WAR Regional conflict brewing in the Mediterranean

Deep state is bound and determined to "get their war" in the ME - desperate to drag Team Trump into this, one way or another.

The Russians seem surprisingly quiet, as it were, about the rapidly developing Libya situation - or, perhaps the western MSM and other sources are not allowing Russian perspectives to be heard/seen via their controlled media outlets.


intothegoodnight
 

Zagdid

Veteran Member

fair use rc/aw (AFP, dpa)
Libya's parliament votes against Turkey deployment
Libya's parliament has voted against a deal that would see Turkey deploy troops in the North African country. The UN-recognized assembly accused Libya’s official head of government, Fayez Serraj, of "treason."

Libya's eastern-based parliament on Saturday voted against an agreement that would allow Ankara to send troops to Libya.

The internationally recognized Libyan House of Representatives (HoR) voted against a deployment requested by the UN-backed Government of National Accord (GNA).

The Western-based GNA had requested help from Turkey, and the parliament in Ankara on Thursday voted in favor of the deployment of troops.

More than a rejection

As well as voting against the deployment and cooperation with Turkey, the HoR also voted unanimously to refer GNA Prime Minister Fayez Serraj to be prosecuted for "high treason" because of the deals signed with Ankara under his watch.

The Libyan deputies also voted to cut relations with Turkey.

Serraj's beleaguered government, which is based in Tripoli, has been under sustained attack by General Khalifa Haftar and his self-styled Libyan National Army (LNA).



Haftar — who with his eastern power base is supported by the HoR — has already seized the country's main oil fields and export terminals.

Why does the UN recognize rival bodies?

The GNA is part of a UN-backed deal to bridge political differences between the rival administrations in the east and west.

Read more: Khalifa Haftar: Libya's military strongman

However, the eastern House of Representatives has never endorsed the politically powerless GNA, as had been envisioned.

A patriotic call to arms

After Turkey voted in favor of the deployment, Haftar on Friday urged all Libyans to take up arms against the foreign intervention.

Haftar said it was no longer a question of liberating Tripoli from the militias that overran it, but of "facing a colonizer." He accused Ankara of wanting to "regain control of Libya", a former province of the Ottoman Empire to which Turkey is the successor state.

Neighboring Egypt has also strongly condemned the Turkish vote, saying it amounted to a "flagrant violation of international law and Security Council resolutions on Libya."

Libya has been beset by chaos since dictator Moammer Gadhafi was toppled and killed in a NATO-backed uprising in 2011.
 

mzkitty

I give up.
Um, real grim......................


[IMG]https://pbs.twimg.com/profile_images/1023765415758123011/AXqVNSrl_bigger.jpg[/IMG][B]Terrence Daniels (Captain Planet)[/B]‏ @[B]Terrence_STR[/B] 8m8 minutes ago

(WARNING) #Breaking Libya: Video from the military academy in #Tripoli #libya hit by a #LNA airstrike. #Haftar #GNA Tripoli government says 28+ people killed in an airstrike by foreign aircraft on a military academy in the city. Reports say it was a UAE drone from Haftar forces.

Scroll down a bit:



[B]K. Elkhattabi - هنا أكتب أراء شخصية[/B]‏ @[B]KamalElkhattab6[/B] 55s55 seconds ago

#Libya #Masacr More than 30 were killed and others injured in an air strike suspected of being #Emirate in support of the war crime #Haftar, in a military academy in central #Tripoli. the victims are new students from all parts of Libya who are under 25 years old
 

mzkitty

I give up.
Ever notice how the entire Mideast is like a toilet that has so much sewage backing up that it's going to explode all over the house?

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1578184529250.png
 

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
Posted for fair use.....

Forces loyal to Haftar enter Libyan city of Sirte

Issued on: 06/01/2020 - 18:07Modified: 06/01/2020 - 18:08

Libyan forces loyal to eastern-based commander Khalifa Haftar said on Monday they had entered Sirte and had taken control of large parts of the coastal city.

Capturing Sirte would be an important strategic gain for Haftar, who since April has been waging a military offensive on the capital, Tripoli, home to Libya’s internationally recognised Government of National Accord (GNA).

Sirte lies in the centre of Libya’s Mediterranean coast, and has been controlled by GNA-aligned forces since they ejected Islamic State from the city with the help of U.S. air strikes in late 2016.

Haftar’s self-styled Libyan National Army (LNA) said they had taken areas surrounding Sirte including al-Qardabiya air base, before moving towards the city centre.

