U.S.
Unable To Halt ISIS March Towards Libyan Oil
25
February, 2016
The
Islamic State (ISIS)
is taking on recruits faster than anyone can keep up with,
and it’s heading towards Libya’s oil crescent, eyeing billions of
barrels that a country at war with itself cannot
protect - even with U.S. air strikes.
In
mid-December, the United Nations brokered a power-sharing agreement
between Libya’s rival factions, but there is no
chance of implementing this. That
means there is no chance that the Libyan government can fight back
the advance of ISIS. Things are about to get messy, and U.S. air
strikes will put only a small dent in a big problem.
According
to U.S. intelligence figures, there
are an estimated 6,000 ISIS fighters now in Libya, headquartered in
the town of Sirte, as
Oilprice.com has reported
in the past.
From here, they control hundreds of miles of coastline. There is
nothing in Sirte they want; this is simply a strategic base.
ISIS
fighters have also been tracked down to Benghazi, but here they have
not solidified control yet. Still, Benghazi is an important
recruitment venue. More specifically, this is where it can combine
forces with it radical brethren in the form of Ansar al-Sharia and
other radical factions. Benghazi is where ISIS gets bigger.
And its
pace of recruitment is faster than anything we’ve ever seen before.
It absorbs new radical factions wherever it goes. The more successful
its attacks and territory grabs, the more successful its recruiting
becomes. In Libya, the former prowess of Ansar al-Sharia has quickly
waned. ISIS is more brutal, and more decisive. It’s either join or
be killed.
ISIS’
ability to launch attacks is not limited to Sirte, which is just the
staging ground, or even to Benghazi. It can attack pretty much
anywhere using hit-and-runs and suicide bombings.
So
what is it after? There
is a multipronged strategy here. The first is to get closer to
Europe. The second is to get closer to Africa. The third is to get
closer to more oil revenues to fill quickly depleting coffers in
Syria and northern Iraq.
The
ISIS Oil Picture in Libya
There
is no oil in Sirte, but ISIS was able to take control of this area
because no one was really paying attention. The
tribes here are loyal to Gaddafi, but they took a backseat to Ansar
al-Sharia, which in turn took a backseat to ISIS when it arrived.
ISIS
has largely been allowed to run amuck in and around Sirte because the
raging civil war that pits two rival Libyan governments against each
other has left the country incapable of fighting off the ISIS
advance. But now ISIS is targeting Libyan oil installations—and
this is what invites U.S. air strikes.
Last
month, ISIS attacked Es Sider and Ras Lanuf, which lie east of Sirte
and beyond its area of control. Es Sider is an oil port, and Libya’s
largest export terminal, with a capacity to export nearly 450,000
barrels per day. Ras Lanuf is a refining area. Ras Lanuf has storage
tanks, and the tank attacked by ISIS was holding about 400,000
barrels of oil.
The attack on Ras Lanuf was captured on video.
Both
Es Sider and Ras Lanuf have been closed
since December 2014—victims
of the civil
war that
is largely a battle for control over the country’s oil wealth. They
are perilously located right between ISIS-controlled Sirte and
Benghazi in the east.
But
ISIS has farther-reaching oil plans in Libya. It’s going after the
producing fields in the southern desert.
(Click
to enlarge)
In
a video,
ISIS made it clear that it had no plans to stop at Es Sider and Ras
Lanuf:
"Today Es Sider port and Ras Lanuf and tomorrow the port of
Brega and after the ports of Tobruk, Es Serir, Jallo, and al-Kufra."
When
it gets a foothold in the southern desert’s oil crescent, this will
be the point of no return.
ISIS
has already secured the route to the “oil crescent”, which
encompasses all the producing fields in the southern desert. It’s
done this by taking control of the desert
town of Nufaliya,
which is about 50 kilometers from Es Side.
At
stake here is Libya’s 48 billion barrels of estimated reserves—the
largest in Africa. The civil war alone has shut down over
three-quarters of Libya’s production, which might be good for the
current oil supply glut, but it’s very bad for Libya and regional
stability.
US
air strikes won’t likely be enough. ISIS
has already cleared a path to the oil crescent, and without a
functioning, unified government in Libya, there is no chance of
heading them off effectively. Air
strikes are but a bandage on a gaping wound.
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