Now that We’re Celebrating Qaddafi’s End, Can We Get a Little Truth?
As I write this, a new day is dawning in Libya.
The “people’s revolt” against yet another tyrant is unquestionably
exciting, and the demise (political and/or otherwise) of Muammar Qaddafi
will, of course, be widely hailed. But barely below the surface
something else is going on, and it concerns not the Libyan “people”, but
an elite.
In reality, a narrowly-based Libyan elite is being supplanted
by a much older, more enduring one of an international variety.
The media, as is so often the case, has botched its job. Thus
virtually all of its resources over the past six months have gone into
providing us with an entertainment, a horse race, a battle, with almost no insight into the deeper situation.
It’s true that Qaddafi, like many—perhaps a majority of—rulers in his
region, was a thug and a brute, if at times a comical figure. But one
doesn’t need to be an apologist for him—nor deny the satisfaction of
seeing the citizenry joyously celebrating his ouster—to demand some
honesty about the motives behind his removal. Especially when it comes
to our own government’s role in funding it, and thus every American’s
unwitting participation in that action.
Let’s start with the official justification for NATO’s launch of its
bombing campaign—for without that campaign, it’s highly improbable the
rebels could ever have toppled Qaddafi. We were told from the beginning
that the major purpose of what was to be very limited
bombing—indeed, its sole purpose—was to protect those Libyan civilians
rebelling against an oppressive regime from massive retaliation by
Qaddafi. Perhaps because of NATO’s initial intervention, the feared
Qaddafi-sponsored, genocidal bloodletting never did occur. (At least,
not beyond the military actions one would expect a government to take
when facing a civil war: after all, remember General Sherman’s
“scorched earth” policy in the US Civil War?).
However, protecting
civilians apparently didn’t generate sufficient public support for
intervention, so we started to hear about other purported reasons for
it. Qaddafi was encouraging his soldiers to…commit mass rape! And
giving them Viagra! And condoms!
[2]
Obama (we intervened to stop massacre)
You can’t make this sort of thing up. And yet that’s just what the
NATO crew did—made it up. The media, always glad to have a “sexy” story,
especially a sick sexy story, even a sick sexy story with no evidence
to back it up, covered this ad nauseum, but never bothered to find out if it was true.
We’ve been expressing doubts about these claims, for a number of
reasons—including logic—for some time now. (For more on that, see this [3] and this [4] and this [5].) But
it’s tough to counterpoise hot-button issues with rationality. If you
questioned the mass rape story, you were a “rape-enabler.” If you
pointed out that Qaddafi was being bombed for anything other than
humanitarian reasons, you were a “Qaddafi-lover.”
The media was so gullible that the professional disinformation guys
went onto auto-pilot, recycling tired old tropes that nobody ought to be
buying anymore. For example, most news outlets reported recently that
Libya had fired a SCUD missile at the rebels.
“That it didn’t hit anything or kill anyone is not the point. It’s a weapon of mass destruction that Col. Qaddafi is willing to train on his own people,” said one Western official.
If the effort to rally public opinion against Qaddafi centered on any
one factor, it was fury over Libya’s purported role in the 1988 bombing
of Pan Am flight 103 over Lockerbie, Scotland. As we noted in a previous article [6],
in the years since the conviction of a Libyan intelligence officer in
the tragedy, a chorus of doubts has grown steadily. The doubt is based
on new forensic evidence and research, plus subsequent claims by
prosecution witnesses that their testimony was the result of threats,
bribes, or other forms of coercion. It is an ugly and disturbing story,
not well known to the larger news audience.
[7]
Lockerbie
Yet Lockerbie has continued to touch nerves. In February, when
Qaddafi’s Justice Minister turned against him and became a rebel leader,
he brought with him dynamite. Mustafa Mohamed Abud Al Jeleil made the
dramatic claim [8]
that his ex-boss was the culprit behind the bombing of Pan Am 103. He
asserted that he had proof of Qaddafi giving the direct order for the
crime. This got considerable media attention, though almost no news
organizations followed up or reported that Jeleil never did supply that
proof. The Libyan convicted of the crime has consistently denied any
involvement. Nonetheless, his conviction in the case has had Qaddafi on
the defensive for years—and working hard to prove to the West that he
can be a “good citizen.” Part of this has entailed his paying out huge
sums in reparations.
