http://www.tlaxcala-int.org/article.asp?reference=4011

<http://www.tlaxcala-int.org/article.asp?reference=4011>What's going on in
Libya?From the Arab World to Latin America
Santiago Alba 
Rico<http://www.tlaxcala-int.org/biographie.asp?ref_aut=104&lg_pp=en>

Alma Allende<http://www.tlaxcala-int.org/biographie.asp?ref_aut=1315&lg_pp=en>


Translated by *
Machetera<http://www.tlaxcala-int.org/biographie.asp?ref_aut=10&lg_pp=en>
*



We have the impression that a great worldwide liberation process may be
aborted by the unappeasable ferocity of Gaddafi, U.S. interventionism, and a
lack of foresight in Latin America.

We might describe the situation like this: in a part of the world linked
once again to strong internal solidarities and from which only lethargy or
fanaticism was expected, a wave of popular uprisings have arisen which have
threatened to topple the allies of Western powers in the region, one after
the other.  Independent of local differences, these uprisings have something
in common that radically distinguishes them from the orange and rose colored
"revolutions" promoted by capitalism in the former Soviet bloc: they demand
democracy, certainly, but far from being fascinated by Europe and the United
States, they are the holders of a long, entrenched, radical anti-imperialist
tradition forged around Palestine and Iraq.  There's not even a hint of
socialism in the popular Arab uprisings, but neither is there one of
Islamism, nor - most importantly - of Euro-centric seduction: it is
simultaneously a matter of economic upheaval and democratic, nationalistic
and anti-colonial revolution, something that, forty years after their
defeat, suddenly opens an unexpected opportunity for the region's socialist
and pan-Arabist left.

Progressive Latin America, whose pioneering liberation processes constitute
hope for world-wide anti-imperialism, ought to support the Arab world right
now without reservation, moving beyond the strategy of the Western powers
overtaken by events, as well as those that are providing an opportunity for
Gaddafi's return - perhaps militarily, but above all, propagandistically -
as a champion of human rights and democracy.  That discourse is hardly
credible in this part of the world, where Fidel and Chávez enjoy enormous
popular credit, but if Latin America aligns itself, actively or passively,
with the tyrant, the contagious popular advances that are already extending
toward Europe, and have gone as far as Wisconsin, will not only see
themselves irreparably halted but will also produce a new fracture in the
anti-imperialist camp, so that the world's ever vigilant timekeeper, the
United States of America can seize advantage in order to recover lost
ground.  Something like this may already be occurring as a result of a
combination of ignorance as well as schematic and summary anti-imperialism.
The Arab people, who are returning to history's stage, need the support of
their Latin American brothers and sisters, but above all, it is the
relationship between world powers that cannot allow for vacillation by Cuba
and Venezuela without having Cuba and Venezuela also suffer the
consequences, with Latin America and the hopes for transformation at a
global level suffering along with them.

We might say that we know very little of what it happening in Libya and are
suspicious about the condemnations coming from the Western media and
institutional powers in recent days.  We might leave it at that.  The
imperialists are more intelligent.  With many specific interests in the
area, they have defended their dictators to the bitter end, but when they
have understood that those dictators were unsustainable, they have let them
fall and chosen another strategy: that of supporting controlled democratic
processes, choosing and deploying post-modern minorities as a driving force
for limited change, a new rainbow of democratic rhetoric, in the sure
knowledge that memory is short and leftist reflections quite immediate.  Any
kind of Western interference must be opposed, but we don't believe, truly,
that NATO is going to invade Libya; it seems to us that this threat, just
barely pointed out, has the effect of entangling and blurring the
anti-imperialist camp, even to the point of making us forget something that
we ought to know: who Gaddafi is.  Forgetting this produces three terrible
effects in the end: breaking the ties with the popular Arab movements,
giving legitimacy to the accusations against Venezuela and Cuba, and
granting new prestige to the very damaged imperialist discourse on
democracy.  All without a doubt, a triumph for imperialist interests in the
region.

Over the past ten years, Gaddafi has been a great friend to the European
Union and the United States, and its dictator allies in the region.  We need
only recall the inflammatory statements of support from the Libyan Caligula
for the deposed Ben Alí, to whose militias he quite probably provided
weapons and money in the days following January 14th.  It's sufficient as
well to recall Gaddafi's docile collaboration with the U.S. in the framework
of the so-called "war on terrorism."  The political collaboration has been
accompanied by close economic ties with the EU, including Spain: the sale of
oil to Germany, Italy, France and the United States has paralleled the entry
into Libya by the large Western oil companies (the Spanish Repsol, the
British BP, the French Total, the Italian ENI and the Austrian OM), not to
mention the juicy contracts for European and Spanish construction firms in
Tripoli.  Moreover, France and the U.S. have continued providing the weapons
that are now killing Libyans from the air, following imperial Italy's
example from 1911.  In 2008, the former U.S. Secretary of State Condoleeza
Rice made it quite clear: "Libya and the United States share permanent
interests: cooperation in the fight against terrorism, trade, nuclear
proliferation, Africa, human rights and democracy."

