Archive for the ‘Libya’ Category

Transcript: National security adviser John Bolton on "Face …

President Trump cheered this week's historic meeting between North Korean dictator Kim Jong Un and South Korean President Moon Jae-in, applauding their agreementto denuclearize and seek peace.

"It's never gone this far," the presidentsaid on Friday, adding later that "this isn't like past administrations, we don't play games." The talks set the stage for Mr. Trump's own upcoming high-stakes summit with Kim, where he hopes the U.S. will make history in striking its own deal with the regime.

White House national security adviser John Bolton joined us to discuss North Korea, the upcoming summit and the future of the Iran nuclear deal.

The following is a transcript of the interview with Bolton that aired Sunday, April 29, 2018, on "Face the Nation."

BRENNAN: Good morning and welcome to "Face the Nation." I'm Margaret Brennan. We've got a lot to cover today and we begin with President Trump's new national security adviser, former U.N. Ambassador John Bolton. Welcome to the program.

BOLTON: Glad to be with you.

BRENNAN: You're just about three weeks on the job now you have this South Korean led diplomatic breakthrough. Do you believe that Kim Jong Un is ready to negotiate away his weapons or is he just trying to soften his image?

BOLTON: Well I don't think we know at this point. I think if he has made a strategic determination that- that North Korea would be better off without nuclear weapons then I think we've got something to talk about and I think the president would be eager to capitalize on the opportunity. But I think it's clear we're here where we are today because of the pressure that the Trump administration has put on North Korea. Economic pressure, political, military pressure. I think this is widely recognized president Moon of South Korea himself has repeatedly said the opportunities for the Olympics, the opportunity for the North-South summit would not have occurred without this pressure campaign. The Prime Ministers of Japan and Australia, the president of France, the chancellor of Germany have all said the same thing. So that's why we're here now. And I think it's up to the North Koreans to show us that they really do intend to give up nuclear weapons.

BRENNAN: Well arguably North Korea also walks in in a position of some strength- economic weakness perhaps but this nuclear program is further along than any past administration has encountered. So are-

BOLTON: Well because of the mistakes of 25 years of past administrations-

BRENNAN: -but is it a requirement that Kim Jong Un agree to give away those weapons before you give any kind of concession?

BOLTON: I think that's right. I think we're looking at the Libya model of 2003, 2004. We're also looking at what North Korea itself has committed to previously and most importantly I think going back over a quarter of a century to the 1992 joint North-South denuclearization agreement where North Korea committed to give up nuclear weapons and committed to give up uranium enrichment and plutonium reprocessing. Now we've got other issues to discuss as well; their ballistic missile programs, their biological and chemical weapons programs, their keeping of American hostages, the abduction of innocent Japanese and South Korean citizens over the years. So there's a lot to talk about.

BRENNAN: Will the U.S. accept this invitation from the North to inspect their nuclear site when it's taken down in May as promised?

BOLTON: Well we'll see exactly what that is, you know the-the

BRENNAN: Well the South says that's what the North promised

BOLTON: the North- the North. Well it's- it's interesting because we've been to this place before. I hope it's a sincere commitment by the North. But I'll just read you a sentence if I may. "In a gesture demonstrating its commitment to halt its nuclear weapons program, North Korea blew up the most prominent symbol of its plutonium production Friday. The destruction of the cooling tower bore witness to the incremental progress that has been made and U.S. led multilateral efforts to end North Korea's nuclear weapons program." June 27, 2008, New York Times. Now the selfsame New York Times last month reported that President Trump is going to have difficulty with North Korea because new satellite evidence suggests that North Korea is expanding its plutonium production. So- we want to see real commitment. We don't want to see propaganda from North Korea.

BRENNAN: You haven't seen such act-actions so far?

BOLTON: We've seen words-

BRENNAN: No dismantlement?

BOLTON: We've seen words so far.

BRENNAN: Continued development.

BOLTON: You've- They've said that they're going to give up nuclear testing and ballistic missile testing. They haven't conducted any recently. That's true. That could be a very positive sign or it could be a sign that they've reached the level of development where they don't need testing now. We've seen this in other contexts as well. President Trump is determined to see this opportunity through. Hopeful that we can get a real breakthrough, but we're not naive in the in the administration and-and a lot's going to ride on this meeting with with Kim Jong Un.

BRENNAN: So there are these headlines that-- from South Korea saying Kim Jong Un would abandon his weapons if the U.S. promises not to invade his country. Are you going to make any kind of promise like that?

BOLTON: Well, we've heard this before. This is- the North Korean propaganda playbook is an infinitely rich resource.

BRENNAN: But it puts a burden on the United States.

BOLTON: I don't think it does really. I think that if you look at the decision to give up nuclear weapons as a real strategic decision that North Korea has to make. What we want to see from them is evidence that it's real and not just rhetoric. In the case of Libya for example and it's a different situation in some respects those negotiations were carried out in private they were not known publicly. But one thing that Libya did that led us to overcome our skepticism was that they allowed American and British observers into all their nuclear related sites. So it wasn't a question of relying on international mechanisms. We saw them in ways we had never seen before.

BRENNAN: That sounds like you want inspections beca- before any kind of sanctions relief.

BOLT: Well I think it would be a manifestation of the strategic decision to give up nuclear weapons doesn't have to be the same as Libya but it's got to be something concrete and tangible it may be that Kim Jong Un has some ideas and we should hear him out.

BRENNAN: According to CBS' reporting, Singapore is the preferred location for this meeting between President Trump and Kim Jong un. When will you make this determination on location and how important is it?

BOLTON: Well I think that the when- when the present is ready to announce that he'll announce it. We're still working on the location. We're still working on the date.

