ASSESSMENTS
In Libya, Hifter Plays the Oil Card
Jan 22, 2020 | 09:00 GMT

Billowing smoke marks the aftermath of an attack by Libyan National Army leader Khalifa Hifter's troops on Tripoli on Jan. 19, 2019. Control of the country's oil exports is a major weapon in Hifter's arsenal.
(ENES CANLI/Anadolu Agency via Getty Images)
Highlights
- The recent Berlin peace conference produced few tangible results and no significant progress on resolving Libya's conflict, meaning the country remains months, if not years, away from a meaningful political solution to its civil war.
- In the short term, LNA leader Khalifa Hifter is unlikely to keep Libya's oil exports offline for more than a few weeks, but production outages could become more frequent or longer.
- In the longer term, the closer Libya gets to a more permanent cease-fire, the greater the chance that actors like Hifter could use their power over the oil sector to extract concessions.
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