THERE NOTHING MUCH TO CHOOSE BETWEEN THE US AND QADDAFI, WHEN IT COMES TO
VIOLATIONS OF HUMAN RIGHTS OF THE PEOPLE OF THE WORLD. US IS AS BRUTAL, AS
INSENSITIVE, AS UNMINDFUL OF THE INTERNATIONAL LAWS, AS QADDAFI COULD BE.
THE ONLY DIFFERENCE BETWEEN THE TWO IS THAT US HAS AN UNDUE ADVANTAGE OF THE
WORLD MEDIA AND WEAK UN MEMBERS TO FORCE A WIDER APPEARANCE OF CONSENSUS
THAN QADDAFI WOULD EVEN BOTHER.

HOWEVER, THE THREAT TO THE WORLD PEACE IS MORE FROM US ACTIONS THAN THAT OF
QADDAFI.

GHULAM MUHAMMED, MUMBAI


http://www.nytimes.com/2011/03/02/world/africa/02tribes.html?_r=1&nl=afternoonupdate&emc=aua2



Even a Weakened Qaddafi May Be Hard to Dislodge By STEVEN
ERLANGER<http://topics.nytimes.com/top/reference/timestopics/people/e/steven_erlanger/index.html?inline=nyt-per>
Published:
March 1, 2011
*PARIS — The regime of the Libyan leader, Col. Muammar
el-Qaddafi<http://topics.nytimes.com/top/reference/timestopics/people/q/muammar_el_qaddafi/index.html?inline=nyt-per>,
has been badly undermined, but he retains enough support among critical
tribes and institutions, including parts of the army and the air force, that
he might be able to retain power in the capital, Tripoli, for some time to
come, say experts on
Libya<http://topics.nytimes.com/top/news/international/countriesandterritories/libya/index.html?inline=nyt-geo>and
its military.

*

* They caution that the situation on the ground is both fluid and confusing.
But they emphasize that tribal loyalties remain an important indicator, and
that there is no clear geographical dividing line between the opponents to
Colonel Qaddafi and his supporters. *

* They suggest that eastern Libya, which was first to fall to the
opposition, was always considered the most rebellious part of the country
and had been starved of funds and equipment by Colonel Qaddafi. The region,
known as Cyrenaica, was an Italian colony and the heartland of the Senussi
tribe that produced the monarch, King Idris I, who was overthrown by Colonel
Qaddafi and his army colleagues in 1969. *

* But they suggest that tribes in the other important areas of Libya —
Tripolitania and Fezzan — remain nominally loyal to the regime. The
revolutionaries of 1969 came largely from three tribes — the Qadhadhfa (the
colonel’s own ), the Maghraha and the Warfalla — which had been subservient
to the Senussis. *

* The Warfalla are now wavering, with its leaders supporting the opposition,
having been implicated in coup attempts in the 1990’s, but its other members
split. The other two tribes “still seem loyal so far to the regime, in which
they have vested interests,” said George Joffé, a scholar of North Africa at
Cambridge 
University<http://topics.nytimes.com/top/reference/timestopics/organizations/c/cambridge_university/index.html?inline=nyt-org>in
England.
*

* Other tribes in the areas of Fezzan and Tripolitania are “watching and
waiting,” Mr. Joffé said. *

* Another source of potential opposition might be the old Free Officers
Movement, he added, an Arab nationalist group that carried out the 1969 coup
but was subsequently marginalized by the Qaddafi regime. *

* “It’s quite clear that the army, some 45,000 strong, has split, but in
exactly what proportions we don’t know,” Mr. Joffé said. *

* Colonel Qaddafi mistrusted the army and monitored its behavior carefully.
He paid particular attention to the units in the rebellious east of the
country, starving them of the best equipment and training, which he reserved
to more loyal tribes and paramilitary units, said Shashank Joshi, an
Associate Fellow at London’s Royal United Services Institute, which
specializes in the military. *

* “The situation is more fluid than we imagine, with Qaddafi capable of
launching military operations outside Tripoli,” including air force sorties,
“and retaining his grip on Sirte,” Mr. Joshi said. “Qaddafi has retained
significant elements of the army and lost the elements he was always afraid
he could lose, those affiliated with tribes he had targeted.” *

* The discovery of large deposits of oil changed the old bargain among
tribes and areas in Libya, and both required and enabled Colonel Qaddafi to
build more of a centralized state to fully exploit the resource, said
Jean-Yves Moisseron, editor in chief of the French-based magazine
“Maghreb-Machrek,” which concentrates on the Arab world. *

* Oil revenues also enabled Colonel Qaddafi to spread the wealth among
tribes, reducing traditional conflicts, Mr. Moisseron said, and to build up
a well equipped paramilitary system loyal to the regime. *

* Colonel Qaddafi at the same time established other military and
paramilitary units, like the 32d Brigade, based in Tripoli and commanded by
one of his sons, Khamis. That brigade, which is known as the “deterrent
brigade,” is used for internal repression and is backed up by foreign
mercenaries. Its size is not clear, but it is said to be equipped with
advanced arms and munitions and trained by outsiders. *

* The mercenaries themselves are an offshoot of the Islamic Legion, a
pan-Arab expeditionary force Colonel Qaddafi established in 1972, soon after
taking power, when he tried to create a grand Islamic state of the Sahel.
First focused on Chad and Sudan, it was made up of immigrants from poorer
African countries looking for work. *

* The idea was recreated after 2000 to bolster the regime, and recruits were
drawn from the million or so sub-Saharan Africans who had come to Libya to
find work or as refugees, Mr. Joffé said. *

* In addition, Colonel Qaddafi also set up the Revolutionary Committee
Movement, itself a paramilitary unit mostly drawn from the same three
reliable tribes, the Warfalla, the Qadhadhfa and the Maghraha, which was
used to terrify opponents with revolutionary justice. *

* In general, Mr. Joffé said, some 119,000 Libyans are part of the security
services, including the army of some 45,000, out of a largely desert country
of only some 6.4 million people. *

* But the oil-based pact in Libya suffered from a stagnation in oil revenues
and the global economic crisis of 2008, which reduced Libyan oil revenues by
40 percent, Mr. Moisseron wrote in an article for Libération, the French
daily “The most worrisome sign for the immediate future of Colonel Qaddafi
is the rupturing of the tribal pact,” he said. *

* But Colonel Qaddafi retains significant strength, Mr. Joshi said. He is
thought to still control the air force, though some elements have defected.
And while there have been clashes in Tripoli, with sniper and small-arms
fire in areas of the capital, “it is not a war zone and not a city in
rebellion,” he said. *

* While the colonel is thought to be delusional, he and his commanders have
proved capable so far of using their forces with some care, Mr. Joshi said.
“There have been no large massacres, air power is being used in a calculated
way and he is launching probing attacks” while “making constant efforts in
the suburbs of Tripoli to check small gestures of dissent.” *

* The struggle in Libya “could go on a long time,” Mr. Joshi said. “Tripoli
is not a bunker. And this is not the decision-making of a man totally out of
touch with reality.” *

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