10 Myths About Libya? Rejoinder
by Conn Hallinan
In his essay, “Top Ten Myths about the Libyan War,” Juan Cole argues
that U.S. interests in the conflict consisted of stopping “massacres of
people,” a “lawful world order,” “the NATO alliance,” and oddly, “the
fate of Egypt.” It is worth taking a moment to look at each of these
arguments, as well as his dismissal of the idea that the U.S./NATO
intervention had anything to do with oil as “daft.”
Massacres are bad things, but the U.S. has never
demonstrated a concern for them unless its interests were at stake. It
made up the “massacre” of Kosovo Albanians in order to launch the
Yugoslav War, and ended up acquiring one of the largest U.S. bases in
the world, Camp Bond Steel. It has resolutely ignored the massacre of
Palestinians and Shiites in Bahrain because it is not in Washington’s
interests to concern itself with those things.
Israel is an ally, and
Bahrain hosts the U.S. Fifth Fleet. Cole accepts the fact that Qaddafi
would have “massacred” his people, but his evidence for that is thin,
and he chooses to completely ignore the deaths and casualties resulting
from the NATO bombing.
The U.S. is interested in a “lawful world order.”
That would certainly come as a surprise to the Palestinians, the Shiites
in the Gulf, and peasants in Colombia who suffer the deprivations of
death squads aided by the U.S. (see the Washington Post story of
8/20/11) etc. The U.S, supports international law when it is in its
interests to do so, undermines it when it is not, and ignores it when it
is inconvenient.
I wish Cole were correct but he is not. The record
speaks for itself.
Okay, spot on for the NATO alliance, which is
exactly the problem. Africa has increasingly become a chess piece in a
global competition for resources and cheap labor. It is no accident that
the U.S. recently formed an African Command (Africom)—the Libyan War
was the organization’s coming out party—and is training troops in
countries that border the Sahara. It is already intervening in Somalia,
and a recent story in the New York Times about an “al-Qaeda threat” in
Northern Nigeria should send a collective chill down all our spines.
NATO has already “war gamed” the possibility of intervention in the Gulf
of Guinea to insure oil supplies in the advent of “civil disturbances”
that might affect the flow of energy resources.
NATO represents western economic and political
interests, which rarely coincide with the interests of either the
alliance’s own people, or those of the countries it occupies. The Libyan
intervention sets a very dangerous precedent for the entire continent,
which is why the African Union opposed it. Who will be next?
Ummm, Egypt? Certainly the U.S. has “a deep
interest in the fate of Egypt,” which ought to scare hell out of the
Egyptians. But overthrowing Qaddafi was important because he had “high
Egyptian officials on his payroll”? Is Cole seriously suggesting that
Libya’s 6.4 million people have anything to do with determining the fate
of 83 million Egyptians?
Opposition to the Libyan War is not based on
supporting Qaddafi, although Cole’s portrait of the man is one-sided.
For instance, Libya played an important role in financing the African
Bank, thus allowing African nations to avoid the tender mercies of the
World Bank and the International Monetary Fund. Libya also financed a
continent-wide telecommunications system that saved African countries
hundreds of millions of dollars by allowing them to bypass
western-controlled networks. He also raised living standards. This does
not make him a good guy, but it does say that Libya’s role in Africa
cannot be reduced to simply “sinister.”
Lastly, the charge that this was about Libya’s oil
is “daft”? Libya is the largest producer of oil in Africa, and the 12th
largest in the world. Its resources are very important for NATO’s
European allies, and over the past several years there has been
competition over these supplies. The Chinese have made major
investments. During the war China, Russia, and Brazil supported the
African Union’s call for a ceasefire and talks, and pointed out that UN
Resolution 1973 did not call for regime change. One of the first
statements out of the Transitional National Council following Qaddafi’s
collapse was that China, Russia and Brazil were going to be sidelined in
favor of French, Spanish, and Italian companies. Quid pro quo?
The war was not just over oil, but how can anyone
dismiss the importance of energy supplies at a time of worldwide
competition over their control? The U.S. is currently fighting several
wars in a region that contains more than 65 percent of the world’s oil
supplies. Does he think this is a coincidence? Sure, the companies that
invested in Libya will take some initial losses, but does Cole think
those Libyans beholden to NATO for their new positions will drive a hard
bargain with the likes of Total SA and Repso when it comes to making
deals? If I were those companies I would see the war as a very lucrative
investment in futures. In any case, when the U.S., China, and Russia
are locked in a bitter worldwide battle over energy resources, to
dismiss the role of oil in the Libyan War is, well, daft.
Special Forces are taking over the U.S. military.
Africom is increasingly active on the continent. NATO has just finished
its first intervention in Africa. With Qaddafi gone, every country that
borders the Mediterranean is now associated with NATO, essentially
turning this sea into an alliance lake.
This is not a good thing.
Conn M. Hallinan is a columnist for Foreign Policy In
Focus, “A Think Tank Without Walls, and an independent journalist. He
holds a PhD in Anthropology from the University of California, Berkeley. He oversaw the journalism program at the University of California at Santa Cruz for 23 years, and won the UCSC Alumni Association’s Distinguished Teaching Award, as well as UCSC’s Innovations in Teaching Award, and Excellence in Teaching Award. He was also a college provost at UCSC, and retired in 2004. He is a winner of a Project Censored “Real News Award,” and lives in Berkeley, California.
|