History, asked by jwngrltps, 3 months ago

developed countries shown keen interest in Libyan civil war due to?​

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Answered by mayanksinha822
2

Answer:

The Libyan Civil War started in 2011 as a result of tensions between the Gaddafi regime and opposition groups who ranged from hardline Islamists to secular “moderates”. Because of NATO intervention, the opposition groups were able to overthrow Gaddafi, the longest reigning non-royal dictator in recent history. But very soon, the fragile alliance between these groups started to crack. In 2014, the newly installed Libyan government split into two factions, the Islamist-friendly Libyan General National Congress headquartered in Tripoli, the official capital of Libya, and the General Khalifa Haftar’s anti-Islamist coalition headquartered in Tobruk. So far these two factions have been sparring each other with no end in sight. Radical jihadist groups like ISIS have taken advantage of the chaos.

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Answered by Anonymous
0

Answer:

Such a war would destabilise Libya’s neighbours, directly threatening European security interests and global energy markets.

Major powers such as the United States and Russia are unwilling or unable to play a constructive or unifying role in Libya, putting the ones on Europeans to lead the effort to reach a solution.

This will require European countries to neutralise or co-opt other foreign actors’ partisan support for Libyan groups.

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