***
From the beginning of the Libya saga in February until now, the NATO
coalition has never wavered from its initial declaration of humanitarian
motives. And, to be sure, we may still learn of horrible,
previously-unknown atrocities by Qaddafi. Still, the
United States and its allies have little history of using their might
strictly to protect civilians. If so, millions of South Sudanese,
Rwandans and others might not be in their graves.
Besides, with all the talk about Qaddafi harming his citizens, what about the effect of more than 7000—yes, seven thousand—NATO
bombing runs? We heard constant reports about how Qaddafi was facing
charges of “war crimes,” with never a word about NATO. To learn the impact of this massive unleashing [9],
you had to be visiting little-known sources such as the Canadian
website, Global Research, which often probes beyond official Western
accounts of global interventions.
[10]
NATO bombing
Some Western military officials couldn’t even be bothered to
participate in the “humanitarianism” charade. For example, the top
British general explicitly stated [11]
that the objective was really to remove Qaddafi. Nobody—including the
media—paid much attention to this admission, perhaps because it was
already assumed to be the case.
Qaddafi should never be seen as a victim—indeed, he has always been
sleazy and monstrous in various ways. But the US and its allies appear
to have cared little about this, while being deeply troubled by his
role as a fly in the geopolitical ointment. A look at the long and
complex historical relationship between Qaddafi and the West begins to
explain the true reason he had to go. It also dovetails perfectly with a
growing body of indications that Western elites encouraged and even
provoked the uprising—while tapping into deep discontent with the
dictator.
[12]
Qaddafi has long been a thorn in the side of the West’s oil
industry and their national security apparatus. In the early 1970s he
worked closely with Occidental Petroleum chairman Armand Hammer in
thwarting the ambitions of the oil majors. He was a leader in the
boycott of Israel and often cozied up to the Soviet Union.
Back in the 1980s, the Reagan Administration plotted for five years
to get rid of Qaddafi and sent 18 U.S. warplanes in April 1986 to
eliminate the “Mad Dog of the Middle East.” Reporter Seymour Hersh
actually did investigate the whys and wherefores of the ensuing bombings
over Tripoli. (The bombings killed the Libyan dictator’s daughter but
obviously failed to achieve their primary objective). Hersh’s piece in
the February 22nd, 1987 New York Times Magazine, “Target Qaddafi,” has striking echoes in the NATO attacks of 2011. It revealed:
- “internal
manipulation and deceit” on the part of the White House to disguise its
real intentions, namely, to assassinate Qaddafi;
- Denials after the
raid on Qaddafi’s compound that he had been a target, insisting that the
compound hit was “a command-and-control” building;
- The training of Libyan exiles, armed by Israel, to infiltrate Libya through Tunisia.
- The creation of a
pretext for the attacks. In this case, it was the April 5, 1986 bombing
of the La Belle discotheque in West Berlin,a hangout of American
servicemen. This bombing was blamed on Libya “based on intercepted
communications,” despite the explicit rejection of this claim by
Berlin’s then-chief of anti-terrorist police.
- The revelation,
according to one intelligence official, that “We came out with this big
terrorist threat to the U.S. government. The whole thing was a complete
fabrication.”
- As for real motives,
Hersh discerned from a three-month investigation that the Reagan
Administration saw Qaddafi as being pro-Soviet, “relentlessly
anti-Israel,” and a supporter of extreme elements in Syria as opposed to
“the more moderate regimes in Jordan and Egypt.”
- Qaddafi’s
“often-stated ambition to set up a new federation of Arab and Moslem
states in North Africa” frightened policy makers about their access to
minerals.
It’s this that has to be considered as background for the true story
of Libya—the one the Western media cannot, or will not now, report.
BEHIND LIBYA’S “SPONTANEOUS REVOLUTION”
What the media has so relentlessly characterized as the “spontaneous
uprising” of February 2011 was hardly spontaneous. It began even before
the Arab Spring itself commenced in Tunisia during December of last
year—and it was orchestrated by the West.
[13]
In October 2010, Qaddafi’s protocol chief, Nouri Al-Mesmari, arrived
in France, purportedly for medical treatment. But he had his family with
him, and the declared reason for his trip was a cover story. He almost
immediately plunged into talks with the French and their intelligence
service. He argued that Qaddafi was weak. He pointed out breaches in
Qaddafi’s national security shield that made it possible to take him
down. (More on this can be found on the subscription-newsletter site [14] “Africa Intelligence.”)
