Power without a throne: how Khalifa Haftar controls Libya

无冕之王:卡扎菲哈法尔如何掌控利比亚

The Audio Long Read

2026-03-23

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When Nato helped overthrow Gaddafi in 2011, there were hopes of a new beginning. More than a decade later, a former CIA asset runs the country – and Libya has become yet another lesson in the unintended consequences of foreign intervention By Anas El Gomati. Read by Mo Ayoub. Help support our independent journalism at theguardian.com/longreadpod
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  • Power Without a Throne, How Khalifa Haftar Controls Libya by Enes El Gomati.

  • Read by Moayyub.

  • In July 2025, four of Europe's most senior officials landed in eastern Libya for an urgent meeting.

  • Italy's interior minister had watched migrant arrivals surge during the previous six months.

  • Greece's migration chief was reeling after 2,000 people reached Crete in a single week.

  • Malta's home minister feared his island was next.

  • And the EU's migration commissioner was scrambling

  • to rescue an agreement worth many hundreds of millions that was visibly failing to stop the boats.

  • Libya is a place where crises converge.

  • Its 1,100-mile coastline, the longest Mediterranean coastline in Africa,

  • has become the main departure point for migrants heading north.

  • Since Muammar Gaddafi was toppled in 2011, the country has been torn apart by successive civil wars.

  • Russia, Turkey, Egypt and the UAE arm rival factions and the contest no longer stops at Libya's borders.

  • From military bases in the south, Russia and the UAE funnel weapons and fighters into Sudan's civil war,

  • which has driven hundreds of thousands more refugees north towards Libya's coast.

  • Whoever controls Libya holds leverage over Europe.

  • Yet Libya's political crisis is so Byzantine that it confuses even experienced European officials.