Report / In Depth

The Abu Dhabi Express

Analyzing the Wagner Group’s Libya Logistics Pipeline & Operations

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Abstract

In late 2020, as the first major ceasefire in Libya’s decade-long proxy war was under negotiation, news broke of a Pentagon report suggesting that the United Arab Emirates, or UAE, co-financed the operations of the Wagner Group, a Kremlin-backed network of Russian private military security contractors. Although the Pentagon report presented no direct evidence of financial ties between the UAE and the Wagner Group, it raised questions about the UAE’s links to the Russian military outfit and its chief financier Yevgeny Prigozhin, who has been sanctioned by the United States in connection with his role in the conflicts in Ukraine and Syria, as well as interference in U.S. elections. This case study outlines how Russia leveraged its long-standing military cooperation with the UAE to piggyback the delivery of sensitive military material to forces allied with Libyan strongman, Khalifa Haftar, and Wagner Group operatives in a potential violation of a standing UN arms embargo. New America’s investigation tracked the transport of radar and electronic equipment for Russian-made Pantsir S1 anti-aircraft surface-to-air missile systems from Russia to the UAE, and tracked suspected military air transports bound for Libya from the UAE. Suspect flights from the UAE to Libya we identified included trips that used U.S.-made C17 cargo planes. Additional data provides insights into how a multi-million-dollar military-technical agreement between Russia and the UAE set the stage for Wagner Group air defense maneuvers and resulted in significant Russian and civilian casualties during a pivotal offensive on Tripoli by Haftar’s Libyan National Army. While the evidence reviewed does not provide conclusive proof of the alleged Emirati financial ties to the Wagner Group, these findings do add to the mounting evidence of UAE support for illicit mercenary activities, and, at minimum, suggest that the logistics pipeline that supports Russia’s military cooperation with the UAE in Libya is worthy of much closer scrutiny.

Acknowledgments

The authors would like to thank our partners and colleagues at New America, C4ADS, and the Center on the Future of War at Arizona State University. The unique collaboration across our organizations has afforded us unprecedented insights into the way technology and the increasingly privatized and networked nature of conflict is transforming security dynamics around the world. We are especially grateful to our partners at Airwars whose meticulous documentation of civilian casualties in Libya inspired us to launch our investigation.

Thanks also goes to New America’s talented team of editors and designers, especially to Emily Schneider for her keen editorial eye and helpful feedback as well as to Alison Yost for leading the charge on production and Joe Wilkes, Joanne Zalatoris, and Maria Elkin who laid out the paper and webpage.

More About the Authors

Jack Margolin
Candace Rondeaux
DSC_4051 - CR CHOICE
Candace Rondeaux

Senior Director, Future Frontlines and Planetary Politics; Professor of Practice, Arizona State University

Oliver Imhof

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