Next Monday, military leaders from Egypt, Jordan, the United Arab Emirates, Kuwait, Sudan, Bahrain, Saudi Arabia, and Libya, will meet to discuss strategies on how to stabilize the nation, according to an Arab League source speaking to Defense News.
Talks already conducted between Libyan National Army chief Maj. Gen. Khalifa Haftar, Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) and Arab leaders have already led to arms sales from the UAE to the Libyan Army.
“Five Mi-35 Hind upgraded helicopters were delivered last month ahead of more Russian equipment, which include anti-tank and armor-piercing weapons and munitions,” the source said.
The meeting will focus on organizing Libyan tribal leaders to create unified support for a potential Arab intervention.
“A meeting to coordinate the different tribes in Libya would reinforce the credibility of an action by the Joint Arab Force in Libya,” Jean-Marc Rickli, assistant professor with the Department of Defence Studies at King’s College London, told Defense News.
That unification is seen as a crucial step in stabilizing Libya, and something that has been stressed in the past by the Egyptian government.
The May 18 meeting could also include officials representing France and Italy.
“France has been asked to supply with logistics and special forces while Italy has been called to provide naval support,” the Arab League source said.
That naval support is already largely in place, and could easily be used to support a ground operation.
The European Union – Italy, in particular – has already taken criticism for its treatment of the migrant crisis in the Mediterranean. Amnesty International blamed European leadership for its decision to halt a search and rescue operation after the capsizing of a migrant vessel off the coast of Tripoli.
It’s criticism like this that makes the Italian government eager to stabilize its neighbor across the sea.
“A Libya in convulsions of civil war is a source of instability for the whole North Africa and the Mediterranean, as it represents a geopolitical black hole which breeds the phenomenon of international crime trafficking of drugs, arms, and people, and religiously motivated terrorism,” Andrea Margelletti, president of the Center for International Studies in Rome, told Defense News.
“In addition, there are Italian economic interests in Libya that our government intends to protect, above all those related to the hydrocarbon sector.”
All parties have expressed concern over the growing influence of the self-proclaimed Islamic State terrorist group, and the potential for its spread through a destabilized Libya. The group rose to power through the fall of the Saddam Hussein.
The leaders could also be encouraged to intervene in Libya based on what they see as a success in Yemen.
“With the operations in Yemen going quite well at the moment and with the movement from the first phase of operations to the second phase, now this could embolden the Arabs to move into Libya,” Rickli said.
“However, in Yemen it was known who were the assailants [and] where direct actions [can] be taken,” he added. “In Libya, the question is who could be labeled as the bad guys.”