When Gaddafi visited France in December of 2007,Ayman
El-Kayman<http://rebelion.org/noticia.php?id=60593> summarized
the situation in the following paragraph:  "Almost ten years ago, as far as
the democratic West was concerned, Gaddafi was no long a reprehensible
individual: in order to get off the U.S. terrorist list, he took
responsibility for the bombing over Lockerbie; in order to normalize his
relations with the United Kingdom, he turned over the names of all the Irish
republicans who'd trained in Libya; for normalization with the United
States, he turned over all the information he had about Libyans suspected of
participating in *jihad*along with Bin Laden, and renounced his "weapons of
mass destruction," as well as calling on Syria to do the same; in order to
normalize relations with the European Union, he became the guardian of
concentration camps where thousands of Africans headed for Europe are held;
in order to normalize his relations with his sinister neighbor Ben Alí, he
turned over the opponents of the Tunisian regime who had been living as
refugees in Libya.

As is apparent, Gaddafi is neither a revolutionary nor an ally, not even a
tactical one, of the world's revolutionaries.  In 2008 Fidel and Chávez
(along with Mercosur) rightly denounced what was known as the "shameful
directive" from Europe that reinforced an already very severe persecution in
Europe of defenseless immigrants who'd been stripped of everything.  Of all
Gaddafi's crimes, perhaps the most serious and least known is his complicity
in the EU's immigration policy, particularly that of Italy, as the
executioner of African migrants.  Anyone seeking a wealth of information on
the subject can read *Il Mare di mezzo*, by the courageous journalist
Gabriele del Grande, or consult his website,
*Fortresseurope*<http://fortresseurope.blogspot.com/>,
where there is a collection of horrifying documents.  By 2006 *Human Rights
Watch* and *Afvic *denounced the arbitrary arrests and tortures taking place
in Libyan detention centers financed by Italy.  The Berlusconi-Gaddafi
agreement of 2003 can be read in its entirety at Gabriele del Grande's site,
and its consequences summarized succinctly and painfully in the cry of Farah
Anam, the Somali fugitive from Libyan death camps: "I'd prefer to die at sea
than return to Libya."  Despite the denunciations of the real extermination
practices taking place - or precisely because of them, proof of Gaddafi's
efficiency as Europe's guardian - the European Commission signed a
"cooperative agenda" in order to "direct migration flows" and "control
borders," valid until 2013 and accompanied by the delivery of 50 million
Euros to Libya.

Europe's relationship with Gaddafi has been a submissive one.  Berlusconi,
Sarkozy, Zapatero and Blair received him with open arms in 2007 and Zapatero
himself visited him in Tripoli in 2010.  Even the king, Juan Carlos, was
dispatched to Tripoli in January of 2009 in order to promote Spanish
business.  On the other hand, the EU didn't hesitate to humiliate itself and
make a public apology on March 27th, 2010, through the Spanish foreign
minister at the time, Miguel Ángel Moratinos, for having prohibited 188
Libyan citizens entry into Europe due to the conflict between Switzerland
and Libya over the arrest of one of Gaddafi's sons in Geneva where he was
accused of assaulting his maids.  More than that: the EU didn't issue the
slightest protest when Gaddafi imposed economic, trade and human reprisals
against Switzerland, nor when he effectively called for a holy war against
that country and made a public statement about his wish that it be wiped
from the map.

And so now when Gaddafi's imperialist friends - who've seen how the Arab
world revolted without their intervention - condemn the Libyan dictatorship
and talk about democracy, we vacillate.  We apply the universal template of
the anti-imperialist struggle, with its conspiracy theories and its
paradoxical distrust of the people, and ask for time so that the clouds of
dust thrown up by the bombs dropped from the air might clear - to be sure
that there are no CIA cadavers underneath.  That is, when we don't offer
direct support, as the Nicaraguan government did, to a criminal with whom
the slightest contact can only stain forever anyone who claims to be leftist
or progressive.  It's not NATO who's bombing the Libyans, but Gaddafi.  "Gun
against gun" is how the revolutionary song goes; "Missiles against
civilians" is something that we cannot accept and that, without even asking
ourselves, we ought to condemn with all our might and indignation.  But
let's ask ourselves the questions as well.  Because if we ask ourselves, the
answers that we have - few as they might be - provide further proof of which
side the revolutionaries of the world should be on right now.  With any
luck, Gaddafi will fall - better today than tomorrow - and Latin America
will understand that what is happening right now in the Arab world has to
do, not with the Machiavellian plans of the EU and the U.S. (which without a
doubt are maneuvering in the shadows), but with the open processes of Our
America, that America which belongs to everyone, that of ALBA and dignity,
since the beginning of the 1990s, following in the wake of the Cuba of
1958.

The opportunity is great and possibly the last for a definitive reverse in
the balance of forces and for isolating the imperialist powers within a new
global framework.  We ought not to fall into such a simple trap.  We ought
not to underestimate the Arabs.  No, they aren't socialists, but in the last
two months, in an unexpected way, they have stripped away the hypocrisy from
the EU and the United States, have expressed their desire for authentic
democracy, far removed from any colonial tutelage, and have opened a space
for the left to thwart capitalism's attempts to recover lost ground.  It's
the Latin America of ALBA, of Che, and Playa Girón, whose prestige in this
area remained intact until yesterday, that must support the process before
the world's timekeeper manages to turn the hands back and to its favor.  The
capitalist countries have "interests," the socialist ones only "limits."
Many of these "interests" were with Gaddafi, but none of these "limits" have
anything to do with him.  He is a criminal and moreover, a hindrance.
Please, revolutionary comrades of Latin America, the revolutionary comrades
of the Arab world are asking that you not support him.



-- 
Peace Is Doable

-- 
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
"Green Youth Movement" group.
To post to this group, send an email to [email protected].
To unsubscribe from this group, send email to 
[email protected].
For more options, visit this group at 
http://groups.google.com/group/greenyouth?hl=en-GB.

Reply via email to