BRENNAN: He said within the next few weeks. Three to four.

BOLTON: He- the president is ready to go on this. And- and so we're eager to come to a conclusion so we can do all the logistical planning but I don't want to preempt any any news that that he may want to make. We just don't have we don't have it pinned down yet.

BRENNAN: Is there any update on the three Americans that are being held prisoner in North Korea? I mean are they essentially going to be held hostage to the success of this diplomacy or do they need to be released before the president walks into that room?

BOLTON: Well I don't want to get into the discussions that-that we've had. I'll just say this. These three Americans are at the top of the president's mind. And in- in exchanges between normal nations these people wouldn't even be held. So I think North Korea should look at this very seriously.

BRENNAN: This is a gesture though that they're not required to take before the meeting?

BOLTON: It would be a demonstration of their sincerity. We're waiting to see what their decision is.

BRENNAN: Can you tell us anything about their status?

BOLTON: Well I'd rather not get into the discussions-- at this point but it's very much on the president's mind.

BRENNAN: I want to ask you as well about this other big decision upcoming on the Iran nuclear deal. You've been very public in the past about your skepticism and it's led diplomats in private to say and to question whether you're going to be a broker here who could actually present another option to the president. If the Europeans can pull off a side deal a fix to the nuclear plant, do you actually think it's possible to keep it?

BOLTON: Well it's the president's decision. I mean one thing people have to keep in mind is that I've changed roles here. When I was a private citizen I could say whatever I've wanted to it was a great a great luxury but --

BRENNAN: In March you said it cannot be improved and it simply blew smoke and mirrors to think we can fix it. That wasn't that long ago.

BOLTON: So I don't - What I said was what I believed I don't back away from them. But that's not my job now. My job is to give advice to the president. He'll make that decision. It's his call. I'm the national security adviser not the national security decision maker. And in fact on the Iran nuclear deal issue I have presented him with options and I'll continue to do it right up until he makes the decision. I think that's critical for the proper functioning of the national security system and it's my obligation to do that.

BRENNAN: So if Secretary Pompeo can craft a side deal you are open to accepting and to keeping the Iran nuclear deal?

BOLTON: I think it's a question of the president being open to make the final decision. It's the job of his advisers to give advice. He's the decision maker.

BRENNAN: So is the U.S. put sanctions back on Iran on May 12th, does that mean the U.S. has withdrawn?

BOLTON: Well there are a variety of things that could happen and I don't want to get into a discussion of what the hypotheticals might be but certainly withdrawal is under consideration. The president has said this repeatedly. His views on the nuclear deal have been uniform consistent and unvarying since the campaign of 2016, and we'll see what happens.

BRENNAN: Well the world is watching. Thank you so much.

BOLTON: Glad to be with you --

BRENNAN: John Bolton. Thank you for coming on "Face the Nation." Hope to have you back soon.

BOLTON: Thank you very much.

Continued here:
Transcript: National security adviser John Bolton on "Face ...

Libya | MSF USA

Libya: Latest MSF Updates

This information is excerpted from MSFs 2016 International Activity Report.

Libya remained fragmented by conflict and political divisions, which severely impacted the health care system. MSF donated drugs and medical equipment to hospitals throughout the country to support emergency and surgical care. In Benghazi, MSF ran a clinic with a Libyan NGO to offer pediatric and gynecological consultations to displaced and vulnerable people. MSF also supported the emergency room in Benghazi Medical Center and Al Abyar and Al-Marj hospitals with staff and training. MSF supported the main Misrata hospital, establishing a partnership for infection control with an MSF-run hospital in Amman, and provided two hospitals in Zintan with supplies and mass-casualty response training.

In addition to being a destination for hundreds of thousands of refugees, asylum seekers, and migrants, Libya was a transit point for people attempting to cross the Mediterranean to reach Europe. These people were exposed to alarming levels of violence, exploitation, and ill treatment. MSF ran mobile clinics in seven migrant detention centers in and around Tripoli, carrying out 7,145 medical consultations.

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Libya | MSF USA

In ‘The Burning Shores,’ Libya Blossoms Briefly Before …

Demonstrators raise Libyan flags at a national unity demonstration in Tripoli's Martyrs' Square in 2012. Courtesy of Frederic Wehrey hide caption

Demonstrators raise Libyan flags at a national unity demonstration in Tripoli's Martyrs' Square in 2012.

In April 2016, former President Barack Obama singled out the "worst mistake" of his presidency: his administration's lack of planning for the aftermath of the 2011 military intervention in Libya.

When Libyan dictator Moammar Gadhafi was toppled, author Frederic Wehrey says, the country was initially seized by euphoria.

"You had the blossoming of civil society; people were free to speak their own minds, they were able to organize themselves politically," says Wehrey, a senior fellow at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace. "And so it was quite easy to get swept up in that triumphal moment."

He witnessed the moment firsthand and then watched as it fell apart. Tribes and militias turned on each other, and Libya descended into civil war.

Wehrey documents the country's unraveling in The Burning Shores: Inside the Battle for the New Libya.

On the United States' plans to help Libya

They had the plans, but the problem was the will to execute them. So this was an administration the Obama administration [that] undertook this intervention with the explicit goal of not being responsible for what followed it, of really abdicating responsibility for the post-conflict recovery and reconstruction to the Libyans themselves, but also to the United Nations and the Europeans.

And for various reasons, those actors proved incapable or unwilling to handle the reconstruction. The U.N. had its own set of problems: bureaucratic, structural. The Libyans were divided about how much assistance they wanted they did not want to repeat an Iraq-style occupation, but at the same time, they did want some assistance. So it was this real quandary about, how do you assist a country that really had no experience in governance?

