http://arabnews.com/columns/post-qaddafi-libya-not-real

The post-Qaddafi Libya is not real
Jen Alic

Tuesday 25 September 2012

PEOPLE often ask me why the West doesn't attempt a Libya-style intervention in 
Syria. After all, things are going so well in Libya. Oil production is up. But 
oil production is merely a mirage, as is security in Libya, which was doomed 
from the day one PG (post-Qaddafi) because of the way it was "liberated."
on Sept. 12, US envoy to Libya Christopher Stevens was killed along with three 
other American diplomats in a rocket attack on the US Consulate in Benghazi.
What about the oil, that global elixir? Well, the violence will not bode well 
for Libya's production ambitions, coming at a time when the country looked 
prepared for a boost in output and was banking on this for economic growth.
Security was already dubious at best, and now international oil companies will 
be more reluctant than ever. Those that are already there — Germany's 
Wintershall AG, Italy's Eni and France's Total — will be seeking to beef up 
security and have already started sending some of their workers home.
If the picture was not clear from the onset of the post-Qaddafi atmosphere, it 
certainly came into focus earlier this summer when protests over parliamentary 
elections forced the temporary closure of the El-Sider oil terminal, the 
country's biggest. Anyone who thinks that Libya will be a secure oil frontier 
after the formation of a new government next summer is mistaken. The road to 
destruction runs from Afghanistan to Benghazi (incidentally, the oil-producing 
region), branching off to southern Iraq and Pakistan's tribal regions.
So, you ask, what about the controversial anti-Islamic movie apparently put 
together by an Israeli-American real estate developer with too much time on his 
hands?
According to Jellyfish Operations — a private intelligence and analysis 
boutique that has spent much time dissecting the intervention in Libya and the 
conflict in Syria — the anti-Islamic movie is a red herring in all of this.
Speaking to Oilprice.com, Jellyfish President Michael Bagley said that while 
the movie is being upheld as the root cause of the intensifying protests and 
the death of the US envoy to Libya, it has only served to give added momentum 
to another more important development.
The real catalyst: "The key to all of this is Al-Qaeda's second in command, Abu 
Yahya Al-Libi, who was killed by a US drone attack in Waziristan on 4 June," 
Bagley said. "The real catalyst for the attack in Libya and the unrest that has 
spread to Yemen, was a lengthy video released by Al-Qaeda leader Ayman 
Al-Zawahiri, marking the anniversary of 9/11 and admitting to the death of 
Al-Libi, who is a Libyan."
"This was a very powerful call to avenge Al-Libi's death," Bagley said, "and it 
came only 24 hours before the attack on the US Consulate in Benghazi." To put 
this into perspective, let's reminisce a bit about Al-Libi, whose past is a 
roller coaster, enemy-foe ride with the US.
Al-Libi was captured in the "war on terrorism" in Afghanistan in 2002 and held 
for three years in Kabul's high-security Bagram prison. Against all odds, he 
escaped in 2005.
In 2011 he resurfaced again, but this time as a friend to Washington who had 
decided that it was no longer friends with Qaddafi, despite all the efforts 
leading up to this to rebuild relations after that nasty Lockerbie business and 
all the sanctions. So here is Al-Libi again, but this time around his terrorist 
inclinations are a bonus rather than a liability: He fights alongside 
intervention forces to oust Qaddafi.
With Qaddafi gone, Al-Libi once again became a liability so he was taken out by 
a drone in Pakistan. This brings us back to the present, with Al-Zawahiri on 
the rampage and Libyan's wise to their liberators.
"This is a cut and dry example of the backfire of the US intervention 
strategy," Bagley said. "Let's hope it isn't attempted in Syria."
The post-Qaddafi Libya is not real. It's a dangerous fabrication of materials 
stuck together by the glue of dubious alliances with jihadists who are cut 
loose with their weapons once the immediate goal (Qaddafi's demise) was 
achieved. Forget about the oil for now.

— Jen Alic is a geopolitical analyst and the former editor in chief of ISN 
Security Watch in Zurich.
— IDN-InDepthNews | Analysis That Matters


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