), or their collusion via local or regional clients.
Their victims were, and remain, the Libyan people, whose wellbeing was, and remains, the last thing on the mind of most of the Berlin conference.
The truth is they met to share out the spoils — Libya’s oil and gas, and its reconstruction and infrastructure projects — and also to consider other, less important, matters: such as how, by reducing Libya to a failed state, they turned it into a conduit for hundreds of thousands of migrants heading for Europe’s Mediterranean shores.
The summit brought together backers of the main warring factions in Libya, and world leaders pledged to end foreign interference and work towards a “permanent ceasefire.”
Turkey, Russia, the UAE and Egypt attended, as well as representatives from the United States, United Kingdom, France, Germany, Congo, Algeria, United Nations, African Union and United Nations.
It was the latest of many diplomatic attempts aimed at pushing Libya on a path to peace.
Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan used the gathering to warn that the collapse of Fayez Sarraj’s internationally-recognised government, which controls less than 20% of Libya’s territory, would turn Libya into a hotbed of terrorism.
If only he had realised that a decade ago. Thanks to him, and all the other governments that cooperated or competed with him for control of Libya and its resources, and sponsored mercenaries to fight there on their behalf, the country was turned into a failed state for the foreseeable future.
The list of culprits is long. As well as Turkey it includes the governments of the U.S. and Russia, the UAE and Qatar, plus France, the UK, Egypt, Sudan, Chad and others.
The Berlin Conference’s closing statement declared that countries that sell arms or send mercenaries to Libya should be sanctioned, and it proposed deploying a truce monitoring force.
In practice, however, truce terms are set by whoever has the upper hand on the ground. In Libya’s case, that unambiguously means General Khalifa Haftar, who was groomed and nurtured for many years by the CIA which set up training camps for his followers.
Libya has been in turmoil since the death of Muammar Gaddafi in a 2011 uprising, with various factions and militias taking advantage of the power vacuum to secure territory and control of Africa’s largest oil reserves.
Haftar’s attempt to capture Tripoli, which began in April last year, marked the beginning of the conflict’s latest stage, and has seen thousands killed in heavy fighting, focused mainly in the suburbs of the capital city.
The general now also enjoys the support of Russia, France, the UAE, Egypt among others.
He refused to sign the ceasefire agreement brokered by Russian President Vladimir Putin in Moscow last week. He will also refuse to sign any similar agreements emerging from Berlin.
And even if he does sign them, he will not respect them. So the Berlin conference’s closing declaration is barely worth the paper it is written on.
By closing down Libya’s oil export terminals, which are under his forces’ control, the day before the Berlin conference, Haftar was sending a message to the participants: Issue as many resolutions as you like. But I’m in control, and most of you secretly support me, so we all know it’s an act.
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