On the death of U.S. Ambassador to Libya Chris Stevens

The great tragedy of this was that Ambassador Stevens was so committed to outreach to the Libyan people and to a particular practice of diplomacy that really meant getting out on the street and meeting people from all walks of life. And the great tragedy of that attack was that it constrained that approach, it curtailed it. There was a tremendous retreat, or retrenchment, of America's diplomatic presence.

And part of that was understandable for the need to safeguard lives, but part of it unfortunately was the partisanship that this became so politicized back in Washington, D.C. that it affected America's ability to engage on the ground in Libya....

A Libyan soldier peers across the frontline in Sirte during battle against the Islamic State in 2016. Courtesy of Frederic Wehrey hide caption

A Libyan soldier peers across the frontline in Sirte during battle against the Islamic State in 2016.

There was no government in Benghazi to protect them, there was no army or police they were at the whim of these militias. Many Libyans actually did try to help the Americans that night, and that story I do not think has been told fully, and I try to tell it in my book that Libyans actually did try to come to the rescue of Chris. There were certain militias that helped the Americans evacuate.

On civil war and ISIS in Libya

You had ... this sort of splintering of the country into two camps, into open civil war, in the summer of 2014. That was exacerbated by regional states that were playing a very cynical game of arming and funding the different factions Egypt, the UAE (United Arab Emirates), Qatar and Turkey. And then in the middle of this vacuum that was opened up, you had ISIS come. And it was an obvious breeding ground for ISIS: a fractured state that already had a tradition of radicalism, of jihadism. You had Libyans that went to Syria to fight that were coming back and they were really the carriers of the "ISIS virus," so to speak. And so quickly ISIS spread across the country.

On the current state of Libya

There are encouraging signs of normalcy in Tripoli: markets are open, there are sports clubs, you know, universities are open.

But there is deep trauma. I mean, there's huge problems with medical care. You have Libyans actually joining those migrant flows across the Mediterranean, they're so desperate to leave. A lot of Libyans have left. You have rampant lawlessness.

So on the surface when you go there, it seems OK, but there is a lot of kidnapping, there's a lot of criminality, and there are militia fights that can break out at any time in the capital over turf for various reasons. So things can go bad very, very quickly. So the calm you encounter on first sight is often very deceptive.

Noah Caldwell and Emily Kopp produced and edited this story for broadcast. Sydnee Monday adapted it for the Web.

See more here:
In 'The Burning Shores,' Libya Blossoms Briefly Before ...

GNC | Libya Analysis

GNA brokers local solution to east Tripoli tensions

On 6 January, a large military deployment by the Government of National Accord (GNA) GNA-affiliated Kani brigade (also known as the GNAs 7th Infantry Division) from Tarhouna took control of the Garabulli coastal checkpoint 40 km east of Tripoli. The kidnapping of two Kani members, and the killing of one, by a gunman from Garabulli is understood to have sparked the offensive. Tensions subsided after the Kani brigade pulled out later the same day. The Garabulli local mayor announced the handover of the checkpoint to local security, and said that it will be manned in conjunction with the GNAs Central Security forces.

The move raised high tensions in Tripoli, in expectation that the assault was a precursor to a larger anti-GNA move by ex-Government of National Congress (GNC) hardliners who were evicted from Tripoli in September 2017. Although the Kani brigade is now affiliated with the GNA, until fairly recently they were aligned with the hardliner GNC alliance led by Khalifa al-Ghwell, and the militia itself is notorious for its brutality and the hardline Islamist ideologies of some of its leadership. It seems the Kani brigade accommodated Serraj in order to retain their power, which they appear to have done successfully.

Both this deployment and that of Usama Juwaili into the Zuwara region were conducted with minimal casualties and both produced (for now) new security arrangements, with mixed local and national army jurisdictions, where the main military forces withdrew leaving in place collocated forces. This means the GNA, headed by Fayez al-Serraj, has further consolidated its military control of the western region, as well as beginning to institutionalize local cooperation with its army units. However, in the case of the Kani operation it does not seem that this was a carefully planned, strategic operation, but rather a response to local rivalries. Nevertheless, the fact that a local security arrangement was agreed shortly after the incident highlights an apparent trend of brokering local solutions to conflict. However, the resilience of such arrangements in the current political standstill plaguing the UN roadmap is to be tested.

Mary Fitzgerald and Mattia Toaldo have recently updated their guide to Libyas main players for the European Council on Foreign Relations. Outlining the key political groups, armed groups, and jihadists the guide also features detail maps of armed groups, centers of power and key infrastructure. In the guide the authors explore the state of some of the Zintani armed groups:

A number of Zintani forces have distanced themselves from Haftar particularly those close to former defence minister Osama Jweili while others remain supportive. As commander of the GNAs western region military zone, Jweili led an offensive in the Wershefana territory on Tripolis hinterland in November 2017 with a coalition that included forces from Zintan, Tripoli among them Haithem Tajouris TRB and Tarhouna. While ostensibly anti-crime, the operation also served to undermine LNA-affiliated groups in the area.

Click here to read the guide.

On 15 October, the UN Support Mission in Libyas (UNSMIL) new Joint Drafting Committee, composed of members of both the House of Representatives (HoR) and the High Council of State (HCS), met for the second time in Tunis to continue negotiations on amendments to the Libyan Political Agreement (LPA). As discussions continued the following day, and despite the UNSMIL indicating that both sides had developed a clearer understanding of the selection-mechanism for the Presidency Council, the HoR announced that they were suspending their participation in the dialogue. Detailing frustrations with the HCS for being unwilling to engage with contentious issues and unable to provide conclusive solutions to points of disagreement, the HoR stated that they would not pursue any further discussions until receiving in writing the HCSs position on crucial matters.

