Libya's leaders shelter by the sea as country tilts toward civil war

The seaside hotel that serves as the last redoubt of Libya's internationally recognized government is named Dar al-Salam, or House of Peace. But beyond the confines of this modest port city nearly a thousand miles from the capital, this country teeters on the brink of civil war.

In the three years since longtime dictator Moammar Kadafi was toppled and slain, the energy-rich North African nation has struggled fitfully to reach some power equilibrium among heavily armed groups, fractured along ideological, regional and tribal lines. But over the last four months, the level of violence has escalated as the various groups fight for influence and riches, and the very notion of Libya as a state is slipping away.

Residential neighborhoods in the two biggest cities Tripoli, the capital, in the west and Benghazi in the east have been smashed by battlefield-grade weapons. Most diplomats, aid groups and foreign enterprises have fled. The fighting has driven civilians from their homes by the tens of thousands. At least 150,000 people, many of them impoverished foreign laborers, have swamped the frontiers in a perilous scramble to escape. Assassinations are commonplace.

In Tripoli, where Islamist-linked militias have seized control, government ministries are guarded by fighters but virtually empty of employees. The international airports are shuttered, their runways and terminals pocked by shellfire. People in the once-cosmopolitan capital scramble for daily necessities such as gasoline and drinking water even as they cling to vestiges of normality, such as the daily routine of whiling away time in coffeehouses.

"We have no real state," said Vice President Mhamed Ali Choueib, interviewed in Tobruk, 85 miles from the Egyptian border, where the parliament elected in June has set up shop. In Tripoli, militias from the coastal city of Misurata have ensconced their own rival legislature and sworn in their own prime minister.

With rival governments each dismissing the other's legitimacy, Tobruk, a onetime Roman fortress, is now a Libyan version of Baghdad's Green Zone: heavily fortified, but with questionable writ outside its boundaries. In a key test of power for the Tobruk-based parliament, lawmakers on Sunday dismissed the head of Libya's central bank, but it was not yet clear who would emerge with control of $100 billion in cash reserves and investments.

Analysts describe the crisis gripping Libya as far more serious than the upheaval that triggered NATO's intervention in 2011, as Kadafi was fighting to cling to his power and his life. This time around, though, Libya's descent into chaos has been eclipsed by catastrophes erupting elsewhere in the region the juggernaut in Syria and Iraq of the radical Islamic State, this summer's war in the Gaza Strip and in the wider world as well, with the conflict in Ukraine and the Ebola outbreak in West Africa.

So even as the chaos mounts, the country has been largely left to its own devices as it is carved into fiefdoms by rival militias. And the fight is fast becoming a proxy war among rival regional powers. The United Arab Emirates, with an assist from Egypt, has staged airstrikes against the Islamist-linked militias, with more strikes reported Monday outside Tripoli. Meanwhile, the Tobruk-based administration accuses Qatar and Sudan of providing arms to the Islamists.

All this has led to an unraveling whose scope has caught even experts by surprise.

"It's been clear since the end of the revolution that the militias have been paramount, but the ability to abrogate the institutions of the Libyan state has been shocking," said Jason Pack, a Cambridge researcher who runs the strategic forecasting company Libya-Analysis.com. "That veneer of official legislative control has disappeared."

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Libya's leaders shelter by the sea as country tilts toward civil war

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