Turkish military intervention in the Second Libyan Civil War


The Turkish military intervention in the Second Libyan Civil War is an ongoing military intervention by Turkey in support of the UN-recognized Government of National Accord of Libya in the Second Libyan Civil War. Military intervention was approved by the Grand National Assembly of Turkey on 2 January 2020, which passed a one-year mandate to deploy troops to Libya. Turkish military deployments to Libya began on 5 January.
Direct Turkish support for the Government of National Accord has generally been on-the-ground advisers providing training and operational support, air support through unmanned aerial vehicles, intelligence operatives and support from Turkish Navy vessels for Libyan ground forces. In addition to its own troop and equipment deployments, Turkey has been hiring and transporting Syrian mercenaries from the Turkish-backed Syrian National Army to support and bolster the manpower of the GNA since December 2019.
The Turkish military intervention in Libya has been mainly interpreted as an attempt to secure access to resources and maritime boundaries in the Eastern Mediterranean as part of its Blue Homeland Doctrine, especially following the ratification of the Libya–Turkey maritime deal. Secondary Turkish objectives are believed to include countering Egyptian and Emirati influence in the Middle East and North Africa.

Background

Memorandum of understanding by Turkey and Libya

Libya–Turkey maritime deal

Intervention

Following the approval of the one-year mandate to send troops to Libya, President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan stated that Turkish forces had begun to be deployed in the country on 5 January. According to Al-Arabiya, MİT intelligence operatives were the first Turkish assets to arrive in Libya. The LNA claimed to have bombed a Turkish cargo vessel which had been carrying supplies for Turkish-backed forces on 19 February during rocket strikes on the Port of Tripoli, although Turkey denied there having been any Turkish cargo ships at the port. On 25 February, President Erdoğan confirmed two Turkish soldiers had been killed in Libya. He also stated that 100 pro-LNA fighters had been killed in retaliation.

Operation Peace Storm

GNA Prime Minister Sarraj announced Operation Peace Storm on 25 March, with Turkish drones and intelligence providing significant backing to the operation. On 1 April, a Turkish frigate fired a surface-to-air missile at a LNA drone which had got close to it, which landed in Ajaylat. With the support of Turkish drones, GNA forces seized recaptured the coastal towns of Sorman, Sabratha, Ajaylat, Aljmail, Regdalin, Zaltan, and Al Assah on 13 April and successfully re-connected GNA-controlled territory with the Tunisian border. Turkish strikes reportedly caused heavily casualties for forces in the area and destroyed military vehicles that had been provided to pro-Haftar forces by the United Arab Emirates.
In May 2020, Turkish drones reportedly destroyed three Pantsir S-1 systems alongside six others which were destroyed by GNA aircraft and drones.
By 6 June, the GNA had successfully ousted Haftar's forces from the entirety of Tripoli and captured the LNA stronghold of Tarhouna, with Turkey's support considered a significant factor in turning the offensive in the GNA's favour.
However, by the end of June, Egypt the backer of Haftar's warned Turkey and the GNA of military intervention as the GNA attacked Sirte. The GNA government denounces it however and called it a declaration of war.

Central Libya clashes

On 4 July, unidentified non-Libyan warplanes aligned to the LNA targeted Al-Watiya Air Base. The airstrikes destroyed GNA military equiptement brought by Turkey; including, as MIM-23 Hawk air defenses and KORAL Electronic Warfare System stationed in the base. The Defense Ministry of Turkey acknowledged that the strikes damaged some of their defense systems. Turkish officials stated no one died in the attack and vowed retribution, indicating the attack could have been perpetrated by Emirati Dassault Mirage aircraft.

Involvement of Syrian mercenaries

Turkey first began sending mercenaries hired from Syrian National Army in December 2019, initially sending 300 fighters. As of August 2020, 17,000 Turkish-backed Syrian fighters have been sent to Libya and 471 have been killed. According to some sources, the demographic composition of the fighters are mostly Syrian Turkmen. Acoording to the Syrian Observatory of Human Rights, 471 Turkish-backed Syrian mercenaries, of whom 34 were children, were killed during the military operation in Tripoli, Misrata, Cyrene, Tarhuna and other areas in Libya. At least 50 fighters were identified as former ISIS members. The Turkish intelligence also transferred more than 2,500 Tunisian ISIS members to Libya to fight alongside the Turkish-backed militias of the Tripoli-based Government of “National Accord”.
On 12 April 2020, the LNA claimed to have captured a Turkish-hired mercenary affiliated with the Rojava Peshmerga but the Kurdistan Democratic Party denied the fighter was affiliated with the group.

International Reactions

UN-member states