There’s no shortage of players in Libya’s conflict. But few champions for peace

Disir

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Sep 30, 2011
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The year-long battle for Tripoli has been heating up in recent weeks despite widespread calls for a ceasefire during Ramadan and the coronavirus pandemic. As the violence escalates and the number of foreigners involved in the fighting multipies, the United Nations Security Council has proven largely inconsequential. The reasons for this are as complex as the politics of Libya’s six-year civil war.

Just in recent weeks, fighters allied to Libya’s internationally recognised Government of National Accord have made significant gains against their rivals in the Libyan National Army, led by self-proclaimed Field Marshal Khalifa Haftar. Both sides are largely loose coalitions of militias whose internal politics are even more complex than the divide driving the war.

The escalation in fighting in northwest Libya coincides with increasing levels of foreign military intervention and material support being offered to both sides by powerful allies. The Libyan National Army has been most visibly backed by Egypt and the United Arab Emirates. It has also benefited from well-trained Russian mercenaries.

Nobody pays attention to Libya.
 
The year-long battle for Tripoli has been heating up in recent weeks despite widespread calls for a ceasefire during Ramadan and the coronavirus pandemic. As the violence escalates and the number of foreigners involved in the fighting multipies, the United Nations Security Council has proven largely inconsequential. The reasons for this are as complex as the politics of Libya’s six-year civil war.

Just in recent weeks, fighters allied to Libya’s internationally recognised Government of National Accord have made significant gains against their rivals in the Libyan National Army, led by self-proclaimed Field Marshal Khalifa Haftar. Both sides are largely loose coalitions of militias whose internal politics are even more complex than the divide driving the war.

The escalation in fighting in northwest Libya coincides with increasing levels of foreign military intervention and material support being offered to both sides by powerful allies. The Libyan National Army has been most visibly backed by Egypt and the United Arab Emirates. It has also benefited from well-trained Russian mercenaries.

Nobody pays attention to Libya.
We have Libyas all over the country now. You see them burning?
 
Libya was a wealthy country that had free health care and university education where half of the students were women.
But the evil bitch Hillary conspired with NATO to bomb the country and topple the government. Libya then turned into a chaotic failed state ruled by various warlords who are still fighting each other to become the country's leader. ... :cuckoo:
 
Oh, yes, we know.
Levchenko Inna Nikolayevna (born in Ukraine) , who has changed her gender, shaved and joined to Russian Mercenaries with her birth sertificate...
IMG_20200611_093616.jpg
 
Oh, yes, we know.
Levchenko Inna Nikolayevna (born in Ukraine) , who has changed her gender, shaved and joined to Russian Mercenaries with her birth sertificate...
View attachment 348690
Sounds like a bullshit. The man on the photo doesn't resemble a woman even after gender change and all steroids (or what this crap is called) that follow after this.
 

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