In December, Mesmari was joined by three Western-educated Libyan
businessmen who had years earlier staged an unsuccessful revolt against
Qaddafi. It didn’t take long for the French government of Nicolas
Sarkozy to sign on to a covert effort to topple Qaddafi. There are
multiple possible reasons for this, including intra-European
competition, notably with the Italians, who enjoyed a particularly close
relationship with Qaddafi and an inside track on Libya’s oil. In
addition, the French were deeply concerned about illegal immigration
from Arab and African countries,via Libya, that they felt was tolerated
or even encouraged by Qaddafi. The French began talking with the
British, who shared many of their concerns and a history of cooperation
on covert projects.
[15]
Qaddafi and Sarkozy (France)
In November, a French trade delegation, including representatives of
multinational corporations, traveled to Benghazi in Eastern Libya. That
delegation has been characterized by Africa Intelligence’s Maghreb Confidential as having included French military officials under commercial cover, assessing the possibilities on the ground.
The New Year’s uprising in Tunisia, followed in rapid succession by
those in other Arab states, created a kind of perfect storm, arguably
even a smoke screen for the “popular revolt.” (It is interesting to note
the above newsletter’s assertion that Mesmari paid a brief visit to
Tunisia in October on his way to France.)
“Muammer Kadhafi’s [i.e., Muammar Qaddafi’s] chief of
protocol, Nouri Mesmari, is currently in Paris after stopping off in
Tunisia. Normally, Mesmari sticks closely to his boss’s side, so there’s
some talk that he may have broken his long-standing tie with the Libyan
leader.”
[16]
Demonstrator
Egypt followed quickly on Tunisia’s heels, and on February 16, just
days after the dictator Hosni Mubarak was toppled in neighboring Egypt,
peaceful demonstrations began in Benghazi—after calls went out on
Facebook for people to take to the streets in protest over the arrest of
a human rights lawyer. (The lawyer, Fethi Tarbel, was quickly
released—news organizations do not appear to have scrutinized who
ordered Tarbel arrested, or exactly why—though this was the seminal
event that would ultimately lead to the end of Qaddafi’s regime.)
On February 27, a National Transitional Council, made up of
politicians, ex-military officers, tribal leaders, businessmen and
academics, announced its launching in Benghazi as the rebel leadership.
Not surprisingly, no mention was made of the French back story.
The Italian intelligence services, intent on preserving that
country’s advantageously close relationship with Qaddafi, began trying
to leak what was going on. (More on the extent of the coziness between
Libya and Italian oil companies, and between Qaddafi and Italian Prime
Minister Silvio Berlusconi here [17].)
When it proved unable to stop the operation, the Italian government
seemingly decided to switch and try to head this particular parade, lest
the spoils go to the others.
[18]
Qaddafi and Berlusconi (Italy)
The United States was late to this affair, but determined to get its
share of the picnic. The US has been as nervous about Qaddafi’s
relationship with Russia’s Putin as France was about his ties to Italy.
CIA was ready with its own man and plan. As we previously noted [19],
Khalifa Hifter, a former Libyan army officer, had spent the past two
decades living just down the road from CIA headquarters, with no
apparent source of income. In 1996, while a resident of Vienna,
Virginia, he organized a Benghazi-based revolt that failed. When the
current uprising was sputtering in March, CIA sent Hifter in to take
command.
[20]
Qaddafi and Blair (UK)
When the rebels were being routed, the United Nations Security
Council approved a no-fly order for Qaddafi. The NATO bombing began
almost immediately, under the “humanitarian” label.
Before long, other European countries had covert elements in Libya. The British paper, The Guardian, has just reported [21]
the role of British special forces in coordinating the rebels on the
ground. This was denied by the UK government . But then another British
paper, The Telegraph, cited [22] UK defense sources saying special forces had been in Libya already for weeks, i.e., since early August.)
For the first time, defence sources have confirmed that the SAS has been in Libya [23] for several weeks, and played a key role in co-ordinating the fall of Tripoli.
Now that it is all over, expect details to emerge daily. For example, see this [24] from the Daily Beast on the extent of US involvement behind the scenes, including:
[A]t NATO headquarters outside Brussels, the U.S.was
intimately involved in all decisions about how the Libyan rebels should
be supported as they rolled up control of cities and oil refineries and
marched toward the capital, Tripoli.
NATO’S MARE NOSTRUM
Ok, so certain Western powers wanted, really, really badly, to oust
Qaddafi. But why exactly? France’s intra-European competitive motive was
certainly one factor. But there was more.
