US Says Russia Aggravating Libya Conflict Through Mercenaries
The United States on Thursday accused Moscow of worsening the Libya conflict and urged diplomacy after a UN report confirmed that Russian mercenaries were fighting on behalf of a rebel warlord.
A report to the Security Council, which diplomats on Wednesday described to AFP, estimated that 800 to 1,200 fighters from Russia's Wagner Group were backing Khalifa Haftar, who has been waging a more than one-year offensive to seize Tripoli.
Russian support to Haftar "has led to a significant escalation of the conflict and a worsening of the humanitarian situation in Libya," said Chris Robinson, a State Department official who focuses on Russia.
"Wagner is often misleadingly referred to as a Russian private security company, but in fact it's an instrument of the Russian government which the Kremlin uses as a low-cost and low-risk instrument to advance its goals," Robinson told reporters.
He said that images of "very heavy and advanced weapons" in Libya from the Wagner Group indicated it was not a mere private company.
Henry Wooster, a State Department official in charge of North Africa, acknowledged it was unlikely Russia would reverse course on Libya, which has joined Syria as a theater for Moscow's renewed influence in the region.
He called on Russia to join calls for both Haftar's self-styled Libyan National Army and the UN-recognized government, which enjoys strong support from Turkey, to return to talks.
"No one should think that Russia is going to pack up and leave now that they've invested in the Libyan conflict," Wooster said.
"The way to end the Russian and other foreign interference in Libya is to first end the Tripoli conflict," he said.
The United States itself has sent mixed signals, with Trump in April last year speaking to Haftar by telephone and praising him.
Haftar is also supported by Egypt and the United Arab Emirates, whose rulers both have close ties with Trump.
But Wooster said that the United States does not back Haftar and opposes his offensive on Tripoli, saying it diverts attention from the priority of fighting extremists from the Islamic State group and Al-Qaeda.
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