Afriqiyah Airways Hijack

We are all thankful that there were no casualties in the Libyan hijack today.  This reminds us of the connection between the parlous security in the Sahara and the Mediterranean littoral.  For analaysis of the  Fezzan and its capital, Sebha, where Muammar Gadhafi stored his nuclear yellow cake and the British military team was attacked in 2012, see page 283 of Belfast to Benghazi.

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US ends its operation in Sirte

Africa Command has concluded its operation in Sirte after the Government of National Accord announced the end of fighting against Islamic State in Sirte.  The Bunyan Marsous fighters have won a significant battle and made a huge sacrifice on behalf of all Libyans.  Now is the time to reconstruct the town and prevent the return of Daesh.  Read about Africa Command’s attempts to intervene in Libya in 2012 on page 278 of Belfast to Benghazi.

https://www.waterstones.com/book/belfast-to-benghazi/rupert-wieloch/9781861515667

 

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Aleppo Debate in Parliament

We are now seeing the tragic consequences of the 2013 “non-intervention” vote with tens of thousands of people killed and millions of people forced from their homes.  What is required now is a post-conflict reconstruction operation on a similar scale to the Balkans, but where is the UN Mandate and the trained civilians, police and military to deploy promptly?  We are not even asking the right questions in the debate in Parliament today.

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Tobruk Picket

Yesterday, Tobruk airport was picketed by protesters against the visit by UN chief Martin Kobler.  This is a far cry from the welcome I received on a visit organised by the Chief of the Libyan Air Staff on Valentine’s Day in 2012, described on page 268 of Belfast to Benghazi.

Elsewhere, the Libyan National Army has  launched a major tank assault on the Ganfouda enclave in Benghazi. The assault, which began in torrential rain, has seen an unknown number of casualties.

It is not surprising that Libya’s outgoing UN ambassador, Ibrahim Dabbash, launched a bitter attack on the international community’ s interference in Libyan affairs.

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Tobruk town council at the Knightsbridge Commonwealth War Cemetery 2012

 

US Strikes IS in Sirte

US Africa Command has now conducted more than 400 airstrikes as part of Operation Odyssey Lightning against Islamic State in Libya since 1 August.  In the south, an AT-802 aircraft, allegedly operated by the UAE,  has bombed a Tebu-held position near Kufra.  Proxy forces are needed because the Libyan Air Force are in such a rundown state – see pages 268-270 of Belfast to Benghazi

https://www.waterstones.com/book/belfast-to-benghazi/rupert-wieloch/9781861515667

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Act of Remembrance

At our local memorial, we read the 28 names of those who died from the 36 families in this parish during WWI.  In 1917, war poet, Cicely Fox Smith wrote a poem about our village on the Dever:

And while I lay and listened, oh the river’s sleepy tune              

Seemed to change its rippling music, like the cukoo’s stave in June       

And the cannon’s distant thunder, and the engine’s war-like drone

Seemed to mingle with its burthen in a solemn undertone.   

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Mosul Mire

Three weeks after Iraqi Forces launched their attack on Mosul, the troops are bogged down in the predicted urban quagmire.  This is a far cry from 7th November 1918 when Ali Ihsan Pasha surrendered Mosul following a 2 week military operation and secret negotiations with Colonal Gerald Leachman, who subsequently became a most succesful governor of Mosul.

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Sad Day in Benghazi

Anti-corruption activist Mohamed Bughaighis was killed today near to the Kish Café, Benghazi, where we made friends with many optimistic Libyans in 2011 and 2012.  In total, 4 people were killed and 21 injured in the vehicle attack, to add to the 10 men who were discovered on a rubbish tip this weekend, bound, tortured and killed.  Tomorrow in London, Fayez al-Sarraj, the Prime Minister of the Government of National Accord will meet  President Obama’s special envoy to Libya, Jonathan Winer at the Foreign and Commonwealth Office to discuss the collapsing economy in Libya.  Perhaps the security situation in Benghazi should be the first point on the agenda.

Tobroq Council

Sleepwalking into a new Cold War?

I was interviewed by Emma Barnett on BBC radio about the British troop deployments to the Baltic announced yesterday.  We are all worried about the deterioration in relations between Russia and the West.  The use of the military to deter aggression is an important tool of diplomacy, but should not be taken as an imminent sign of War.  See Chapter 2 of Belfast to Benghazi for a sense of what it was like to serve on the front line during the Second Cold War; the period of heightened tension from the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan in 1979 to the time of Glasnost and Perestroika.

img_1056The 17th/21st Lancers patrolling in the Arctic during the Cold War.