Back in 2007, European Union leaders were seriously toying with the
idea of NATO-izing the entire Mediterranean, turning it into the new mare-nostrum
originally contemplated in Roman days. In 2007, France’s President
Nicholas Sarkozy invited 27 European Union heads of state to launch a
“Mediterranean union.” He also invited 17 non-EU Mediterranean countries
to use, as Britain’s Daily Telegraph [25] put it, “imperial Rome’s centre of the world as a unifying factor linking 44 countries that are home to 800 million people.”
One leader did not buy in, however: Muammar Qaddafi. He claimed the
scheme would divide Africa and the Arab World. “We shall have another
Roman empire and imperialist design,” he was quoted as saying in July,
2008. “There are Imperialist maps and designs that we have already
rolled up. We should not have them again.”
Qaddafi was particularly angered [25]
that an earlier plan, which contemplated building closer co-operation
among a few southern European and North African states bordering the
Mediterranean, had been replaced with one which included the whole EU,
the Middle East—and Israel—in the new “Union.”
“It is unbelievable that I would come to my own country and people
and say that I have a union with Israel. It is very dangerous,” he said,
referring to the possibility of the plan fomenting jihadism throughout
Europe, not just the Middle East.
Despite this “insult,” however, Qaddafi had been attempting for some
time to get his country out of the near-global embargo imposed after
blame for the Lockerbie bombing was laid at Libya’s feet. And the West,
for its part, had been largely in a great hurry to “forgive”—and to get
access to Libya’s riches.
[26]
Qaddafi and Condoleezza (US)
While Qaddafi was discussing with the Russians in 2007, for instance,
the prospect of building a Russian military base in Libya, he’d also
been busy rapidly repairing relations with other potential allies.
French President Sarkozy visited that year, and signed a number of
agreements, including a deal for France to build a nuclear-powered
facility to desalinate ocean water for drinking. The next year, Qaddafi
signed a cooperation treaty with Italy’s Berlusconi. And American
secretary of state Condi Rice came calling in 2008, accelerating the
thaw George W. Bush had avidly begun early in his administration.
[27]
McCain and Qaddafi
In recent years, Qaddafi was on such good behavior that U.S.
officials showered him with the sort of praise usually reserved for
those officially deemed to be close allies. If that sounds unlikely, all
you need to do is watch this video [28] of Republican Sen. John McCain on an August 2009 visit to Tripoli—with his buddy Joe Lieberman,
known to most as a pro-Israel, pro-Iraq-war hawk—gushing about Qaddafi
and his regime. Emerging from meetings, they evoked a spirit of
friendship and mutual respect, and endorsed the US providing defense equipment
to that regime. (Ever the political animal, in recent weeks, the very
same McCain who led that delegation has turned to criticizing Obama for not being willing to bomb Libya heavily enough.)
A cable [29] from the US embassy in Tripoli, released by WikiLeaks, confirms that on the 2009 visit,
“Lieberman called Libya an important ally in the war on
terrorism, noting that common enemies sometimes make better friends,”
the cable continues. “The Senators recognized Libya’s cooperation on
counterterrorism and conveyed that it was in the interest of both
countries to make the relationship stronger.”
[30]
Goldman Sachs
This rapprochement was characterized by a land rush of Western
corporations that had long coveted their share of Libya’s oil revenues.
Leading the way was the investment bank Goldman Sachs. Qaddafi and his
advisers trusted Goldman’s claims that it would turn handsome profits
with any funds entrusted to it. Yet Goldman managed to lose an
astonishing 98 percent [6] of
the funds, which were the Libyan people’s sovereign wealth. No matter.
Goldman was soon back with more brilliant ideas—including suggesting, at
the height of the Wall Street crisis, that Qaddafi buy a substantial
stake in the Goldman firm itself.
Qaddafi was faced with these huge losses at the very time Libya was
carrying a crushing obligation of reparations for the Lockerbie bombing
that had been pressed on Libya as a condition of its re-emergence from
years of isolation, and he began to worry about how he would pay for it
all. Keeping the Libyan population at a relatively high standard of
living (compared certainly to neighboring Egypt) was essential to his
maintaining power. It was at this point that Qaddafi began pressing [31] foreign oil companies to increase the royalties they pay, and the companies began grousing about it.
Could this hardening of postures have contributed to the sudden
decision to oust a man who had worked hard to ingratiate himself with
the West?
