The revolution has already brilliantly succeeded in bringing down the entire Gaddafi regime paving the way for the establishment of a democratic and modern Libya,” said Ahmed Shebani, President of Libya’s Democratic Party. “We are not going to be held back by dictatorship nor by backwardness and demagogy.”
“The Democratic Party affirms that there will be no return to military rule in Libya as is the case in Egypt," Shebani told The Media Line.
^
But despite the vows of Shebani and other Libyans placing hope in next month’s United Nations-sponsored National Conference—billed as a transition to a civilian-led, pluralistic future—Khalifa Haftar has launched an operation in southern Libya ostensibly aimed at rooting out "terrorists" and foreign fighters but which could result in the emergence of an Egypt-like security state with popular participation in government symbolic at best.
Haftar’s Libyan National Army—which remains at odds with the internationally-recognized government—is focused on securing control of critical oil infrastructure in Fezzan province where there were no signs of Revolution Day celebrations.
“Looking back, the revolution became chaotic and allowed for ISIS and criminals to get a very strong footprint in Libya,”
Salem El Senoussi, a resident of the eastern city of Al Baidaa, told The Media Line. “And it also allowed for foreign states and their greed to interfere with our politics and security.”
Up to one-third of Libya’s proven petroleum reserves are located near Fezzan’s el Sharara Field and there are increasing signs that Washington is aligning militarily with Haftar in the south, even as American officials maintain rhetorical support for the UN political process focused on the more heavily populated West.
“The United States is committed to using all available tools to sustain pressure against terrorist groups, at the request of and in coordination with the [Tripoli-based] Government of National Accord,” said Deputy State Department spokesperson Robert Palladino.
This week U.S. Africa Command said it “is not involved in the reported raid of an al-Qai'da site in Ubari, Libya.” The attack, according to some unconfirmed reports, was carried out by French fighter jets.
Paris also officially denies any military intervention in Libya, but French authorities openly stated that their Mirage 2000 fighter jets targeted armed elements that tried to cross the border into Chad
President Emmanuel Macron has made clear that France wants a united national army that includes Haftar, thus joining the Egyptians and Unite Arab Emirates in backing the 75-year-old general as the most effective leader to battle Libya’s Islamist militants.
“The next several months may end up being dominated by a sense of euphoria as the Haftar camp makes dramatic progress through military and financial means,” said Jalel Harchaoui, a geopolitics lecturer at the University of Versailles near Paris.
“But the old 'secular army versus political Islam' trope has very little to do with the current reality which is a pure struggle over which factions in Libya control the resources,” he told The Media Line.
Kissinger: “demonization of Vladimir Putin is not a policy; it is an alibi for the absence of one.”
________
Cold War 2.0 Russia hysteria is turning people’s brains into guacamole.
We’ve got to find a way to snap out of the propaganda trance
________
Buddha: "trust the person who seeks truth and mistrust the person who claims he has found it "
1.2.3.4.5.6.7. All Good Children Go to Heaven
Bookmarks