Imperialist Powers Prepare Another Military
Intervention In Libya
By Jean Shaoul
August 06, 2015 "Information
Clearing House" - "WSWS"
- A joint US-European mission to Libya
involving soldiers from six countries is being hatched under the
pretext of combating Islamic State in Iraq and Syria (ISIS) and with
the aim of establishing a pliant pro-Western government and
“stabilising” the country.
On August 1, the London Times reported,
“Hundreds of British troops are being lined up to go to Libya as
part of a major new international mission.” It stated that the UK
soldiers would join “Military personnel from Italy, France, Spain,
Germany and the United States…in an operation that looks set to be
activated once the rival warring factions inside Libya agree to form
a single government of national unity.”
It is part of an expansion of imperialist military
interventions in the resource-rich Middle East and North Africa,
coming on top of the war in Iraq and Syria, in which Britain and the
other powers are pursuing their own geostrategic and commercial
interests.
The Times notes that Italy, the former
colonial power in Libya, is expected to provide the largest
contingent of ground troops. France has colonial and commercial ties
with Libya’s neighbours, Tunisia, Mali and Algeria. Spain retains
outposts in northern Morocco and the other major power involved,
Germany, is once again seeking to gain
access to Africa’s resources and markets.
The new mission follows proposals earlier this
year to launch a “humanitarian” military operation targeting people
traffickers bringing impoverished migrants in unsafe boats from
Africa and the Middle East to Europe. Such justifications can now be
seen a part of a softening-up process to legitimise yet another
criminal and unpopular imperialist venture.
The five European forces will work with US forces,
the European Union and the United Nations (UN), under the moniker of
“P3+5,” in an operation expected to number several thousand. A UK
government source said, “You might see movement towards the end of
August.”
The US and European powers are using the UN to
broker a peace deal between Libya’s warring factions aimed at
establishing a national unity government.
A spokeswoman for the UK’s Ministry of Defence
said that Britain, “along with international partners, is supporting
the process to form a recognised Libyan government and we are
developing plans to provide support once this is done; it is too
early to discuss the exact nature of this.”
Last month, UK Prime Minister David Cameron
admitted that he was considering military action in Libya. He said,
“If there is a threat to Britain or to our people or our streets and
we can stop it by taking immediate action against that threat, then
I as Prime Minister will always want to try to take that action and
that’s the case whether that problem is emanating from Libya, from
Syria, or anywhere else.”
While UK forces will “train” the army, coast guard
and police and provide “counterterrorism” units, alongside Special
Forces units from France and the US, it is not expected that the
British air force will be involved, as it is already fully extended
in Iraq and in Syria.
Following the 2011 NATO-led war to topple the
regime of Colonel Muammar Gaddafi, government and rule of law
collapsed, and the country has descended into complete chaos that
has inflicted untold suffering on the Libyan people, and spread to
Mali and the Central African Republic in the Sahel.
Rival militias are fighting for control of the
country’s oil, estimated at 46.4 billion barrels of proven reserves,
the largest in Africa.
The Islamist-backed Libya Dawn regime, made up of
the General National Council (GNC) that refused to recognise the
outcome of the 2014 elections, took control of the Libyan capital
Tripoli in the west. Meanwhile, the internationally recognised
government is holed up in Tobruk, a city of about 120,000 people
more than 1,000 km away in the east and one of its last toeholds.
Egypt and the United Arab Emirates have backed the Tobruk-based
authorities, who accuse Qatar, Turkey and Sudan of backing the
Islamists in Tripoli.
There are frequent clashes between the various
militias in different parts of the country, while fighting continues
on an almost daily basis in the eastern city of Benghazi. The
country is awash in arms, narcotics, people traffickers and
smuggling of all kinds, and kidnappings to extort ransoms are rife.
Libya has also seen the emergence of militias
affiliated to ISIS, which have taken control of the city of
Sirte—midway between Tripoli and Tobruk—where 21 Coptic Christian
workers were beheaded last February. This was just one of a string
of atrocities carried out by Islamists trained in Libya, both within
the devastated country and in France and Tunisia.
The major powers believe that UN envoy Bernardino
Leon is close to reaching an agreement between Tobruk and Tripoli
over the formation of a national unity government, whose permission
will be necessary if the US-European task force is to have any legal
cover.
But success has so far eluded Leon, as Tripoli is
demanding a greater role in any such a government and rejects the
dominant role given to the so-called Libyan National Army headed by
CIA asset, former Libyan General Khalifa Hiftar, allied to Tobruk.
Should an agreement be reached, a UN resolution
will be sought to authorise the “P3+5” military intervention, which
will include the patrol of Libyan waters by European aircraft and
gunships, including Britain’s flagship helicopter carrier HMS
Bulwark. This can only lead to further atrocities and the
intervention of NATO.
This week, Defence Secretary Michael Fallon also
announced that Britain will extend its air campaign in Iraq against
ISIS militants by a year, adding that it would use its eight ageing
Tornado fighter jets, originally due to be taken out of service last
March, to conduct strikes until at least early 2017.
He ruled out any possibility of British ground
troops joining the fight against ISIS. This is another lie, as
Britain has about 150 military “advisors” training the Kurdistan
Regional Government’s Peshmerga forces. Their effectiveness and role
is now being undermined by Turkey’s bombing of Kurdish forces in
Iraq and Syria.
Despite inflicting death and destruction on the
Iraqi people and their homes, the US-led forces have made little
headway against the Sunni Islamist forces that have captured huge
swathes of Iraq, including its second city Mosul, from which it has
been able to generate $40 million a month in oil revenues.
Several commentators have criticised Britain’s
policy as incoherent and called for “boots on the ground.” Former
Chief of Defence Staff Lord Richards recently argued that the West
needed “tens of thousands” of trainers on the ground if it wanted to
make a difference. He said that the West’s efforts against ISIS were
“woefully insufficient,” and “If you want to get rid of them [ISIS]
we need to effectively get on a war footing.”
Britain’s expanded military ventures are going
ahead with virtually no public discussion, let alone approval or
popular support, and in the case of Syria, in defiance of explicit
assurances to the contrary.
Britain only has parliament’s authority to carry
out air strikes against ISIS in Iraq, as part of the US-led
coalition, but not in Syria. Nevertheless, Prime Minister David
Cameron and Defence Secretary Michael Fallon covertly
authorised the participation of British pilots, embedded with
US, French and Canadian forces, in bombing operations against ISIS
positions in Syria in defiance of parliamentary votes in 2013 and
2014.
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