‘A Ground Invasion of the
Capital Is Imminent’
All-out war is coming to
Libya, as rebel militias and a
government-in-hiding begin a battle for
control of the country.
By Bel TrewBel
December 30, 2014 "ICH"
- "FP"
-
TRIPOLI, Libya — Zeina, 27,
was hanging out her washing when the first
Grad rocket smashed into a neighbor’s house
at the end of her dusty street. The
deafening boom was followed by the telltale
buzz of more incoming rockets. Libya’s civil
war had landed on her doorstep.
“It started as a normal day — then we heard
the sound of shelling and rockets,” said the
young mother. “Without warning, they hit our
houses. We fled with just the clothes we
were wearing.”
Zeina is now crammed together with seven
other people in a cinderblock outhouse that
is part of Tripoli’s zoo. They are just a
handful of the more than 400,000 people who
are currently displaced inside Libya, which
is witnessing its worst crisis since the
2011 NATO-backed revolt that toppled
dictator Muammar Qaddafi.
For three years, Libya has been without a
functioning government, police force, or
army. The country has been ripped apart by
warring fiefdoms of ex-rebels who helped
oust Qaddafi but have since directed
politics with AK-47s and anti-aircraft guns.
This summer, as the battle lines began to
harden, two rival factions emerged to vie
for control of Libya: On one side is the
newly elected parliament that has been
banished to the eastern city of Tobruk —
supported by the fractured remains of
Qaddafi soldiers who defected during the
uprising, as well as regional powers like
Egypt, Saudi Arabia, and the United Arab
Emirates. On the other side is Libya Dawn, a
self-described revolutionary coalition of
militiamen and Islamist-leaning politicians
that originated in the western city of
Misrata, allegedly backed by Turkey and
Qatar.
Zeina’s hometown of Kikla, which lies less
than 100 miles southwest of Tripoli, is on
the front line between the two factions,
which are battling for control of the
capital. With two governments and two
parliaments, both of which have a tenuous
grip on power and access to funds, there is
no one in authority to ask for help.
“It’s winter now, and we’re in a desperate
situation,” Zeina said. “We heard our houses
have been flattened and burned. What do we
do?”
* * *
Hundreds of miles to the east, smartly
dressed lawmakers, Salafi militants, fighter
jet pilots, and tribal leaders sat in a
glittering hotel lobby. The building was
under strict military lockdown — its long
driveway studded with concrete roadblocks
and checkpoints. But inside the hushed
halls, uniformed waiters moved between the
groups serving cappuccinos and croissants.
Lavish three-course meals were served in the
dining and conference rooms. Outside, the
legislators’ children — forced into exile
with their parents — played soccer on the
abandoned tennis courts that overlook the
Mediterranean.
This is the exiled parliament’s stronghold
in Tobruk, over 900 miles to the east of
Tripoli.
When Libya Dawn staged an armed takeover of
the capital this summer, it forced the House
of Representatives, which had been elected
in June, to flee here. Now, loyalists are
plotting their return to Tripoli.
When Libya Dawn staged an armed takeover of
the capital this summer, it forced the House
of Representatives, which had been elected
in June, to flee here. Now, loyalists are
plotting their return to Tripoli.
Money and war are the main topics of
conversation. The country’s oil authorities
and ministries now lie in the hands of Libya
Dawn, which claims to be the legitimate
government. The Islamist coalition’s case
was bolstered after a November Supreme Court
decision, which it said nullified the House
of Representatives and a constitutional
amendment on which the June elections were
based.
The Libyan Central Bank, fighting to
maintain its neutrality, has refused to
channel the country’s lucrative oil revenues
to either administration since the court
decision. It is only paying “expenses” for
both administrations, and basic salaries,
which ironically includes those of the
militias, who were absorbed into the
interior and defense ministries by the
former parliament in 2012.
The decision has rendered the Tobruk
parliament’s plans and newly drafted $42
billion budget for the next financial year
nothing more than pieces of paper.
For the politicians and military leaders in
Tobruk, that means war.
“The easiest solution is a military takeover
[of Tripoli]; it’s the only way to move
forward from this ridiculous stalemate,”
said one senior lawmaker, dressed in a crisp
suit. “We are trying to build a new central
bank and premises for different ministries,
but this is temporary until we take back
Tripoli.”
The United Nations was supposed to have
chaired a fresh round of peace talks between
the warring factions this month. But so far
they have been unable to set a date, let
alone an agenda to resolve the crisis.
