During the
2011 uprising, the entire Al-Saiqa force in Benghazi defected to the opposition on 19 February 2011, following Major General
Abdel Fattah Younis, who had established the unit by decree in 1970. The next day, Al-Saiqa attacked the Gaddafi-aligned Fadil Bu Amr brigade in Benghazi and seized its headquarters, one of the first military operations carried out in the name of the February Revolution. By late 2012, Al-Saiqa reported to the Ministry of Defence on paper and numbered "a few thousand" personnel. In practice, the central government gave Al-Saiqa little support while funding rival militia umbrellas such as the
Libya Shield Force. This neglect was one reason Bukhamada sided with
Khalifa Haftar's
Operation Dignity in 2014. As the security situation deteriorated and assassinations of military and police officers increased, Bukhamada called on civilians to bolster Al-Saiqa's ranks; around 800 volunteered, joining the unit's 300 professional soldiers. Elements of Ansar al-Sharia and other militant factions in Benghazi went on to pledge allegiance to the
Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL) from late 2014 onwards, with the group's senior sharia official defecting to ISIL in March 2015. Al-Saiqa continued to fight these groups as part of the
Libyan Arab Armed Forces (LAAF) until the LAAF secured control of Benghazi. Bukhamada died in November 2020. Field Marshal Khalifa Haftar appointed Major General Abdul Salam Al-Hassi, a career officer within Al-Saiqa who had previously led its operations room during the Tripoli offensive, to replace him. Under Al-Hassi's command, Al-Saiqa reopened and rehabilitated facilities including the Battalion 302 training centre in Ganfouda and resumed formal cadet training, graduating new classes of recruits through the LAAF structure.
Mahmoud al-Werfalli joined Al-Saiqa after the fall of the Gaddafi regime and held a commanding role from at least December 2015. By August 2017, his title was Axes Commander and he was responsible for at least one detention centre. Both warrants remained outstanding until al-Werfalli was shot dead in Benghazi on 24 March 2021. The ICC terminated proceedings against him in June 2022.
Benghazi clashes and Operation Dignity Following the fall of the Gaddafi government, the period between 2012 and 2014 saw escalating tensions in Benghazi between regular army elements, including Al-Saiqa, and Islamist militias such as
Ansar al-Sharia, which was designated a terrorist organisation by the
United Nations, the
United States, the
United Kingdom,
Turkey and the
United Arab Emirates. Al-Saiqa was deployed in Benghazi in the summer of 2013 to control the growing disorder and was popular among residents for its stance against the militant groups. This position led to targeted assassinations of its officers and friction with government-sanctioned militias like the
Libya Shield Force. The conflict intensified as militant factions formed the
Shura Council of Benghazi Revolutionaries (BRSC), an alliance that included Ansar al-Sharia and other armed groups opposed to the regular army. Elements of these factions later pledged allegiance to the
Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL), with Ansar al-Sharia's senior sharia official defecting to ISIL in March 2015 and many of the group's fighters following. A senior Al-Saiqa official reported losses of 63 dead and 200 wounded between 21 and 30 July. By 13 August 2014, Al-Saiqa had fallen back to
Benina International Airport, the base of Operation Dignity's helicopter unit. Al-Saiqa's defence at Benina coincided with the formal endorsement of
Operation Dignity (
Karama) by the
House of Representatives, which gave
Khalifa Haftar an official military role. With Al-Saiqa integrated into the broader
Libyan Arab Armed Forces (LAAF) structure, the unit launched a counter-offensive and fought through heavily contested districts of Benghazi including Al Laithi and Buatni. The LAAF reported more than 5,000 casualties across its forces during the three-year campaign. == Related voices ==