The key issues of contention are not detailed, however they are likely to be connected to how individuals are selected for key positions and to Article 8 of the LPA. Article 8 requires all military positions to be vacant upon the formation of the new Libyan government and would see Khalifar Haftar lose his position as commander of the armed forces. Sources say that the HoR wants the decisions of the Supreme Commander of Libyan Army, which under the current terms would be the PC, to be approved by the HoR, while the HCS rejects this.

The situation is likely to put the new UNSMIL road map into a prolonged state of limbo that may provide Haftar with an opportunity to justify and pursue his preference for a military solution to the crisis. Haftar has said the ongoing UN political process is not the only solution to Libyas political crisis, implying that a military solution approved by the people remains possible. During a speech in Benghazi on 14 October, Haftar claimed that the Libyan National Army (LNA) controls territory from Ras al-Jedir to west Zawiyya, and while Tripoli remains outside his grasp, he has on several occasions stated his willingness to take the city by force if necessary. If the LNAs military control and social support for Haftar increases in western Libya, Haftar may no longer see any value in paying lip service to the UN process and could attempt to achieve his aim of taking Tripoli through force or via a series of alliances on the ground.

On 25 September, presidential hopeful Basit Igtet landed in Metiga airport and led small crowds from Tajoura to Martyrs Square to demonstration against the Government of National Accord (GNA). However, the crowds remained relatively small, numbering around 2000 people, and their demands were unclear. Pro-GNA Tripoli militias were deployed in force in most of the main streets in the capital leading towards the square and continue to remain deployed in anticipation of any security instability in the capital. The Tripoli security directorate had previously announced that it was denying permission for the demonstration but they did not try to prevent it on the day.

According to the Libya Herald, the event was peaceful, in spite of the presence of a significant number of anti-Igtet protestors and despite some of the those on both sides said to have taken weapons just in case there was violence. The two sides were kept part by plain clothed security forces, said to belong to Ghneiwas central security authority. According to the Washington Post, hundreds of counter-demonstrators attended and shouted anti-Igtet slogans. Igtet himself was present at one point, but did not speak. As night fell, the two sides clashed with fistfights before security forces intervened and separated them with dozens of vehicles. Most headed home afterwards.

The deflation of expectations for a large, game-changing popular rally in support of Igtet, as well as against the GNA and Khalifa Haftar, is likely to pave the way for the new UN led roadmap to gain stronger momentum and traction in the coming days. While the UN led process is indeed expected to gain positive momentum, especially after the high level UN Summit lending support to the plan, possibilities for further fragmentation and conflict remain high. Military wise, the fomenting conflict in Sabratha may become a catalyst for a groundswell of military action in the coastal region west of Tripoli between pro and anti LNA rivals, and thus could trigger conflict in the capital as well.

Last week, the UN Security Council published its final report of the Panel of Experts on Libya, established pursuant to resolution 1973 (2011). The long, detailed report touches on a number of significant topics including human rights violations, violations of the arms embargo, and the role of foreign mercenaries in Libyas conflicts. The report states that the panel continues to receive frequent reports of serious human rights violations, including kidnappings, arbitrary detentions and summary executions. Cases investigated by the Panel include abuses against Libyan residents of Tripoli and Benghazi, prisoners of war and migrants.

The Panel documented several instances in which armed groups were involved in actual or potential violations of the arms embargo. Access to military equipment has facilitated the escalation of armed conflicts, notably through air strikes. The report states that the United Arab Emirates have been providing military equipment to the LNA, in violation of the arms embargo, significantly increasing the air support available to LNA. Likewise, the report indicates that armed groups in Misrata have received support from a network of foreign pilots, mercenaries, and arms dealers, including Ecuadorians, which has allowed them to increase their capacity to launch airstrikes.

The report also highlights the direct intervention of Chadian and Sudanese mercenaries in the Libyan conflict, particularly in the Oil Crescent, warning that their actions are a direct threat to the security and economic stability of Libya. The Panel also received reports that commanders of the Sudan Liberation Army/Minni Minawi were received in Marj in mid-October 2016. Chadian groups were also hosted in Misrata-controlled bases in Ahjar al-Sawda and in Sabha.

This report highlights the destabilizing impact that external support for rival factions, whether that support is direct or indirect, military or political, has on Libyas fragile dynamics. While such support continues, which it is likely to do particularly in the case of the UAE given the recent strengthening of the anti-Qatar Arab alliance, it will be difficult to de-escalate conflict and bring rival factions to the negotiating table on equal terms.

Click here to accessthe full report.

In a long form article for Norwegian NGO Hate Speech International, Jason Pack and Rhiannon Smith map out the history and context of Libyas myriad jihadist groups.

Six years after protests first erupted in February 2011 against the brutal and repressive rule of Colonel Muammar al-Qadhafi, Libya remains a country beset by deepening political fragmentation, bloody internecine conflict and accelerating economic decline. The Islamic State (ISIS) capitalised on this instability and in late 2014 established a satellite branch in Libya, successfully seizing territory around the central coastal city of Sirte and expanding its influence across the country. By December 2016, an anti-ISIS military campaign supported by US airstrikes and led by militias aligned with Libyas UN-backed Government of National Accord (GNA) Libyas internationally recognised government established under the December 2015 Skhirat Libyan Political Agreement had succeeded in driving ISIS out of Sirte. However, the group is far from defeated and ISIS fighters are regrouping in the vast deserts and remote communities of southern Libya.1

Yet, while ISIS undoubtedly continues to pose a threat to security and stability in Libya, the group is neither the strongest nor the most dangerous jihadist2 group in Libya currently. Since those uprisings that culminated in Qadhafis violent death in October 2011, after 42 years in control, jihadist groups have grown in power and influence, often with funding from wealthy international backers. Although they remain largely on the fringes of Libyan politics and society, jihadists of all colours and stripes can influence developments in Libya due to the transitory and almost fickle nature of the countrys political and military alliances, as well as and the increasing polarisation and instability of institutions at the level of central government.