Tobruk’s military forces, meanwhile, don’t
seem to be in the mood for talking. Gen.
Khalifa Haftar, a formerly rogue military
leader who embarked on a self-styled “War on
Terror” against Islamists earlier this year,
is at the helm of the recently rebranded
“Libyan National Army” — the remnants of the
Qaddafi-era armed forces that defected
during the revolution. And he seems to
believe the wind is at his back.
“A ground invasion of the capital is
imminent,” Haftar told me from his sprawling
military base in the countryside outside
Merj, a town that lies roughly an hour-long
helicopter ride west of Tobruk.
Haftar, 71, has seen his fortunes improve
dramatically in recent months. He was
declared an outlaw by the authorities after
unsuccessfully attempting to overthrow the
previous Islamist-dominated parliament in
February, and was only recently reinstated
by the House of Representatives, which
lacked a military force of its own to wrest
control back from the militias. Haftar
quickly changed that: He absorbed
pro-government western militias into his
army, and is currently encircling the
capital and fighting Libya Dawn militiamen
in Kikla.
Haftar’s first major offensive was in the
eastern city of Benghazi, where his troops
have gained serious ground after six months
of battling Libya Dawn-allied eastern
militias and jihadis — including the
U.N.-designated terror group Ansar al-Sharia.
Haftar claims his forces have “secured”
around 95 percent of the city.
Seeking to build on his momentum, Haftar
then turned west. In November, he sent his
battered MiG fighter jets to Tripoli to bomb
Libya Dawn positions and weapons depots.
This month, the general pushed further west,
striking targets on the border with Tunisia,
which briefly closed the largest border
crossing, Ras Jedir. On Dec. 28, his forces
hit Misrata, the hometown of most of the
Libya Dawn leadership.
“We cannot continue with two governments,
two parliaments, so Libya Dawn should end or
we are going to arrest them all,” he said,
promising further airstrikes in Misrata.
Haftar’s men told me that a large
multimillion-dollar arms deal with an
Eastern European country, which would see
the acquisition of updated fighter jets,
helicopters, and heavy weaponry, will be the
nail in the coffin of their enemies. The
Tobruk authorities are footing the bill, and
are just waiting for delivery.
Tobruk Prime Minister Abdullah al-Thinni, a
former military man himself, echoed Haftar’s
hawkishness.
“We are supporting the front line with more
jet fighters to break the deadlock,” he told
me from his temporary offices in Labraq, a
city just west of Tobruk, consisting of
stark, Soviet-style concrete buildings.
“Citizens of Tripoli are getting ready now
and are waiting for the moment when the army
enters the city.”
But there is lingering bad blood between
Thinni and his military commander, which
could presage a future conflict.
But there is lingering bad blood between
Thinni and his military commander, which
could presage a future conflict. In June,
Thinni, who had been serving as prime
minister then too, had been among those in
the previous parliament who blacklisted
Haftar. That same month, Haftar said that he
wanted most of Thinni’s cabinet jailed. The
distrust between the two men is still
palpable, as both claim ownership of the war
in the west.
Thinni said he would only come to the
negotiating table if Libya Dawn accepted the
legitimacy of his parliament, dropped its
alliance with terror groups like Ansar al-Sharia,
and gave up Tripoli — an impossible set of
preconditions sure to scupper any
U.N.-backed mediation initiative. “Libya
Dawn members who committed crimes should be
tried,” he added.
Establishing his government’s authority over
the whole country is going to take a massive
influx of money — and Thinni knows it. The
prime minister admitted it was near
impossible to run a country without access
to the country’s government buildings and
funds. As an interim solution, he appointed
his own heads of the National Oil
Corporation, the body solely response for
the sale and purchase of oil and gas, and
the Libyan Central Bank, which controls the
country’s purse strings. He wants to move
their offices east, to Benghazi and Ras
Lanuf, redirecting oil funds and effectively
carving Libya in two.
“It’s about who is controlling the money. We
can change the direction of flow of oil
income into the banks we choose,” he said.
“So Libya Dawn can just sit in Tripoli and
invent their own authorities, but in fact
they control nothing.”
* * *
In Tripoli, Libya Dawn’s ascendance is
visible by simply walking down the street.
The Che Guevara-looking Zintan fighters, who
backed the Tobruk government, were chased
out of town, and have been replaced by
Misrati militiamen, who cruise the
neighborhoods in pickup trucks mounted with
anti-aircraft guns. Their trucks — scrawled
with text reading “Correcting the direction
of the February 17 revolution” — guard the
main ministries and parliament buildings.