***
At least two factors appear to have come together to create an
impossible situation for Qaddafi: (1) The French, perhaps impatient
with Qaddafi’s independence, and frustrated with his Italian alliance,
began considering whether they might effect a change of government in
Libya. And (2) the Arab Spring. Suddenly, a startling number of the
thuggish Middle Eastern allies of the NATO countries began to come under
threat. For a number of U.S. Eastern Establishment types, at least,
these regional spasms of disaffection and bravery seemed to come as a
genuine surprise. The Council on Foreign Affairs produced articles
titled “What Just Happened?” and “Why No One Saw it Coming,” in the
May/June issue of its Foreign Affairs magazine, dedicated to “the New Arab Revolt.”
View Page 3 of 3 [32]
3 [32]
No one seemed to know for certain what was going to happen, although
there was plenty of Monday morning quarterbacking about how the Arab
Spring was entirely predictable in light of the world-wide financial
meltdown in 2008-09 and a growing restiveness in the Arab world. (See
also our recent article [33] about a correlation between skyrocketing food prices and the revolts.)
But while it may take years to put the Arab Spring in its proper
perspective, it surely had begun to occur to foreign policy elites that
NATO’s plans for a militarized Mediterranean would be susceptible to
unraveling if Libya’s unpredictable Qaddafi remained…unpredictable.
Especially with the NATO-allied dictator Mubarak on his way out and
Egypt destabilized.
[34]
Libya Oil Exports
A mere glance at the map reveals the strategic location of Libya.
Right next to Egypt. Large. Unlike Egypt, full of oil. And of a
particularly sought-after grade of sweet crude oil. (If you had
momentarily forgotten how incredibly important oil is to Western
government and corporations, consider this news item: Exxon Mobil
reported second quarter profits of $10.7 billion, up 41 percent from the previous year.)
In other words, Libya is both sitting on gobs of oil and perfectly,
strategically located for military bases to protect that oil and the oil
of nearby countries, including Saudi Arabia, whose citizens have
expressed hostility to the siting of American troops there. Almost
nobody could stand Qaddafi. So if he were pushed out, who would
complain?, By getting behind the rebels (or, even better, helping to create and fortify the rebels) the forces of the West might be able to have their own Arab Spring.
WHAT? IT’S ALL ABOUT OIL?
[35]
Crude Oil Prices in February
In an inexcusable affront to the public, the media (with notable exceptions such as The Guardian) has largely waited until Qaddafi was destroyed to begin focusing on this incredibly obvious oil factor. One example is a piece just published [36] by the New York Times. How useful is it to allow the one-sided demonization of this man, and then, when he is on his way out, to begin saying, Oh, by the way, it was always about oil?
The piece focuses on the rebels’ plans to favor the countries who
backed them over those who preferred a negotiated settlement with
Qaddafi:
“We don’t have a problem with Western countries like
Italians, French and U.K. companies,” Abdeljalil Mayouf, a spokesman for
the Libyan rebel oil company Agoco, was quoted by Reuters as saying.
“But we may have some political issues with Russia, China and Brazil.”
Russia, China and Brazil did not back strong sanctions on the Qaddafi
regime, and they generally supported a negotiated end to the uprising.
All three countries have large oil companies that are seeking deals in
Africa.
This feels like Iraq Redux, only with different players and, so far, a
different outcome. In 2003, Germany and “Freedom-fries” France refused
to join the “Coalition of the Willing” in George W. Bush’s invasion of
Iraq. Why? Because they had pending oil deals with Saddam Hussein.
There are other possible factors, including Qaddafi’s unique
influence as an uncontrollable, Castro/Chavez-style independent
nationalist with influence throughout the region. Qaddafi was an avid
promoter of African unity, of governments that would remain free from
the influence of the major powers. He poured a lot of money into South
Africa, for instance, when it was struggling to free itself from Western
influence after the fall of the apartheid regime there. As Qaddafi was
going down to defeat, the West began pressuring South Africa to turn
over frozen Libyan funds. (Not incidentally, there’s more than $35
billion of frozen Libyan assets in the U.S., and a comparable sum in
Europe.)
African nationalism remains a big concern for Western mining, banking
and industrial interests. Though the people of Africa remain
desperately poor, the continent is the earth’s richest potential source
of precious and strategic metals, minerals and resources of every
stripe.
