On 4/1/13 3:01 PM, Carrol Cox wrote:
> It is good to hear that Monthly Review is maintaining serious opposition to
> U.S. & EU imperialism
>

How's that now? By printing lies about Qaddafi being some kind of 
liberator, the anti-imperialist crown prince of Africa? I understand 
that MRZine was set up as Yoshie's playpen after she caught John Bellamy 
Foster in a compromising position with a hamster, but I never thought 
that MR would become corrupted as well.


> It is sad that so many leftists for sloppy idealist reasons are leaping to
> the support of imperialism.
>

Anti-imperialist? GIVE ME A FUCKING BREAK.

http://justiceinconflict.org/2011/09/06/a-remarkable-relationship-us-and-uk-complicit-in-gaddafi-regime-crimes/

A “Remarkable Relationship”: US and UK Complicit in Gaddafi Regime Crimes

Posted on September 6, 2011     
by Mark Kersten

Shocking but unfortunately unsurprising reports have emerged that 
American and British intelligence agencies were complicit in the torture 
and extraordinary rendition of Gaddafi regime “enemies”. At the same 
time, in an awkward development for the rebels’ ally NATO, a key rebel 
commander, Abdul Hakim Belhaj, is considering suing the US and the UK 
for their role in his torture and rendition.

The records were found by journalists in the office of Moussa Koussa, 
Gaddafi’s former intelligence chief. Following his defection to the UK 
early in the Libyan conflict many human rights groups had called for his 
arrest but he was able to find asylum in Qatar. Surely UK officials are 
now wishing Koussa had taken the documents with him!

The implications of these revelations on the situation in Libya are 
unclear. Clare Algar, at The Guardian, suggests that the UK’s “relations 
with anti-Gaddafi forces [have been] poisoned virtually before they 
could even begin.” The extent to which relations have been damaged will 
only be revealed in the coming weeks and months. These developments, 
however, are only more evidence of the complicity of key Western states 
in propping up the Gaddafi regime. They also provide credence to and 
fuel calls for accountability, not only of pro-Gaddafi and rebel forces 
but of external actors as well.
Abdul Hakim Belhaj


Of course, some will note that Western intelligence agencies should have 
a had a relationship with the Gaddafi regime. They wouldn’t be wrong. It 
was neither absurd nor unwise that the US or the UK and their 
intelligence agencies had a relationship with Libya. The problem is one 
of distance; it is now clear that the relationship between these Western 
intelligence agencies and a Libyan regime which had recently sponsored 
terrorism was remarkably close. Consider the friendly, cozy language of 
one memo from Stephen Kappes, a senior official in the CIA, and Moussa 
Koussa, at the time Libya’s spy chief:

     “We are eager to work with you in the questioning of the terrorist 
we recently rendered to your country.”

Further, apparently at least one British memo ends with the epithet 
“Your Friend”, while another, by senior intelligence official Mark Allen 
in response to the successful transfer of Belhaj from Malaysia to Libya, 
reads:

     “This was the least we could do for you and for Libya to 
demonstrate the remarkable relationship we have built over recent years.”

Additionally, the most recent Libyan foreign minister admitted last 
night, on BBC, that British intelligence officials had continued their 
work through January and into February 2011 – right up to the beginning 
of Gaddafi’s crackdown.

Peter Bouckaert of Human Rights Watch described the extent of cooperation:

     “It wasn’t just abducting suspected Islamic militants and handing 
them over to the Libyan intelligence. The CIA also sent the questions 
they wanted Libyan intelligence to ask and, from the files, it’s very 
clear they were present in some of the interrogations themselves.”

CIA rendition

Now offering service from our partners in the UK as well!

I have previously written about the remarkably close political, economic 
and military relationship between Western states and the Gaddafi regime. 
Many have been quick to say that any relationship between the West and 
the Gaddafi regime would have been wrong. This isn’t the case. 
Engagement between Western states and the Gaddafi regime was 
instrumental in guaranteeing that Libya discontinued its sponsorship of 
terrorism and its nuclear program. However, as Stephen Glover has 
rightly explained:

     “What is not defensible is the subsequent indulging of this 
horrible man, and treating him as though he were a normal leader of a 
normal country.”

