DON’T BE FOOLED BY LIBYA—THIS IS A FAILED STATE
By James Stafford Via Oilprice
Gunmen
seized LIBYAN Prime Minister Ali Zeidan from a hotel in central Tripoli,
releasing him shortly afterwards, but making it clear that post-Gaddafi LIBYA
is a failed state and that the government is incapable of taking full control
over its oilfields and export terminals.
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LIBYA - THE WILD WEST OF NORTHERN AFRICA
http://geopoliticsrst.blogspot.com/2013/10/libya-wild-west-of-northern-africa.html
While
the markets have been responding lately with unfounded optimism over LIBYA,
anyone who has been privy to the intelligence briefings and executive reports would
know that announcements of progress emanating from the capital Tripoli are hot
air. There are too many roving militias who want their piece of LIBYA’S fossil
fuels largesse—and the government is impotent.
Nothing demonstrates this more
clearly than the seizure of Prime Minister Ali Zeidan from the Corinthia hotel
in central Tripoli.
More to the point, the prime
minister was apparently seized by militias linked to LIBYA’S Interior and
Defense Ministries, which makes one ask whether he was kidnapped or arrested, or
indeed whether it is even worth getting into the semantics.
His arrest was not about oil,
specifically, it was in retaliation for the US special-forces capture of a LIBYAN
al-Qaeda suspect in Tripoli over the weekend. Militant groups—many of whom
control various branches of the impotent government—were angered over the US
capture of Abu
Anas al-Libi, wanted for the 1998 bombings of US embassies in KENYA
and TANZANIA, in which more than 220 people were killed.
Look no further than LIBYA’S
National Congress, which was adamant that the US return the captor, which it
labeled as a kidnapping and a violation of LIBYA’S national sovereignty.
OIL CANNOT FLOW IN AN NOT FUNCTIONAL STATE
Upon his release, Prime Minister
Zeidan took to the international media, calling on WESTERN powers to step
in—again. In an interview with BBC Newsnight,
Zeidan said the country was being used as a base to export weapons across the SAHEL
and that “the movement of these weapons endangers neighboring countries too, so
there must be international cooperation to stop it.”
Background Information:
WHY THE SAHEL IS
CRUCIAL TO EUROPE'S NEIGHBORHOOD – AND ITS SECURITY STRATEGY. Read entire article at:
Regardless, the situation should be
clear even for those LIBYAN enthusiasts who are under the impression that this
is a functioning state. Ali Zeidan’s days are numbered without another direct
Western intervention.
This is the same reason the oil
cannot flow as planned.
VOLATILE SAHEL REGION
The crisis began two years ago with
the overthrow of Muammar Qaddafi, but in August things took a definitive turn
for the worse, with armed groups seizing major oil export terminals and
demanding autonomy for the eastern region. (See Background information below) Now
the crisis has reached the west where other militant formations ominously
charged with guarding the country’s pipelines and oil fields are seeking to
profit on the momentum of the strikers and protesters in the east.
Background Information:
According
to some analysts this instability could also be triggered deliberately by certain
foreign entities who invested heavily in LIBYA’S oil and fossil extraction prior
to the military intervention in LIBYA. When coalition forces decided to
intervene in LIBYA they did not consider the consequences such intervention
would have on the geopolitical landscape.
With the aim to gain control over
Libya’s oil reserves WESTERN coalition forces thought they could outwit CHINA
and RUSSIA who also invested heavily in LIBYA’S lucrative oil industry. Lured
into voting in favor of the UN resolution which in the end paved the way for
Military Intervention in LIBYA, RUSSIA and CHINA expected to receive their fair
slice of the “energy cake” once the intervention was concluded, instead they
were left out of the equation, losing millions of dollars of investments in
LIBYA, for all energy deals RUSSIA and CHINA inked with Muammar Qaddafi prior to the military intervention
suddenly became void, leaving the USA, FRANCE and BRITAIN the sole benefiters of
the entire operation.
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The
interim government cannot manage this crisis. It’s already been forced to
compromise, agreeing earlier in September to a 20% wage hike across the board
for civil servants, and including oil security forces in this mix. At the same
time, the government has issued warrants for the arrest of strike organizers in
the east.
While
the government will not be able to enforce these warrants, the blowback for
this still will be severe and will result in a violent upheaval unlike anything
else in the past two years. This will reverberate throughout the already
volatile Sahel region, threatening security in TUNISIA and ALGERIA most
immediately. It is also leading to a tightening of world oil supplies.
Solid government economic and structural reform is needed as soon as possible.
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