# The New York Times 

February 22, 2011
WikiLeaks Cables Detail Qaddafi Family's Exploits
By SCOTT SHANE

WASHINGTON — After New Year's Day 2009, Western media reported that Seif 
al-Islam el-Qaddafi, a son of the Libyan leader Col. Muammar el-Qaddafi, had 
paid Mariah Carey $1 million to sing just four songs at a bash on the Caribbean 
island of St. Barts.

In the newspaper he controlled, Seif indignantly denied the report — the big 
spender, he said, was his brother, Muatassim, Libya's national security 
adviser, according to an American diplomatic cable from the capital, Tripoli.

It was Muatassim, too, the cable said, who had demanded $1.2 billion in 2008 
from the chairman of Libya's national oil corporation, reportedly to establish 
his own militia. That would let him keep up with yet another brother, Khamis, 
commander of a special-forces group that "effectively serves as a regime 
protection unit."

As the Qaddafi clan conducts a bloody struggle to hold onto power in Libya, 
cables obtained by WikiLeaks offer a vivid account of the lavish spending, 
rampant nepotism and bitter rivalries that have defined what a 2006 cable 
called "Qadhafi Incorporated," using the State Department's preference from the 
multiple spellings for Libya's troubled first family.

The glimpses of the clan's antics in recent years that have reached Libyans 
despite Col. Qaddafi's tight control of the media have added to the public 
anger now boiling over. And the tensions between siblings could emerge as a 
factor in the chaos in the oil-rich African country.

Though the Qaddafi children are described as jockeying for position as their 
father ages — three sons fought to profit from a new Coca-Cola franchise — they 
have been well taken care of, cables say. "All of the Qaddafi children and 
favorites are supposed to have income streams from the National Oil Company and 
oil service subsidiaries," one cable from 2006 says.

A year ago, a cable reported that proliferating scandals had sent the clan into 
a "tailspin" and "provided local observers with enough dirt for a Libyan soap 
opera." Muatassim had repeated his St. Barts New Year's fest, this time hiring 
the pop singers Beyoncé and Usher. An unnamed "local political observer" in 
Tripoli told American diplomats that Muatassim's "carousing and extravagance 
angered some locals, who viewed his activities as impious and embarrassing to 
the nation."

Another brother, Hannibal, meanwhile, had fled London after being accused of 
physically abusing his wife, Aline, and after the intervention of a Qaddafi 
daughter, Ayesha, who traveled to London despite being "many months pregnant," 
the cable reported. Ayesha, along with Col. Qaddafi's second wife, Safiya, the 
mother of six of his eight children, "advised Aline to report to the police 
that she had been hurt in an `accident,' and not to mention anything about 
abuse," the cable said.

Amid his siblings' shenanigans, Seif, the president's second-eldest son, had 
been "opportunely disengaged from local affairs," spending the holidays hunting 
in New Zealand. His philanthropy, the Qaddafi International Charity and 
Development Foundation, had sent hundreds of tons of aid to earthquake-ravaged 
Haiti, and he was seen as a reasonable prospect to succeed his father.

The same 2010 cable said young Libyan contacts had reported that Seif al-Islam 
is the `hope' of `Libya al-Ghad' (Libya of tomorrow), with men in their 
twenties saying that they aspire to be like Seif and think he is the right 
person to run the country. They describe him as educated, cultured, and someone 
who wants a better future for Libya," by contrast with his brothers, the cable 
said.

That was then. Today the young protesters on the streets are demanding the 
ouster of the entire family, and it was Seif el-Qaddafi who declared on 
television at 1 a.m. Monday that Libya faced civil war and "rivers of blood" if 
the people did not rally around his father.

As for the 68-year-old Colonel Qaddafi, the cables provide an arresting 
portrait, describing him as a hypochondriac who fears flying over water and 
often fasts on Mondays and Thursdays. The cables said he was an avid fan of 
horse racing and flamenco dancing who once added "King of Culture" to the long 
list of titles he had awarded himself. The memos also said he was accompanied 
everywhere by a "voluptuous blonde," the senior member of his posse of 
Ukrainian nurses.

After Colonel Qaddafi abandoned his pursuit of weapons of mass destruction in 
2003, many American officials praised his cooperation. Visiting with a 
congressional delegation in 2009, Senator Joseph I. Lieberman, Independent of 
Connecticut told the leader and his party-loving national security adviser, 
Muatassim, that Libya was "an important ally in the war on terrorism, noting 
that common enemies sometimes make better friends."

Before Condoleezza Rice visited Libya in 2008 — the first secretary of state to 
do so since 1953 — the embassy in Tripoli sought to accentuate the positive. 
True, Colonel Qaddafi was "notoriously mercurial" and "avoids making eye 
contact," the cable warned Ms. Rice, and "there may be long, uncomfortable 
periods of silence." But he was "a voracious consumer of news," the cable 
added, who had such distinctive ideas as resolving the Israeli-Palestinian 
conflict with a single new state called "Isratine."

"A self-styled intellectual and philosopher," the cable told Ms. Rice, "he has 
been eagerly anticipating for several years the opportunity to share with you 
his views on global affairs."

Andrew W. Lehren contributed reporting from New York.





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