More broadly, The Guardian’s Editorial board presented the ever pressing 
challenge in dealing with autocratic regimes:

     at the heart of this case lies a truth about the way democracies 
deal with dictatorships. The answer is: all too easily

What these damning documents demonstrate is that not only did the UK and 
the US treat Gaddafi and his regime as normal, but as partners in the 
war on terror and in the perpetration of torture – as obvious a crime 
against humanity as they come.

So how have the US and the UK responded?

A CIA spokesperson had this to say:

     “It can’t come as a surprise that the Central Intelligence Agency 
works with foreign governments to help protect our country from 
terrorism and other deadly threats.”

Meanwhile, British PM David Cameron has asked for an existing 
commission, the Gibson Inquiry, which is examining claims of rendition 
and torture to examine these allegations as well. Foreign Secretary 
William Hague was sent to answer for MI5 and MI6. He chose to hide 
behind partisan politics, arguing that the allegations

     “relate to a period under the previous government so I have no 
knowledge of those, of what was happening behind the scenes at that time”.

I suppose not knowing what happens before you’re elected is a good 
enough excuse for Hague and that “doing your homework” wasn’t a lesson 
he took into his political life.

The argument that key Western states view international accountability 
and justice as instruments to be used at their will is now all the more 
salient. More than ever, it appears that key Western states were more 
than happy to find a partner and ally in Gaddafi. With the advent of the 
Arab Spring and the Gaddafi regime’s brutality, these Western states 
succeeded in having the situation in Libya referred to the ICC, but with 
key provisions to shield them from scrutiny. Knowing the closeness of 
their relations with the Libyan regime, they then sought to shape the 
international intervention to protect themselves by guaranteeing that 
the ICC was only granted permission to investigate events after February 
15 2011.

Tripoli's Abu Salim jail, a notorious prison where many were said to 
have been tortured (Photo: AP)

The temporal, jurisdictional limit which prevents the ICC from 
investigating events prior to February 15 2011 has had its intended 
effect: it has shaped a narrative of the Gaddafi regime as one defined 
by its brutal crackdown on protesters rising up for democracy and human 
rights. At most, the popular Gaddafi narrative is told as one where he 
sponsored terrorism, was responsible for Lockerbie, bombed a disco in 
Berlin, followed by a decade of silence and looking the other way on 
human rights abuses (if not praising human rights standards), and then, 
“out of nowhere” cracking down on his own people. These allegations 
expose those “lost years”. Yet, because the Court cannot or chose not to 
investigate any alleged crimes prior to February 15, Western states 
cannot be shown to be complicit in those crimes and thus bear some 
responsibility.

These reports of extraordinary renditions and torture may also now be 
the most blatant sullying of an intervention which, to date, had had 
been a remarkable success for the intervening forces in may ways: few 
civilian deaths, little collateral damage, not a single soldier on the 
ground (there were special forces, but not soldiers), and, most 
importantly, what appears inevitably to be a Gaddafi-free Libya, largely 
achieved with rebel forces in the drivers’ seat.

Of course, these documents are not yet verified as authentic, but it 
speaks volumes that few would be surprised. Further, it is disturbing 
that we would only know of these links between the CIA and MI5 and the 
Gaddafi regime because of the turmoil and instability wrought on by the 
conflict in Libya.

If the allegations turn out to be true, and the responses by both 
Foreign Secretary and the CIA suggest they are, it will be hard, if not 
impossible, to achieve complete justice in Libya. When the UN Security 
Council included the provision that no events prior to February 15 2011 
could be investigated, the UK and the US betrayed the fact that they had 
unsavoury relations to hide. With allegations emerging that their 
intelligence services were complicit in torture and extraordinary 
rendition, surely, justice cannot be achieved if some British or 
American officials aren’t brought to account.
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