http://www.juancole.com/2011/03/qaddafis-scorched-earth-policy-at-home-and-abroad.html

 Qaddafi’s Scorched Earth Policy, at Home and
Abroad<http://www.juancole.com/2011/03/qaddafis-scorched-earth-policy-at-home-and-abroad.html>

Posted on 03/09/2011 by Juan

Muammar Qaddafi is still trying to play the al-Qaeda card, arguing that his
murderous regime is what stands between Europe and the emigration to it of
thousands of Muslim extremists. *He told Turkish television that his regime
is a key 
element*<http://www.reuters.com/article/2011/03/09/us-libya-gaddafi-airspace-idUSTRE7281T620110309>of
stability in the Eastern Mediterranean, and its fall would bring chaos
there, including to Israel.

*So, who knew? Qaddafi is the guarantor of Israel’s security and that of
Europe?* It is a desperate attempt to induce caution with regard the growing
move in the West toward some sort of military intervention to prevent
Tripoli from massacring the rebels.

Interestingly, Qaddafi’s language seems calculated to appeal to the far
right in Europe and Israel, which views all Muslims as potential terrorists.
It is an attempt to build a Qaddafi-National Front-Likud-Peter King front
against the democracy movement in the Middle East. *Qaddafi also sent an
envoy Wednesday to the military council that is running
Egypt*<http://uk.reuters.com/article/2011/03/09/egypt-libya-plane-idUKLDE7281GU20110309>.
Since the pro-rebel tribe Awlad Ali dominates Salloum, the Egyptian city on
the Libyan border, the rebels presumably are getting some supplies from
their Egyptian allies. Qaddafi is probably keen to cut them off. His
fear-mongering about al-Qaeda might have some purchase with right wing
officers such as Omar Suleiman.

Aljazeera Arabic points out that the rebel forces, far from being
“al-Qaeda,” are mostly disgruntled youth from major Libyan tribes such as
Zintan. The keywords preferred by *statements from such tribes are secular
ones*<http://www.libyafeb17.com/2011/03/translated-statement-from-the-tribes-of-zintan/>–
the nation, the people, the army. Muslim fundamentalists speak of the “umma”
or the ‘community of believers’ when they talk about the nation, whereas
those imbued with civil discourse use terms like the ‘watan’ (originally a
translation of the French ‘patrie’ or fatherland), and speak of ‘the people’
(sha’b) rather than ‘the believers.’ It is this civil language that the
rebels speak, in all the communiques I’ve seen.

Pro-Qaddafi forces *are being accused by residents of
Zawiya*<http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-africa-12688286>,
an important oil town to the west of Tripoli, of pursuing a scorched earth
policy in the city, according to the BBC. Some 50 tanks and 150 armored
vehicles are said to be indiscriminately wreaking havoc on the
infrastructure.

Aljazeera Arabic is showing scenes, nevertheless, of defiant, chanting
crowds in Zawiya during the past two days, at times dispersed by live
ammunition directed at them by Qaddafi’s men. It is reporting as of early
morning Wednesday that there are still resistance fighters in the central
square of the town, which has not been completely subdued by forces from
Tripoli. It remains mysterious as to why such heavy armored forces are
having such trouble taking the central square; presumably they are facing
heavy rocket-propelled grenade fire; the rebels have shown that they can
kill tanks that way. An interviewee from Zawiya says by telephone that there
are no phone lines and there is no internet in the city, and residents
cannot now get out.

Aljazeera Arabic is reporting a major battle mid-day Wednesday at the gates
of Ras Lanuf, including artillery duels, between rebels and pro-Qaddafi
forces. Rebel forces continue to hold a position 20 km west of the town. On
early Wednesday morning *sounds of explosions and heavy fighting were
audible in Ras 
Lanuf*<http://gulftoday.ae/portal/6d89cf1d-4fb7-4a85-aa2a-790b11934ab2.aspx>,
continuing on and off subsequently. Presumably Qaddafi forces in the nearby
town of Ben Jawad are also defending it from rebel attack. The rebel
technique of continuing to advance on Ben Jawad and to threaten Qaddafi’s
hometown of Sirt, i.e. of carrying the fight to the enemy, had probably
blunted so far the ability of the pro-Qaddafi forces to attack effectively
in Ras Lanuf, though it is subject to aerial bombardment. Aljazeera is
showing film of a mosque in the city hit by an air raid, another piece of
evidence pointing to a desperate, scorched-earth policy on Qaddafi’s part.

*3News in New Zealand has an excellent
report*<http://www.3news.co.nz/Libya-Gadhafi-forces-barrage-rebels-in-east-west/tabid/313/articleID/201586/Default.aspx>on
the way the rebels in Ras Lanuf and to its west have gotten hold of
some
tanks and shoulder-held anti-aircraft missiles, and are showing not only
more firepower but more discipline at the Ben Jawad front.

*Aljazeera English interviews a spokesman for the Benghazi-based Libyan
national 
council*<http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=b7B9C1YwZM4&feature=player_profilepage>who
insists that Qaddafi must leave the country but raises the possibility
that the National Council would not pursue legal measures against him and
his sons if he did depart.


[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]



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