The White House has joined other international voices in urging Benghazi-based renegade General Khalifa Haftar to halt his ongoing assault on the country's capital — this as the United Nations-backed Government of National Accord (GNA) in Tripoli has already spent days battling Haftar's Libyan National Army (LNA), which has included the use of air power.

Late in the day Sunday, Secretary of State Michael Pompeo said in a statement, “We have made clear that we oppose the military offensive by Khalifa Haftar’s forces and urge the immediate halt to these military operations against the Libyan capital.”

Gen Haftar's forces in the southern town of Sebha last month, via AFP/BBC

And additionally Pompeo stated, "There is no military solution to the Libya conflict" — an absurd and ironic line for a top US official, given it was the US-NATO led 2011 war on Libya's Gaddafi that plunged the country into years of internecine civil war and violence in the first place.

“A political solution is the only way to unify the country and provide a plan for security, stability and prosperity for all Libyans,” Pompeo said further.

Over the weekend US Africa Command said it was withdrawing a small contingency of Marines in Libya due to “security conditions on the ground.” US forces had reentered Libya in larger numbers during a 2016 campaign to oust ISIS terrorists from their stronghold in Sirte (notably Sirte had been Gaddafi's favored town and the place of his execution at the hands of NATO-backed Islamists).

"The security realities on the ground in Libya are growing increasingly complex and unpredictable," said AFRICOM commander Marine Corps Gen. Thomas Waldhauser, announcing the move. "Even with an adjustment of the force, we will continue to remain agile in support of existing U.S. strategy."

The LNA has conducted air strikes on the south of the city as it seeks to advance into the center from a disused airport. But the government of Prime Minister Fayez al-Serraj has armed groups arriving from nearby Misrata to help block the LNA. It reported 11 deaths without saying on which side. Al-Serraj, 59, who comes from a wealthy business family, has run the Tripoli government since 2016 as part of a U.N.-brokered deal boycotted by Haftar. — Reuters

Haftar - who solidified control of Eastern Syria and swept through the south in January, seeks to capture Tripoli and seize military control of the entire country, after his LNA captured a section around Tripoli's international airport.

As we noted earlier Sunday, some international reports confirmed that the LNA gained full control of the airport later in the day Saturday, but other conflicting reports say that this was premature, which could mean only a section what's called the "old airport" was wrested from Tripoli forces — not the operational international side. Video purporting to be from the inside the Tripoli airport was posted on social media Saturday.

The U.N. Security Council fears that the Libyan National Army's advances toward Tripoli –– where the U.N.-backed government is –– could lead to a military showdown.https://t.co/Htb5xrPhM9 — NPR (@NPR) April 6, 2019

The renegade general, who for about two decades previously lived in exile in the US a mere few miles from CIA headquarters in Virginia, is unlikely to halt the assault, which has the UN fearing a new major war that could further rip Libya apart.

#Libya- video of LNA fighting near Khallet Alforjan, Ain Zara, outskirts of #Tripoli.

Classic combined-arms tactics:

-Couple of dudes taking potshots with an MG in general direction of enemy

-Tank doing donuts

-Someone walking by with an RPG

-A guy on his back filming it all pic.twitter.com/USLo4i026e — Oded Berkowitz (@Oded121351) April 8, 2019

One political commentator and historian, Gerald Horne, placed the latest events within the context of the prior NATO intervention: “You may well expect a bloodbath to unfold in Tripoli. Which is quite tragic and unfortunate, but I’d say it’s the inevitable outcome of the ill-advised attack by NATO, led by the US, that resulted in the 2011 overthrow of Gaddafi,” he told Russia's RT.

As Libya descends even further into anarchy, violence & instability, here was the reaction of Hillary Clinton - a leading advocate of that "humanitarian bombing" - after learning Gaddafi was murdered (he was raped with a bayonet by a mob as he was killed). "Humanitarian wars": pic.twitter.com/GFjPnaQKny — Glenn Greenwald (@ggreenwald) April 7, 2019

Based in Libya's oil-rich east, Haftar's militia has already captured much of the country's oil resources, especially after a successful blitz to take much of the south over the past year.

And now he stands ready to take the capital of Tripoli in the west — home to Libya's state-run National Oil Corporation, which when combined with small subsidiaries under its direction accounts for some 70% of the country's oil output.

* * *

Bloomberg's Salma El Wardany considers the potential impact on global oil markets and asks, will this impact oil exports?

Not immediately. Major oilfields and export terminals are

far from the clashes. But history shows that fighting anywhere

in Libya can cause dramatic swings in output. In June, Libya’s

crude shipments were suspended for weeks after Haftar captured

two export terminals and transferred them to an oil authority in

eastern Libya. Exports dropped by 800,000 barrels a day and

Libya lost almost $1 billion before he handed the terminals back

to the Tripoli-based National Oil Corp. “Oil operations have

been largely normal but any sustained fighting could quickly

bring Libya back below one million barrels a day,” Darwazah

said.

Concerning oil facilities in the west of the country:

Any disruption at Zawiya port, the main export terminal for

Sharara, would cause a partial or a complete shutdown of the

300,000 barrel-a-day oil field. Zawiya is scheduled to load 6

million barrels of crude in April. If Haftar takes control of

the terminal, he will virtually control Libya’s oil industry.

Prior the 2011 Libyan war and NATO military intervention which ultimately led to the overthrow and killing of longtime ruler Muammar Gaddafi, Libya produced about 1.6 million bpd, but years of turmoil and political instability in the aftermath have slashed that to 550,000 barrels per day as of 2018 output numbers.