These jihadist networks also pose a threat to security outside Libya, as demonstrated by the horrifying suicide bombing against a Manchester arena on 22 May that killed 22 people and injured many more. The attack was claimed by ISIS and conducted by Salman Abedi, a British Libyan whose parents fled to the UK in the 1990s due to their connections to theal-Qaeda linked Libyan Islamic Fighting Group (LIFG).3 Abedi visited Tripoli shortly before he carried out the attack, and although at the time of writing it remains unclear whether Abedireceived direct training or supportfor his attack from ISIS cells in Libya, or from associates closer to home, his familial connections to Libyan jihadist networks are significant.4 It is therefore crucial to understand who these Libyan jihadists are, how they interact with other actors, and what influence they can exert.

Click here to read the full article.

Ali Shamekh, the CEO of the Libyan Investment Authority (LIA) as appointed by theHouse of Representatives and the eastern authorities in August 2016, toldReuters on the sidelines ofGlobal Sovereign Wealth Forum in London on 29 March that he was working to unite the fragmented LIA.TheGovernment of National Accord (GNA) also named a Steering Committee to manage the fund last summer, headed by Ali Mahmoud Hassan Mohamed. However,following a recent Tripoli court ruling freezing the decree that created the GNAs steering committee, AbdulMagid Breish, who was thechairman of the LIA before it split and claims he retains this position, has moved back into the LIAs head office in Tripoli.

Shamekh said the fall in production, lower oil prices and instability in Libya meant he was considering investing part of the funds capital inside the country. There are not enough resources or money coming into the country, he said. LIA can play a role in directing some of its funds into energy and power generation, both traditional and renewables, oil and gas, and infrastructure our ports and airports need rehabilitation.

He said he was considering starting an incubation and acceleration fund to back young entrepreneurs with seed capital, particularly in the IT and financial services sectors. The money for this inward investment could come from the $11 billion Libyan Local Investment and Development Fund, a subsidiary of LIA. Shamekh also wants to reopen a London office.

We are considering having a presence for LIA in London its under evaluation by the board of directors, he said. The United Kingdom and London in particular is a focal point of our future strategy overseas.

Click here to read the full article.

Rhiannon Smith spoke to Voice of Americas Mohamed Elshinnawi on 22 March about the dangers of the escalating situation in Libya and how a shift to greater militarisation of the conflict could result in an endless tug of war between competing factions, no one of whom are powerful enough to control the whole country themselves. She discussed the role the international community could play in reinvigorating the political process by de-incentivising military action.

Please click here and go to 17.33 to hear the full interview.

In an article for Foreign Policy, Karim Mezran and Mattia Toaldo argue that as fighting heats up between rival armed groups and Russia increases its involvement, a power vacuum threatens to tear Libyaapart and therefore the international community needs to be doing more to prevent this.

First, Libya needs a de-conflicting mechanism to avoid escalation. If the U.N. envoy cannot do it, someone else in the West should. What better opportunity for Britain to show its continued relevance after Brexit than this? Or why not the French foreign minister, who could beef up his legacy just weeks before leaving office? This should only be a temporary replacement for a fully functioning U.N. mission capable of working on reconciliation, local cease-fires, and monitoring human rights violations. Both a temporary negotiator and the U.N. could work on a number of confidence-building measures, such as establishing permanent channels of communication, liberating prisoners, reopening roads, and sharing humanitarian aid.

Second, the country needs what economist Hala Bugaighis calls a Libyan Economic Agreement on how to peacefully share its oil wealth. Negotiating a new social contract may take some time, but in the meantime, two measures would represent a good start: The government in Tripoli should strengthen financial support for all of Libyas municipalities, including areas controlled by Haftar, and oil installations should be placed under the control of the independent National Oil Corporation in Tripoli, with attempts to establish parallel economic institutions punished by international sanctions.

Finally, Tripoli must be the heart of international efforts. The most pressing need is a plan to free the city of all heavy weapons, pushing militias to stock them outside of civilian-populated areas. This is an important condition to allow the Libyan government to operate and to facilitate international assistance.

Click here to read the full article.

The Middle East Eye reported yesterday that on 21 March, the Misrata Military Council led by Ibrahim Bin Rajab claimed it had overthrown the Misrata Local Council, a locally elected body headed by mayor Mohammed Eshtaiwi. Tensions are escalating between more moderate Misratan factions, who largely support the Government of National Accord (GNA) in Tripoli, and more hardliner factions who areopponents of both the GNA and Haftar and largelysupport Khalifa al-Ghwells resurrected National Salvation government which was evicted from Tripoli last week.

In a statement from the Misrata Military Council (MMC) and its allied militias the Union of Revolutionary Fighters (URF) and the Misrata Security Department MMC chief Ibrahim Bin Rajab said the group had overthrown the municipal council after it refused to negotiate with protesters over its management of the city.

A committee was set up to mediate between the protesters and the municipal council, but the latter refused to meet with the committee without giving any justifications, the Libya Observer cited the statement as saying.

Click here to read the full article.