[37]
Qaddafi and Obama (US)
In hindsight, the Libyan “revolution” may be viewed as a clever
effort to harness genuine domestic discontent to a global competition
for the resources necessary to sustain the industrial West as well as
newly emerging industrial countries like China, India and Brazil.
Refracted this way, the whole NATO involvement in Libya
appears to be, at root, business as usual. As they say in law
enforcement, follow the money. In the midst of a severe fiscal crisis, Pentagon spending [38]
alone on Libya through the end of July was $896 million. Will everyone
who believes that the Western military establishment is spending such
vast sums to further the “aspirations of the Libyan people,” please
raise their hands?
At this juncture, it seems realistic to expect the US and its allies
to settle in, nice and comfortable, on Libyan “assets” for a very long
time. Anyone who doubts that might want to check out US statements [39],
not widely discussed, of intent for US troops to remain in Iraq well
past the original troop departure date. Or a proposal for the same thing
in Afghanistan—see this report [40] about a desire to keep substantial military personnel there through 2024. Then do a little reading on the potentially $1 trillion worth of minerals in Afghanistan which the US says it only recently learned about. (Wink, wink.) As The New York Times reported [41] in June, 2010 (the story generated little public reaction):
The previously unknown deposits — including huge veins of
iron, copper, cobalt, gold and critical industrial metals like lithium —
are so big and include so many minerals that are essential to modern
industry that Afghanistan could eventually be transformed into one of
the most important mining centers in the world, the United States
officials believe.
An internal Pentagon memo, for example, states that Afghanistan could
become the “Saudi Arabia of lithium,” a key raw material in the
manufacture of batteries for laptops and BlackBerrys.
[42]
Libyan Rebels
Some will say that ascribing solely selfish motives to Western
“liberators” is too cynical. For one thing, aren’t the rebels at least
an improvement on Qaddafi in terms of human rights, liberties, and so
forth?
For a possible answer, it’s worth reading [43]
the British journalist Patrick Cockburn. He nicely sums up the
craziness, brutality and internecine murder taking place in the rebels’
ranks without proper Western media attention. They appear to have killed
one or possibly two of their own commanding generals on suspicion of
treachery—or at least being partial to the wrong faction. For example,
we’ve been hearing—in part via a seemingly well-informed individual
inside Libya—that the reason the rebels killed their own
commander-in-chief General Abdul Fatah Younis was his
advocacy of negotiations with Qaddafi. If that’s correct—and these
subjects need more reporting by the news organizations there on the
ground—then we’d like to know what position all those Western spooks
took on the ouster and killing of this man.
[44]
Dead Black Libyans
Continuing on this score, we have the plight of black Libyans,
generally among the poorest in the country. We’ve seen a steady stream
of indications [45]
that, almost by definition, anyone black in Libya (many African migrant
workers but also some Libyan citizens) has been lumped in with
Qaddafi’s non-Libyan African mercenaries, considered a suspected Qaddafi
loyalist and therefore targeted for harassment, physical violence and
death.
Meanwhile, the rebels have released, en masse, prisoners linked to extremist Islamic movements. And one analyst is currently asserting [46] that an Al Qaeda-linked figure is the new military commander of post-Qaddafi Tripoli.
Here’s another twist: The Libyan convicted in the Lockerbie bombing,
released in 2009 from jail in Scotland and allowed to return home for
health reasons, is now, according to CNN, on his death bed, said to be
deprived of medicines due to the recent looting of Libyan pharmacies.
Once the rebels had consolidated their hold over Tripoli, CNN found Abdel Basset al-Megrahi [47]
comatose, and while he has consistently maintained his innocence, it is
unlikely the world will ever learn what he knows. With him and Qaddafi
disappearing from the scene, any demand for a deeper inquiry into the
bombing will likely evaporate.
But where is the West in all of this? A leaked plan [48]
for post-Qaddafi Libya shows how elaborately involved NATO has been in
the entire operation. It includes a carefully thought-out proposal for
avoiding the mistakes made in the Iraq occupation—including embracing
most of Qaddafi’s security forces, and an initial occupying force
“resourced and supported” by the United Arab Emirates, with essentially
no (visible) Western “boots on the ground.”
Doesn’t this sound more and more like an invasion, for spoils? And
one that could—notwithstanding lessons supposedly learned—quickly get
very messy?
