I never said anything about Algeria or Morroco, they don't interfere in other nations affairs. Neither did I bring up anything about support to the general. I was disputing the way you're framing Libya.
That's funny since Egypt and Algeria are cooperating on every level (both militarily and politically) in regards to Libya since Elsisi's visit to Algeria. The way I'm framing Libya is the way Libya is, several militias fighting each other and the state for greater power, be they Islamist, or secular. All the articles you posted claim Egypt is helping Haftar and you have claimed it before and now.
Of course the Arab world/international community now back the government after June elections. The elections where they closed polling stations where Islamists have highest support. And when they replaced GNC(Which had MB dominace) with House of Representatives.
Wrong again:-
The General National Congress was composed of 200 members of which 80 were elected through a
party list system of
proportional representation, and 120 were elected as
independents in
multiple-member districts.
[14][15]
National Forces Alliance (39)
Justice and Construction (17)
National Front (3)
Union for the Homeland (2)
National Centrist (2)
Wadi Al-Hayah (2)
Other parties/blocs (15)
Independents (120)
[6]
It is estimated that 25 independents were associated with the NFA, 17 with Justice and Construction, and 23 were Salafis.
[16]
NFA was created in February 2012. On 14 March 2012, the former wartime prime-minister, Mahmoud Jibril, was elected president of the alliance. NFA competed in the
Libyan General National Congress election, 2012. It fielded 70 candidates across Libya.
[4] Bucking the Islamist trend set by the
Muslim Brotherhood's victories in
Egyptian and
Tunisian elections, the NFA beat out the
Justice and Construction Party (Muslim Brotherhood's political arm in Libya) to take first place. NFA received
48% of the popular vote and won 39 of the 80 party-list seats.
[6] It is also estimated that
25 of the 120 independents in the GNC are associated with the NFA.
[7] Two NFA deputies were subsequently removed from the GNC by the integrity commission due to them having served as officials under the Gaddafi regime.
[7] On 14 November 2012, NFA became the largest governmental political party.
Tasked primarily with transitioning Libya to a permanent democratic constitution, it
was given an 18-month deadline to fulfil this goal. When the deadline passed with work on the new constitution only just getting underway, Congress was forced to organise elections to a new House of Representatives, which took power and replaced it on 4 August 2014.
General National Congress - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
GNC was same parliement which was stormed by Hafter affiliated militias. Of course you can't find this information anywhere on the internet. If you google the situation on Libya none of this is mentioned by any global media.
BBC News - Gunmen storm Libyan parliament
BBC news:
The BBC's Rana Jawad in Tripoli says Libya's national congress
has been stormed on dozens of occasions by gunmen over the past year and a half.
It was stormed many times by many different militias and factions, all with different grievances. The information is everywhere.