The Strategic Impact of the Oil Variable on the Events of Libya "Dialogue in the Crisis of 2011"

Authors

  • Malik Dhham Meti'b

Abstract

Libya in the African continent has adopted a policy against Western intervention to liberate the continent from foreign dependence, support its liberation movements, and work to develop the continent by working to deliver the political will of the countries of the continent and regulate political and economic relations Emphasizing common interests, contributing to the process of investing natural resources, especially oil, and harnessing them for the benefit of the peoples of the continent, and contributing to supporting economic and human development plans in various African countries. Therefore, the Libyan crisis constituted one of the most sensitive regional crises, whether at the Arab or African levels. Since the fall of Muammar Gaddafi’s regime in Libya in 2011, the Libyan state has not known a stable form for its political system, as many crises erupted in it, and the legitimate concern was the basis for a deep political crisis that developed in After a military conflict that varies in intensity from time to time All of this is affected by regional and international interventions and the inability to control the supply of arms despite the multiplicity of UN resolutions, as well as the outcomes of international conferences, and Libya entered a regional conflict, and it seems that it will turn into a complex international conflict after Western intervention in it, which makes the possibility of resolving this conflict complicated, as it has intensified The Libyan crisis with the continuation of the security coup, political differences and the absence of a national unity government, as well as the suspicious and pressing role played by oil companies benefiting from energy in Libya for the continuation and sustainability of the crisis.

Published

2022-03-01

How to Cite

Meti’b, M. D. (2022). The Strategic Impact of the Oil Variable on the Events of Libya "Dialogue in the Crisis of 2011". Hammurabi Journal for Studies, 11(41), 401–416. Retrieved from https://hamm-journal.org/index.php/HJS/article/view/238

Issue

Section

Articles