Moon of Alabama.png

 

 

Libya - How Moscow Can Influence A Unity Deal

 

 

Richard Galustian, Moon of Alabama, 9 June 2016

 

Russia's growing influence in Libya is reflecting their ever evolving new
Middle East and North African policy.

 

While Libya has been divided between two parliaments and governments since
2014, Russia's influence has grown with East Libya.

 

A review of the United Nations resolution on Libya's arms embargo is likely
to be voted upon early next week. However this will only be achieved if
Russian concerns can be overcome.

 

Despite the international efforts a paradox remains. A partial lifting of
the UN's arms embargo to one side will greatly increase the danger of
swelling the intensity of the civil war and of risking some of those arms
reaching the Islamic State in Libya.

 

The Russians do not understand the West's approach to extremists. Russia's
logic is sound as shown in Syria. If it looks like a duck and walks and
quacks like a duck; it probably is a duck, to paraphrase Russia's Foreign
Minister Sergey Lavrov comment on terrorists.

 

In Libya the two divided factions, the democratically elected eastern
government and parliament, the House of Representatives (HoR), and the
'Libya Dawn' coalition of Islamist militias who created Tripoli's National
Salvation Government (NSG), are now challenged by a third 'virtual' faction,
the Government of National Accord (GNA) which was selected by the UN as a
nine men, now reduced to seven, Presidency Council (PC), which in effect
constitutes a GNA quorum.

 

Let me be clear: The international community supports a non-existent GNA
headed by a Western patsy designated prime minister and six other men. To
boot, this fledgling Western selected so called government still faces huge
unpopularity from the masses who resent Western interference in its internal
affairs.

 

The GNA, having no military forces of their own, have agreed with Dawn
Militias that they be re-badged 'the Presidential Guard' and that they be
the recipients of new weapons permitted by the UN if the resolution is
accepted by the Security Council.

 

Interestingly Russia's UN Ambassador Churkin said "the highest priority" in
Libya should be to encourage the HoR Parliament in the East approval of the
new GNA government. A new twist. If anyone can persuade the East and the HoR
to 'bless' the GNA, it will be the Russians that will be the broker.

 

Let's note that the cards are now in East Libya's favor. They receive
weapons through Egypt; they control their oil; they made their own currency,
courtesy of Russia.

 

The fact is IS is not a priority for Libyan adversaries and it is not as
huge a threat as some would have us believe. Despite what is tantamount to
propaganda by a compliant almost government manipulated Western media, there
is a relatively small number of IS present in the country of hundreds not
thousands.

 

If the West let arms like heavy artillery and most importantly ammunition to
go to 'the Dawn' militias, a sizeable proportion will undoubtedly end up in
IS hands and the probable result will be that both will end up fighting
Khalifa Hafter's Libyan Army of East Libya.

 

The Russians won't allow anything that doesn't protect the East Libyans.
This Kremlin perspective is a reality Western nations don't seem to grasp.
Equally the Russians still don't understand the West's unrealistic
expectation to tag who's who in Libya's (and Syria's) terrorist spectrum.
Neither do I.

 

Moscow knows Khalifa Haftar well as the Libyan General has made frequent
trips to Russia. The Kremlin see's Western behavior towards Haftar as
mistaken. There is a disregard by the West for the actual players on the
ground like Hafter, like the tribes, yet utmost consideration is given to
'the Dawn' Islamists and Muslim Brotherhood militias which seems illogical
and inconceivable.

 

Then there is UN Special Envoy to Libya, Martin Kobler. The other day he
said "Libya is a country awash with weapons; 20 million pieces of weaponry
in a land of six million inhabitants." Kobler then childishly added, that
"these weapons do not fall from the sky" adding "These arms fuel the
conflict and shipments must end". Yet he was in Vienna last month when it
was agreed to do just that; to deliver more weapons.

 

Is he schizophrenic?

 

Kobler's mixed messages are making the Russians even more assertive.
Actually one cannot help noting an unexpected consequence has been that both
(East & West) NOC's and both CBL's are talking to one another. The
international community and it's mostly incompetent bureaucrats and
diplomats would have you believe any such positive movements between Libyans
is their doing; that's nonsense.

 

Britain's U.N. Ambassador Matthew Rycroft has presented this week to other
Security Council members a British-drafted new Libya resolution and has
stated he hopes for a vote as early as Monday.

 

Now we must wait for Russia's stance on the proposed resolution as it
becomes a more strident player in the entire MENA region. Maybe the road to
unity for Libya will end up going through Moscow.

 

 

From:
<http://www.moonofalabama.org/2016/06/libya-how-moscow-can-influence-a-unity
-deal.html>
http://www.moonofalabama.org/2016/06/libya-how-moscow-can-influence-a-unity-
deal.html

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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