Long Arms of
Libya: How Regional Ties Create Libya’s
Arms Trafficking Challenges
Preamble
Since the Arab Spring began in 2011, Libya has grown into a regional
hub for trafficking small arms including guns, shoulder mounted missiles, and
mortars. Weapons have been trafficked in from external nations including
the United States of America and the State of Qatar. Caches of weapons
have also been looted from depots that were formerly under control of Libyan
leader Muammar Gaddafi before he was killed and overthrown.
Since then, weapons have also been trafficked out of Libya in many
directions, including to Egypt in the East and to Algeria, Mali, Niger, and Chad
in the West and South. The networks used to bring these weapons in by
land, air, or sea before dispersing them across Libya and North Africa has,
thus far, been under-studied and misunderstood.
A Network Analysis
I want to answer the following question: what are key social
connections in the North African context that facilitate weapons to be
transferred to conflict zones other than the ones they were intended for? Are
tribal or family relationships the strongest indicator of arms networks?
Or are political or religious affiliations better indicators of illicit
network channels?
Why is this Important?
This is important because the crisis in Libya is likely continue
through the coming years. The relationships between armed groups will be
important for containing the conflict and will also be an indicator of how to
look for networks of influencers, information, alliances, and money. The
information would also be predictive of where conflict might arise in the
future. For example, if there is an area of Mali that currently has
regional conflict but limited weaponry but has tribal ties shared with people
in Libya, would this be an indicator that the Mali region might soon experience
further conflict due to access to weapons through a tribal network?
Without better understanding the networks that allow for the State
of Libya to become a hub of illicit weaponry, this small country of about six
million individuals will likely remain a distributor of arms and centerpiece of
instability for years to come.
Data Required
The data for this project will rely on several forms of research.
1) ACLED conflict data set which contains information on what kinds of
weapons were used and by which groups in North Africa, 2) anthropological and
sociological data on where different tribes, political, terror, and religious
groups overlap. 3) Newspaper and terrorism watch journals to identify
overlap of weapons traffickers and different identity groups.
Details of the Network
Analysis
The network analysis will
focus on the following methods:
Sub-group
analysis: What are the historic tribal, political, business, and religious
networks in Libya and how do they overlap with surrounding countries?
Betweeness:
Which groups sit in the path of major choke points (cities, ports, roadways,
etc)?
InDirection:
Monitor for groups, like Qatari proxies who exclusively bring weapons
into Libya.
OutDirection:
Monitor trade groups on the Egyptian border that exclusively take arms
out of Libya.
BiDirectional:
Groups that both gather and distribute weapons.
Next Steps for Further
Analysis
Core issues that are
unlikely to be addressed by this network analysis but that should be followed
up in future analysis include:
Further research would include comparing connectivity of networks
for weapons in North Africa to networks that trade other good whether illicit
like drugs, human trafficking, or legitimate activities like oil and natural
resources, commodities, and textiles.
Similarly, it would be useful to see how networks of diaspora
Libyans work into the illicit weapons trade in the country and how diaspora
networks in the Libyan context compare to illicit arms trafficking in other
regions, such as the Irish diaspora for the Irish Republican Army.
1 comment:
As we've discussed, this is a great topic in which you've shown a lot of interest. You've done a good job of telling us what an SNA could do to show how Libya is becoming a hub of the illegal weapons trade in North Africa, and the data sources seem sensible. It would of course be nice to have some direct data on arms smuggling itself; I would have liked to see some evidence of research of work done on other similar situations (you mention the IRA, for instance.) A bit more on what the SNA measures could show would have also been helpful. Well done overall; I hope that someday you'll be able to do this study.
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