Abstrakt: |
The article aimed to identify the position of the Security Council on the military intervention in Libya by providing a theoretical framework for the concept of intervention, its types and legitimacy, and reviewing the reasons that prompted the military intervention in Libya, represented by the chaos resulting from the Arab Spring. The study also reviewed the circumstances of NATO and Turkey's intervention in Libya. The study concluded that the position of the UN Security Council on NATO's military intervention in Libya was compatible with the interests of the superpowers in this country; The decisions taken by the Council regarding NATO's intervention in Libya in 2011 were within the framework of Chapter VII of the United Nations Charter, which allows the use of force against states, the pretext for the intervention in Libya was the violation of human rights by the former Libyan regime, which reflects the duplicity of the Council's decisions in line with the interests of the major powers; Whereas, the position of the Security Council rejected the Turkish intervention in Libya in the year 2020, because that conflicts with the interests of superpowers that have condemned this intervention, led by NATO, the European Union countries, and the United States of America. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR] |