Report / In Depth

“This‌ ‌War‌ ‌is‌ ‌Out‌ ‌of‌ ‌Our‌ ‌Hands”‌

The Internationalization of Libya’s Post-2011 Conflicts From Proxies to Boots on the Ground

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Abstract

This report examines the post-2011 Libyan civil war chronologically to recount its history and unpack how the deterioration of multilateral institutions and norms, American retrenchment, European disunity, military assertiveness by rival Middle Eastern powers, and Russian opportunism have conspired to intensify and prolong conflict. Additionally, it accounts for the role of technological innovations on the battlefield like drones and the reliance by all sides on disinformation and foreign fighters.  First it addresses how foreign intervention and rivalries played out during the 2011 revolution and the post-revolutionary period until 2014. Secondly it addresses the proxy war in the context of the Dignity versus Dawn civil war and its aftermath until 2019, and thirdly examines the battle for Tripoli and the post-2019 phase, characterized by increasingly direct intervention by foreign powers. Then finally it offers scenarios for the future of international involvement in Libya and provides lessons from Libya’s experience of proxy warfare.

Acknowledgments

The author is grateful to the numerous Libyans and foreign officials who shared their insights. He wishes to thank Sandy Alkoutami for her research assistance and Ghassan Salamé, Stephanie Williams, Matthew Herbert, Jalel Harchaoui, Jeffrey Feltman, Emadeddin Badi, Andrew Weiss, Eugene Rumer, Mieczysław Boduszyński, Zuri Linetsky and Geoffrey Howard for their helpful comments on successive drafts. The author also appreciates the editorial assistance and substantive input from David Sterman and other researchers from New America.

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Frederic Wehrey

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“This‌ ‌War‌ ‌is‌ ‌Out‌ ‌of‌ ‌Our‌ ‌Hands”‌

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