-END-
— Additional research by Charlotte Dennett
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[3] this: http://whowhatwhy.com/2011/03/30/libya-rape-charge-view-with-caution/
[4] this: http://whowhatwhy.com/2011/06/11/did-qaddafi-really-order-mass-rapes-or-is-the-west-falling-victim-to-a-viagra-strength-scam/
[5] this: http://whowhatwhy.com/2011/06/15/whowhatwhy-factchecks-the-media-more-questions-about-the-libyan-sex-atrocity-reporting/
[6] previous article: http://whowhatwhy.com/2011/06/06/libya-connect-the-dots-you-get-a-giant-dollar-sign/
[7] Image: http://whowhatwhy.com/wp-content/uploads/2011/09/images.jpg
[8] claim: http://www.reuters.com/article/2011/02/23/us-libya-protests-lockerbie-idUSTRE71M54A20110223
[9] impact of this massive unleashing: http://www.globalresearch.ca/index.php?context=va&aid=25221
[10] Image: http://whowhatwhy.com/wp-content/uploads/2011/09/82097078-libya-nato.jpg
[11] explicitly stated: http://whowhatwhy.com/2011/05/17/quick-quick-why-are-we-in-libya-a-new-candor-prevails%E2%80%A6sort-of/
[12] View Page 2 of 3: http://whowhatwhy.com/2011/08/31/now-that-we%E2%80%99re-celebrating-qaddafi%E2%80%99s-end-can-we-get-a-little-truth/2/
[13] Image: http://whowhatwhy.com/wp-content/uploads/2011/09/images-1.jpg
[14] site: http://www.africaintelligence.com/MCE/
[15] Image: http://whowhatwhy.com/wp-content/uploads/2011/09/Colonel-Muammar-Gaddafi_Sarkozy.jpg
[16] Image: http://whowhatwhy.com/wp-content/uploads/2011/09/tumblr_lh026mjCMR1qc53ju.jpg
[17] here: http://whowhatwhy.comadd:%20Libya%20relationship%20with%20ITALY%20--%20http://www.thedailybeast.com/articles/2011/08/27/gaddafi-s-connections-to-italy-and-berlusconi.html
[18] Image: http://whowhatwhy.com/wp-content/uploads/2011/09/gaddafi2crop-420x0.jpg
[19] previously noted: http://whowhatwhy.com/2011/04/22/the-cia-s-man-in-libya/
[20] Image: http://whowhatwhy.com/wp-content/uploads/2011/09/ScreenHunter_39-Mar.-13-16.52.jpg
[21] just reported: http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2011/aug/23/sas-troopers-help-coordinate-rebels
[22] cited: http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/worldnews/africaandindianocean/libya/8721291/Libya-SAS-leads-hunt-for-Gaddafi.html
[23] Libya: http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/worldnews/africaandindianocean/libya/
[24] this: http://www.thedailybeast.com/articles/2011/08/30/america-s-secret-libya-war-u-s-spent-1-billion-on-covert-ops-helping-nato.html?om_rid=C42kGP&om_mid=_BOXNRGB8dCTPIU
[25] Daily Telegraph: http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/worldnews/europe/2277517/Gaddafi-attacks-Sarkozy-plan-for-Union-of-the-Med.html
[26] Image: http://whowhatwhy.com/wp-content/uploads/2011/09/u8_Gaddafi-crush-Condoleezza.jpg
[27] Image: http://whowhatwhy.com/wp-content/uploads/2011/09/tweet-mccain-libya.png
[28] this video: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yYVWT_kDTsU
[29] cable: http://wikileaks.org/cable/2009/08/09TRIPOLI677.html
[30] Image: http://whowhatwhy.com/wp-content/uploads/2011/09/goldman-sachs-may-face-bribery-charge-in-libya-deal.jpeg
[31] began pressing: http://www.nytimes.com/2011/03/24/world/africa/24qaddafi.html?_r=2
[32] View Page 3 of 3: http://whowhatwhy.com/2011/08/31/now-that-we%E2%80%99re-celebrating-qaddafi%E2%80%99s-end-can-we-get-a-little-truth/3/
[33] recent article: http://whowhatwhy.com/2011/08/26/let-them-eat-baklava-food-prices-and-the-arab-spring/
