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Comment: The roots of the counter-revolutionary movement go back to the first days of the Arab Spring, if not to decades of authoritarian regimes in the region, writes Alaa Bayoumi.
Comment: Eliminating IS from Sirte was an important step in bringing stability to Libya, but the political and economic challenges ahead are numerous, writes Guma El-Gamaty
Comment: The doctrine of liberal interventionism has destroyed post-Gaddafi Libya, just as it destroyed post-Saddam Iraq, writes Vijay Prashad.
Comment: The UN has again failed to get rival governments talking. Fundamental political differences between the two camps are obvious, but selfish interests are more to blame, says George Joffe.
Comment: A pan-Arab force is not going to be the solution to the many ills and conflicts that afflict the region, writes Abdallah Hendawi.
Comment: Libya stands at a crossroads of destiny, and must choose whether to accept compromise and consensus, or let brutal violence tear the nation apart.
Comment: Amid chaos caused by mismanagement, intervention, international rivalries and civil war, ordinary people who hoped for a better Libya are dying, says Vijay Prashad.
Comment: Libya’s descent into full-blown civil war – again – seems inevitable. The country has, to all intents and purposes split into two. Surrounding states are slowly being sucked in.
Libya’s descent into chaos has been rapid but is explicable. Unfortunately the situation on the ground does not lend itself easily to mediation efforts. Full-blown civil war seems imminent.
Since the downfall of Muammar Gaddafi, a power vacuum has led Libya down a path of factionalism and war. Isolated from both Tobruk and Tripoli's rule, extremists and separatists thrive, leaving the future of Libya hanging in the balance.