In an article for the European Council on Foreign Relations, Mattia Toaldo and Karim Mezran argue that at this point in the ongoing crises affecting Libyas governance, economy and security, none of the belligerent parties can militarily defeat the others, but each side thinks it can win and is unwilling to back down. They argue that:

First, the United States, Europe, and regional powers involved in Libya such as Egypt, the UAE, Algeria, Tunisia, and Qatar should put in place a de-conflicting mechanism, cooperating where possible with Russia. Major fighting between the east and the west of the country should be avoided by keeping channels of communication open. These countries should also push UN Secretary General Antonio Guterres to overcome the impasse on his Special Representative for Libya created by the US rejection of Salam Fayyad so that the UN can play an active role in setting up a political process.

Second, as demonstrated by recent fighting, Libyas oil wealth and its distribution remain one of the core drivers of conflict. The US and Europeans should push Prime Minister Serraj to offer to Eastern Libya a Libyan Economic Agreement on how to share oil wealth and energy installations in a way that benefits the Libyan public and stabilizes the country.

Finally, the militia rule in the capital is incompatible with any stabilization effort and threatens any Libyan government while hampering any form of international assistance.

Click here to read the full article.

On 15 March, the Libya Herald reported that fighting between militias in western Tripoli had intensified and spread from Hay al-Andalus and Gurgi towards central Tripoli, with local pro-Government of National Accord (GNA) militias attacking and reportedly ousting Khalifa al-Ghwell and his National Salvation forces from the Rixos hotel compound. There are reports that Ghwell was injured in the fighting.

Haitham Tajouris Tripoli Revolutionaries Brigade joined forces with Abdul Ghani Al-Kikli, also known as Ghneiwa, to retake control (of the Rixos), according to the Tripoli operations room. Ghneiwas Abu Sleem Central Security Force is now reported to be protecting the hotel, which was seized by Ghwell last October in an attempted coup rejecting the PC and the UNSMIL-brokered Libyan Political Agreement.

On the evening of 15 March, the Presidential Council (PC) managed to broker a ceasefire in the capital, calling forthe departure of armed factions beyond the law within the frameworkof the Libyan Political Agreement. However, it is unclear whether this ceasefire will be effective, and precisely which militias the PC and its allies want to depart the city.

Click here and here to read more from the Libya Herald.

Rhiannon Smith spoke to the Voice of Americas Africa Today radio show on 8 March about the significant impact that the Benghazi Defence Brigades (BDB) advance against Haftars Libyan National Army (LNA) forces is likely to have on Libyan political alliances and the ongoing peace process, and how prolonged conflict in the oil crescent is even more likely now that the House of Representatives (HoR) has voted to withdraw from the Libya Political Dialogue. She highlighted how the BDBs handover of Sidra and Ras Lanuf oil ports to Petroleum Facilities Guard (PFG) forces aligned with the Government of National Accord (GNA) may not signify the strength of the GNA but rather its weakness, as by tacitly extending its support to the BDB, the GNA is actually bowing to pressure from the loose Islamist alliance led by Khalifa al-Ghwell in Tripoli.

Click here to listen at 9 minutes into the clip.

The Associated Press has reported that a spokesperson for the House of Representatives (HoR) said yesterday that the body is suspending all peace talks with the UN-backed Presidential Council (PC) and Government of National Accord (GNA).

The Tobruk body called on all Libyan parties to condemn militias that occupied the two key terminals in what it described as terrorist attacks, saying it was suspending its participation in peace talks until they did so.

The GNA unity government is not legitimate any more, as well as its presidential council and anything to do with this entity, Ablaihig said, urging the international community to lift an embargo on weapons sales to the Libyan army under Hifter.

Meanwhile, Reuters reported thatIdris Bukhamada, recently named by theGNA as the head of the Petroleum Facilities Guard, told Al-Nabaa TV thatWe have been tasked by the BDB to protect the oil ports, adding his oil guard belonged to the state and had no military mission.

Click here to read the AP article and here for Reuters.

On 9 February, Libyan National Army (LNA) forces launched airstrikes against an airbase in Jufra, around 300km south of Sirte, killing two and wounding 13 according to the LNA spokesperson Ahmed al-Mismari. He said that the attack was aimed at immobilizing the enemy before an expected attack on the ports. There had been reports in recent days of anti-LNA forces, including the Benghazi Defence Brigades and some Misratan elements, mobilizing in Jufra to launch another offensive to retake the oil crescent ports of Sidra and Ras Lanuf from the LNA. The Libya Herald reports that the LNA planes took off fromAl-Khadim airbase south-east of Marj allegedly usedin recent weeks byaircraft from the UAE.

On 8 February, a convoy of fighters from Misrata arrived in Tripoli. They are led byColonel Mahmoud al-Zaghel, a military commander allied to Khalifa al-Ghwell who has recently re-established the General National Congress (GNC) National Salvation government in Tripoli in an attempt to remove the UN-backed Government of National Accord (GNA) from power.

Zagals force arrived in Tripoli on Wednesday from Misrata, Ghwells home city, in a convoy of several dozen vehicles, triggering heavy clashes with an armed group loyal to the GNA in the southern districts of Salaheddin and Abu Salim.Zagal announced on Thursday the formation of the National Guards, which he said would be used to secure state institutions and diplomatic missions.

Click here to read the Reuters article on this topic.

On 24 January, the Libya Political Dialogue group met in Tunisia and agreed in principle to a number of amendments to the Libyan Political Agreement (LPA). However, no official decision has been made because there was no House of Representatives (HoR) delegation attending the discussions.

The Libya Herald reports that:

Under the new proposals, a new three-man Presidential Council (PC) with a head and two deputies, separate from the government, would replace the current unwieldy nine-man PC. A different prime minister would be appointed. Additionally, a new military council would be formed comprising the heads of the PC, HoR and the State Council, the Dialogue team said in a statement.

The State Council would also in future comprise all those elected to the former legislative authority, the General National Congress, in July 2012. Replacements would not be acceptable unless they replaced originally elected members who had died or resigned.