“The army forces control all the districts surrounding the city of Sirte, and we are heading towards the heart of the city to complete its liberation,” said Khaled al-Mahjoub, an LNA spokesman.

An LNA military source said forces from the city of Misrata had retreated. Misrata led the campaign against Islamic State and is a key source of military power for the GNA.

A resident in Sirte city centre told Reuters by phone: “We can see convoys of LNA inside Sirte city ... they control large parts of the city now. We also hear gunfire.”

There was no immediate comment from GNA forces.

Turkey sending military advisors
The LNA advance comes as Turkey prepares to send military advisors and experts to Libya to help shore up the GNA, part of a trend of rising international involvement in Libya’s conflict.

Haftar’s LNA has received material and military support from countries including the United Arab Emirates, Jordan and Egypt, according U.N. experts and diplomats.

In recent weeks there has been an escalation of fighting, shelling and air strikes around Tripoli. On Saturday evening a military college in the capital was hit, killing at least 30 people, a day after the only functioning airport in Tripoli faced its latest closure due to shelling and rocket fire.

Sirte, the birthplace of former Libyan leader Muammar Gaddafi, was taken over by Islamic State in early 2015, becoming the jihadist group’s most important base outside the Middle East.

The city is just to the west of Libya’s oil crescent, a strip of coastline along which several key oil export terminals are located. Haftar’s forces seized the oil ports in 2016.

(REUTERS)
 

Plain Jane

Just Plain Jane

NEWS
JANUARY 8, 2020 / 5:48 AM / UPDATED 3 HOURS AGO
Turkey, Russia seek Libya ceasefire as rivals clash

Can Sezer, Ayman al-Warfalli
3 MIN READ

ISTANBUL/BENGHAZI, Libya (Reuters) - Turkey and Russia urged Libya’s warring parties on Wednesday to declare a Jan. 12 ceasefire as eastern forces carried out air strikes on the government in a conflict drawing increasing foreign involvement and concern.

Turkey backs Fayez al-Serraj’s Tripoli-based Government of National Accord (GNA) and has said it will send troops as requested, while Russia has sent forces to back General Khalifa Haftar’s eastern-based Libyan National Army (LNA).

However, after talks between their presidents Tayyip Erdogan and Vladimir Putin in Istanbul, Turkey and Russia issued a joint statement calling for the end of hostilities, normalization of life in Tripoli and other cities, and U.N.-sponsored peace talks.

The conflict is undermining regional security and “triggering irregular migration, further spread of weapons, terrorism and other criminal activities including illicit trafficking,” the statement said.

Haftar’s LNA took control of Sirte, a strategically important city in the centre of Libya’s Mediterranean coastline, in a rapid advance on Monday and is seeking to consolidate gains.
Since April, the LNA has also been waging a campaign to take the capital, Tripoli, about 370 km (230 miles) northwest of Sirte, where it is battling forces aligned with the GNA.
GNA forces said they withdrew from Sirte to avoid bloodshed.
Those forces are mainly from the port of Misrata, 190 km east of Tripoli, and had controlled Sirte since driving Islamic State militants from the city in late 2016.

On Tuesday afternoon, clashes broke out around al-Washka, on the road between Sirte and Misrata, where LNA sources said nine of their men were killed in an evening drone strike.
On Wednesday, the LNA responded with strikes near the Abu Grein checkpoint, close to al-Washka, where clashes were continuing, LNA military officials said.
Libya has been divided since 2014 into rival camps based in Tripoli and the east, each with its own set of institutions, and Haftar’s offensive against Tripoli upended U.N. efforts to broker a political settlement.
The upheaval in Libya, where strongman Muammar Gaddafi’s long rule was toppled in 2011, has in recent years disrupted the OPEC member’s oil production, fueled migrant smuggling to Europe, and given space to Islamist extremists.
Regional powers have stepped up intervention, with the LNA also receiving support from the United Arab Emirates, Jordan and Egypt.

The European Union’s top diplomat and the foreign ministers of Britain, France, Germany and Italy this week condemned Turkey’s plans to send military experts and trainers to Libya, saying interference was exacerbating instability.
Italian Prime Minister Giuseppe Conte held talks with Haftar in Rome on Wednesday and was due to see Serraj later in the day, an Italian government source said.
Reporting by Ayman al-Warfalli in Benghazi and Ahmed Elumami in Tripoli; Olesya Astakhova and Can Sezer in Istanbul; Giuseppe Fonte in Milan; Writing by Aidan Lewis and Andrew Cawthorne; Editing by Mark Heinrich
Our Standards:The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.
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