Graffiti praising Misrata, where Libya Dawn
originates, has been scrawled on Qaddafi-era
brigade bases they have commandeered.
The charred apartment blocks near the
bombed-out airport are a stark reminder of
the summer’s fierce fighting. Tripoli
residents now tentatively go about their
daily business, but activists in the city —
who have been outspoken against the militias
for years — say there has been a spike in
kidnappings against their community since
the summer, driving many into hiding or out
of the country.
Prime Minister Omar al-Hassi, a 55-year-old
former academic from Benghazi who was
appointed by Libya Dawn, has the same idea
as his rivals. He has moved quickly to seize
control of the country’s sole remaining
institutions: He headquartered his
administration at the National Oil
Corporation, taken over government buildings
and websites, and appointed his own oil
minister.
His forces are also on the offensive against
oil sites held by Libya Dawn’s rivals. A few
months ago, Libya Dawn militiamen seized
control of the lucrative oil fields in the
south — including El Sharara, Libya’s
largest — bringing production to a grinding
halt. In early December, they moved on the
eastern oil ports and oil fields currently
controlled by forces loyal to the Tobruk
authorities, prompting new clashes with
Haftar’s men. In the last week, five oil
tanks that stored almost a million barrels
of oil were set ablaze.
Hassi also sounded just as uncompromising
about his enemies in Tobruk as they did
about him. He described Thinni and Haftar as
criminals for ignoring the court verdict
invalidating the House of Representatives,
and called on the international community to
boycott the exiled parliament.
“Their crimes are huge and they are exacting
a collective punishment on us all,” he said.
“Whoever doesn’t listen to the court becomes
an outlaw and should be stopped.”
Hassi called for fresh parliamentary
elections “once the war stops.” Until that
day, he argues that his “salvation
government” should rule and preside over any
peace talks. He defended his
administration’s alliance with Ansar al-Sharia
— saying the jihadi group had been
misunderstood and actually represented a
“simple, beautiful, friendly idea.”
Hassi promised his government “was all about
dialogue,” but his militiamen, embittered by
Haftar’s airstrikes in Tripoli and Benghazi,
appear more determined than ever to fight to
the death.
Hassi promised his government “was all about
dialogue,” but his militiamen, embittered by
Haftar’s airstrikes in Tripoli and Benghazi,
appear more determined than ever to fight to
the death.
“They will keep going until the last man is
gunned down — you can forget about peace
deals or negotiations,” said the head of one
of the largest Islamist militias operating
in Benghazi. “We are losing between 20 and
25 men a day; there is no way after such
huge losses the men will give up.”
While hatred for Haftar unites all the
militias under Libya Dawn’s banner, wildly
differing views of the country’s future
could drive them apart in the future. The
coalition includes both liberals and radical
Islamists — and already there are signs of
discontent simmering beneath the surface
among some on the extremes.
Speaking on the phone from the front line in
Benghazi, one Ansar al-Sharia fighter said
they were not happy with Libya Dawn’s
insistence on pursuing the trappings of a
democratic state. “We’ll be happy if sharia
law is properly implemented — but we won’t
settle for less,” he said tersely.
* * *
Back in the cramped cinderblock outhouse
that Zeina calls home, the young mother and
her friends are stockpiling blankets in
preparation for winter. They count
themselves lucky, because they have access
to running water. Next door, a family
hastily constructs their own makeshift
concrete block home in the dusty street.
Others have been forced to make do living in
parks and schools.
But there are many others who have fared far
worse. Libya Body Count, a local independent
monitoring organization, reports that over
2,700 people have been killed this year
alone. As battles across the country
intensify, that number goes up every day.
Hundreds of thousands of civilians who have
fled the war are now struggling to stay
alive as the temperatures drop, and aid
workers are unable to provide urgently
needed medical care, food, and shelter.
Meanwhile the economy is in tatters — Libya
relies on oil revenues, and the fighting at
the oil ports has seen production plummet by
60 percent in recent days.
The poorest and most vulnerable, like Zeina,
have been hit hardest by the crisis. And
with nobody truly in charge of the country,
they have been left to fend for themselves.
“We just want to go home and for this war to
stop,” Zeina said. “We were promised
everything. It’s been three years now, and
what good have we seen?”
Bel TrewBel Trew is
broadcast and print journalist based in
Cairo. Follow her on Twitter at @beltrew.