Click here to read the full article.

Rhiannon Smith speaks to the Voice of Americas Africa News Tonight show to discuss Khalifa al-Ghwells recent seizure of ministries in Tripoli and analyse his demands for a new political process in Libya to replace the UN-backed Government of National Accord (GNA).

Click here to hear the clip the Libya section starts at 12.26.

Continuing my focus on the need for US engagement in Libya at this critical time as Russia appears to be muscling in, Ive written an article for Al-Monitor which follows up on my recent Foreign Affairs piece. I am continuing to push for the Trump Administration to appoint a Special POTUS envoy because I see it as essential.

Russias increasing public support for Hifter and his anti-Islamist strongmancredentials may be the fuel for this particular fire. On Jan. 11, Hifter was flown aboard a Russian aircraft carrier that has recently anchored off Libyas eastern coast. He was given an official tour of the vessel before holding a videoconference with Russias Defense Minister SergeiShoygu and accepting a consignment of medical supplies. The movefollows Russias pledge earlier this month to lift theUN arms embargo to allow Hifter to access weapons as well asrecent visits by Hifter and his political allies to Moscow.No matter which party is victorious in southwest Libya, if Misrata and Hifter begin a full-scale battle for control, then there is little doubt that the whole southern region will be destabilized. There have been calls for calm from a variety of local and international actors, and there is some hope that the rapprochement efforts that have been going on in the background between rival factions may provide channels of communication to de-escalate the conflict. However, the terms of any new political bargain are likely to be far more favorable to Hifter and the eastern faction than those of the existing Libyan Political Agreement The GNAand its Presidential Councilare weak and becoming increasingly fragmented and irrelevant,as highlighted by the resignation of council member Musa al-Koni on Jan. 2. Egypt, Algeria and Russia have been hosting various meetings and negotiations between different Libyan parties to try to find a diplomatic solution to the political impasse that would include Hifter, with Egypt in particular pushing for the Libyan Political Agreementto be reworked to include Hifter as the head of the Libyan Armed Forces (a role the Presidential Council currently holds) and to reduce the size of the council. The United States has yet to respond and risks being outmaneuvered by rival powers. Now is the time for increased US engagement. The Donald Trump administration will come into office with a unique opportunity to mediate a genuine settlement. Its first step should be the appointment of a special presidential envoy tasked with mediating a resolution between Libyas main power blocs.To Read the Full Article Click here.

The Associated Press reports that forces loyal to Khalifa al-Ghwell, head of theself-declared Government of National Salvation, took control of the ministries of defense, labor and the martyrs and the wounded in Tripoli yesterday. Ghwell announced a coup in Tripoli in October, taking control ofthe old GNC building which had housed the High Council of State, but not seizing any political power. His main allies are Islamist militias, many of which are allied with the Mufti Sadeq al-Ghariyani.

A spokesman for Serrajs government dismissed the moves by Ghwells forces, saying they are trying to sow chaos but they have no means to control. He said the ministries Ghwell claimed to have seized are either under maintenance, not controlled by Serrajs government, or were seized briefly before being let go.

In a televised speech, Ghwell declared that all the past arrangements brokered by the U.N. are invalid, and described Serrajs government as expired. Referring to his forces as the Presidential Guard, he ordered them to secure the capital and warned other militias to stand down. He also called for new talks among Libyan factions without foreign mediators.

Click here to read the full article.

The European Council on Foreign Relations has published an excellent and highly informative paper written by Hayder al-Khoei,Ellie Geranmayeh & Mattia Toaldo looking atpost-Isis stabilisation efforts with a special focus on Iraq and Libya, with the aim of assessing where European states can play a more meaningful role in ensuring that the important military gains of recent months are not squandered once the anti-ISIS guns fall quiet. The authors believe this is a track of increased importance given that the incoming US administration is likely to invest less resources than ever in strengthening sustainable stability, and that the fall out of failure will directly impact European interests in terms of the threat of terrorism and challenge posed by ongoing migration.

The papers policy recommendations for Libya are:

Click here to read the full paper.

On 6 December, the UN Special Envoy to Libya Martin Kobler told the UN Security Council that Libyan Political Agreement (LPA) framework signed in Skhirat last yearhas stalled and that its articles are not set in stone. The Libyan Political Agreement even foresees a mechanism for change, should the political circumstances demand. This is significant particularly given that the agreement is due to expire on 17 December and given the current political shifts taking place in Libya following the Misratans declared victory against Islamic State in Sirte, the recent inter-militia clashes in Tripoli and the move by anti-Haftar forces against the Libyan National Army (LNA) forces in the oil crescent.

Click here to read the Libya Heralds report on this topic.

In an article for Religion and Geopolitics, Rhiannon Smith and Jason Pack discuss how recent developments in Libya are causing political alliances to shift and outlinehow these developments might impact the fight against ISIS in Sirte. They conclude that:

In the worst case scenario, Ghwells coup may unleash a new wave of conflict between pro and anti-unity government militias, driving the unity government into exile and possibly establishing a new de-facto government in Tripoli, presided over by Islamist hardliners loyal to Libyas supreme religious leader, the Grand Mufti Sadeq al-Ghariyani. He would actively halt the fight against ISIS to bring all hardline Islamists into his fold. This would lead to the collapse of the UN process with nothing to replace it, short-circuiting attempts to defeat ISIS in Sirte, which would allow the group and other jihadis to extend influence. Conflict in the capital could also strengthen Haftars hand, pushing towards separatism, legitimising military rule and the use of force against Islamist militias, while emboldening those same Islamists to work with ISIS remnants against Haftar.

Time will tell on which of these trajectory Libyas ever-fluid and confusing political landscape is currently evolving, but the direction it takes will certainly influence how much or how little success Libyan forces will have in defeating ISIS.