[34] Image: http://whowhatwhy.com/wp-content/uploads/2011/09/libya-oil-map.jpg
[35] Image: http://whowhatwhy.com/wp-content/uploads/2011/09/Brent-104_0.jpg
[36] just published: http://www.nytimes.com/2011/08/23/business/global/the-scramble-for-access-to-libyas-oil-wealth-begins.html?_r=4
[37] Image: http://whowhatwhy.com/wp-content/uploads/2011/09/6a00d8341c60bf53ef01347ff209fd970c-500wi.jpg
[38] Pentagon spending: http://blogs.abcnews.com/politicalpunch/2011/08/us-military-intervention-in-libya-cost-at-least-896-million-.html
[39] US statements: http://www.politico.com/news/stories/0811/61731.html
[40] this report: http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/worldnews/asia/afghanistan/8712701/US-troops-may-stay-in-Afghanistan-until-2024.html
[41] reported: http://www.nytimes.com/2010/06/14/world/asia/14minerals.html?pagewanted=all
[42] Image: http://whowhatwhy.com/wp-content/uploads/2011/09/800_ap_libya_rebels_110307.jpg
[43] worth reading: http://www.independent.co.uk/opinion/commentators/patrick-cockburn-libyas-ragtag-rebels-are-dubious-allies-2335453.html
[44] Image: http://whowhatwhy.com/wp-content/uploads/2011/09/74983951-dead-bodies.jpg
[45] indications: http://www.mcclatchydc.com/2011/08/28/122333/libyan-rebels-face-test-as-they.html
[46] asserting: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1D7yVkSyIPs&feature=youtu.be
[47] found Abdel Basset al-Megrahi: http://articles.cnn.com/2011-08-28/world/libya.lockerbie.bomber_1_lockerbie-bomber-al-megrahi-national-transitional-council?_s=PM:WORLD
[48] leaked plan: http://www.theaustralian.com.au/news/world/iraq-haunts-plans-for-post-gaddafi-libya/story-e6frg6so-1226111211251
[49] click here to donate: http://whowhatwhy.com/donate/
[50] 1: http://www.france24.com/en/files/element_multimedia/image/libya-oil-map.jpg
[51] 2: http://img1-cdn.newser.com/square-image/115128-20110328193526/obama-libya-speech-president-said-us-intervened-to-stop-a-massacre.jpeg
[52] 3: http://t2.gstatic.com/images?q=tbn:ANd9GcRA1_pp-XJvyPO7s2rrzw20FjsmU2PoOiIo__bwccRCQq8CafUN
[53] 4: http://img3.allvoices.com/thumbs/image/609/480/82097078-libya-nato.jpg
[54] 5: http://t3.gstatic.com/images?q=tbn:ANd9GcRX3ajn7CmrB8L9F_9JNNtYt_yiyFuTGY2-EQFdeH-02a5F1MGw
[55] 6: http://www.enjoyfrance.com/images/stories/france/news/Colonel-Muammar-Gaddafi_Sarkozy.jpg
[56] 7: http://media.tumblr.com/tumblr_lh026mjCMR1qc53ju.jpg
[57] 8: http://www.bollyn.com/public/gaddafi2crop-420x0.jpg
[58] 9: https://lh6.googleusercontent.com/-gqbngMqgvao/TX_fuPRO7OI/AAAAAAAAseM/XjS2UySUxx8/s320/ScreenHunter_39-Mar.-13-16.52.jpg
[59] 10: http://resources1.news.com.au/images/2011/03/10/1226018/869413-libyan-rebel-fighter.jpg
[60] 11: http://coto2.files.wordpress.com/2011/06/france-bombs-gaddafi-libya-benghazi.jpg
[61] 12: http://www.indiavision.com/news/images/articles/2011_08/222712/u8_Gaddafi-crush-Condoleezza.jpg
[62] 13: http://blog.prospect.org/blog/weblog/tweet-mccain-libya.png
[63] 14: http://img1-cdn.newser.com/square-image/120594-20110609121023/goldman-sachs-may-face-bribery-charge-in-libya-deal.jpeg
[64] 16: http://www.zerohedge.com/sites/default/files/images/user5/imageroot/von%20havenstein/Brent%20104_0.jpg
[65] 17: http://atlasshrugs2000.typepad.com/.a/6a00d8341c60bf53ef01347ff209fd970c-500wi
[66] 18: http://images.ctv.ca/archives/CTVNews/img2/20110307/800_ap_libya_rebels_110307.jpg
[67] 19: http://2.bp.blogspot.com/-cIWLEi75Fmw/Td_q38BxaYI/AAAAAAAAAl0/3atVyuU_Wxk/s1600/74983951-dead-bodies.jpg