Click here to view the full article.

Jason Pack appeared live on Al Jazeera English to discuss the significance of former GNC member Khalifa Ghwells coup attempt last week (despite it not being a coup in the sense that no tangible political power has been seized) and how this might affectthe Libyan political process going forward.

According to the AP,

The United States launched multiple airstrikes against Islamic State militants in Libya on Monday, opening a new, more persistent front against the group at the request of the United Nations-backed government, Libyan and U.S. officials said Serraj said his government is joining the coalition against IS, adding, This is the time for the international community to live up to its promises to the Libyan people.

Pentagon press secretary Peter Cook said President Barack Obama authorized the strikes following a recommendation from Defense Secretary Ash Carter and Gen. Joseph Dunford, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff.Cook told reporters that U.S. Africa Command will coordinate any strikes with the Libyans and that the new air campaign will last as long as the Libyans request assistance to eliminate IS from Sirte. The U.S. is also providing airborne surveillance and intelligence.Mohammed al-Ghasri, the commander of a pro-government militia known as al-Bonyan al-Marsous, said his forces gave target coordinates of Islamic State positions to the U.S.You can read the whole article here.

According to Jason Pack, I think the short term impact is outrage on the libyan street that their government is in such open cahoots with the West. The medium term impact is that a sustained campaign could help BM breakthrough against ISIS in Sirte. But the long term impact is only negative because the US has agreed to help with airstrikes without a genuine anti-ISIS coalition being formed and without that it is irrelevant. Even if Sirte were to be liberated, ISIS will still persist in Libya and the political impasse will not be solved. What is needed is sustained political engagement, not just airstrikes.

Confusion over Saif, Muammar Gaddafis sons alleged-release from prison in Zintan last week, demonstrates that Libyas main players are no closer to putting aside grievances for the common good, say Jason Pack and Rhiannon Smith.

Being Western educated with a PhD from the London School of Economics and the spearhead of the movement liberalizing Libyas economy from 2003-2010, hewas thought by manyto be the wave of the future which would bring Libya into the worlds 21st century economy and society. But when the 2011 revolts broke out, he firmly allied with his father, Colonel Gaddafi,and referred to the rebels as rats who should be crushed.

In the aftermath of Gaddafis defeat and death, Saif was captured by Zintani militiamen and been held there ever since.

The Zintanis were always uneasy bedfellows with the Misratan, Islamist, Berber, and jihadi militias who they fought alongside to help overthrow Gaddafi. Zintan struggled to compete both strategically and financially with Misrata, Libyas third largest city and the countrys commercial maritime hub. However, Saif gave them crucial leverageleading the National Transitional Council (NTC) to offer thedefence minister portfolioin the first post-Gaddafi cabinet to Zintan. Since that point they have refused to turn Saif over to any of Libyas transitional governments.With the takeover of Tripoli by Misratan and Islamist militias supporting the Tripoli-based General National Council (GNC) in 2014, and the subsequent bifurcation of Libya into two governments, the Zintanis became the major force in western Libya to support the House of Representatives (HoR) and its eastern government based in Tubroq and Beida. This eastern government has key former Gaddafi officials in top positions most notably General Khalifa Haftar and this has been the main grievance against them from the Misratans and Islamists who suffered disproportionately under Gaddafis rule.

Saifs alleged-release

Since the Zintanis and Haftar have been tarred and feathered as Gaddafis troops, there has long been speculation that they might work with Saif and release him as a rallying cry for former Gaddafi elements to join them in the fight against the Misratans and whichever political body they are opposing, whether it be the GNC or the UN-brokered Government of National Accord (GNA). Therefore, last weeks sensational news of Saif Al-Islam Gaddafis release did not seem all that improbable. It seemed possible that the HoR and the Zintanis would want to send a message and create a new coalition.

Divergent reactions to Saifs release

The news of Saifs release caused a wave of panic mainly amongst hardline revolutionaries, Islamist groups and Government of National Accord (GNA) supporters, reinforcing their fears of a complete counter revolution by ex-regime forces facilitated by the HoR and the UN mediation process. The local council in Zintanissued a statement denying his release, but sourcesin the city say that the local council has no relevance to Saifs case or his whereabouts, and issued the statement only to take political heat off the city.

Saifs pseudo release demonstrates that the main players are no closer to putting aside their grievances for the common good than they were even before the GNA was formed. This, is the real tragedy revealed by this debacle. No one seems ready to put aside past grievances to work together for Libyas future.

Read the rest here:
GNC | Libya Analysis

Libyas Economic Outlook- April 2017 – World Bank

The lengthy conflict is taking a heavy toll on the Libyan economy and the well-being of the population. Obstructed by the conflict, production of oil, the main source of income in Libya, has been steadily declining over the last 4 years to reach around 0.38 million barrel per day (bpd) in 2016, which is less than 1/4 of pre-revolution levels. As a result, the Libyan economy shrank by an estimated 2.5% in 2016, with estimated real GDP falling to less than half of its pre-revolution level.

The economic outlook assumes that a new functioning government is endorsed this year. In this context, the dynamics in the hydrocarbon sector triggered during the last quarter of 2016 is expected to continue, translating into higher production of oil, which is projected to progressively reach 1 million bpd by end-2017, still rep-resenting only two thirds of potential. On this basis, GDP is projected to increase by 40%. Although improving, the twin deficits will remain, as revenues from oil will not be sufficient to cover high budget expenditures and consumption-driven imports. This should keep the budget deficit at about 18.8% of GDP and the current account deficit at 15.3% of GDP in 2017.

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Libyas Economic Outlook- April 2017 - World Bank