Very Interesting Reality that we've allowed to happen for so many years..

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From: Dominic Tweedie <[email protected]>
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Date: Thu, 01 Sep 2011 21:03:34 
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Subject: [YCLSA Discussion] Anti-Empire Report: Libya and the world we live in

 
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 The Anti-Empire Report 
   
   
 Libya and the world we live in 
   
 
 
  William Blum, www.killinghope.org <http://www.killinghope.org/> , 1 September 
2011 
   
   
 
"Why are you attacking us? Why are you killing our children? Why are you 
destroying our infrastructure?"
  – Television address by Libyan Leader Muammar Gaddafi, April 30, 2011 
   
   
 A few hours later NATO hit a target in Tripoli, killing Gaddafi's 29-year-old 
son Saif al-Arab, three of Gaddafi's grandchildren, all under twelve years of 
age, and several friends and neighbors. 
   
 In his TV address, Gaddafi had appealed to the NATO nations for a cease-fire 
and negotiations after six weeks of bombings and cruise missile attacks against 
his country. 
   
 Well, let's see if we can derive some understanding of the complex Libyan 
turmoil. 
   
 The Holy Triumvirate — The United States, NATO and the European Union — 
recognizes no higher power and believes, literally, that it can do whatever it 
wants in the world, to whomever it wants, for as long as it wants, and call it 
whatever it wants, like "humanitarian". 
   
 If The Holy Triumvirate decides that it doesn't want to overthrow the 
government in Syria or in Egypt or Tunisia or Bahrain or Saudi Arabia or Yemen 
or Jordan, no matter how cruel, oppressive, or religiously intolerant those 
governments are with their people, no matter how much they impoverish and 
torture their people, no matter how many protesters they shoot dead in their 
Freedom Square, the Triumvirate will simply not overthrow them. 
   
 If the Triumvirate decides that it wants to overthrow the government of Libya, 
though that government is secular and has used its oil wealth for the benefit 
of the people of Libya and Africa perhaps more than any government in all of 
Africa and the Middle East, but keeps insisting over the years on challenging 
the Triumvirate's imperial ambitions in Africa and raising its demands on the 
Triumvirate's oil companies, then the Triumvirate will simply overthrow the 
government of Libya. 
   
 If the Triumvirate wants to punish Gaddafi and his sons it will arrange with 
the Triumvirate's friends at the International Criminal Court to issue arrest 
warrants for them. 
   
 If the Triumvirate doesn't want to punish the leaders of Syria, Egypt, 
Tunisia, Bahrain, Saudi Arabia, Yemen, and Jordan it will simply not ask the 
ICC to issue arrest warrants for them. Ever since the Court first formed in 
1998, the United States has refused to ratify it and has done its best to 
denigrate it and throw barriers in its way because Washington is concerned that 
American officials might one day be indicted for their many war crimes and 
crimes against humanity. Bill Richardson, as US ambassador to the UN, said to 
the world in 1998 that the United States should be exempt from the court's 
prosecution because it has "special global responsibilities". But this doesn't 
stop the United States from using the Court when it suits the purposes of 
American foreign policy. 
   
 If the Triumvirate wants to support a rebel military force to overthrow the 
government of Libya then it does not matter how fanatically religious, 
al-Qaeda-related,1 <http://killinghope.org/bblum6/aer97.html#note-1>  
executing-beheading-torturing, monarchist, or factionally split various groups 
of that rebel force are at times, the Triumvirate will support it, as it did 
certain forces in Afghanistan and Iraq, and hope that after victory the Libyan 
force will not turn out as jihadist as it did in Afghanistan, or as fratricidal 
as in Iraq. One potential source of conflict within the rebels, and within the 
country if ruled by them, is that a constitutional declaration made by the 
rebel council states that, while guaranteeing democracy and the rights of 
non-Muslims, "Islam is the religion of the state and the principle source of 
legislation in Islamic Jurisprudence."2 
<http://killinghope.org/bblum6/aer97.html#note-2> 
   
 Adding to the list of the rebels' charming qualities we have the Amnesty 
International report that the rebels have been conducting mass arrests of black 
people across the nation, terming all of them "foreign mercenaries" but with 
growing evidence that a large number were simply migrant workers. 
   
 Reported Reuters (August 29): "On Saturday, reporters saw the putrefying 
bodies of 22 men of African origin on a Tripoli beach. Volunteers who had come 
to bury them said they were mercenaries whom rebels had shot dead." To complete 
this portrait of the West's newest darlings we have this report from The 
Independent of London (August 27): "The killings were pitiless. They had taken 
place at a makeshift hospital, in a tent marked clearly with the symbols of the 
Islamic crescent. Some of the dead were on stretchers, attached to intravenous 
drips. Some were on the back of an ambulance that had been shot at. A few were 
on the ground, seemingly attempting to crawl to safety when the bullets came." 
   
 If the Triumvirate's propaganda is clever enough and deceptive enough and 
paints a graphic picture of Gaddafi-initiated high tragedy in Libya, many 
American and European progressives will insist that though they never, ever 
support imperialism they're making an exception this time because ... 
   
* The Libyan people are being saved from a "massacre", both actual and 
potential. This massacre, however, seems to have been grossly exaggerated by 
the Triumvirate, al Jazeera TV, and that station's owner, the government of 
Qatar; and nothing approaching reputable evidence of a massacre has been 
offered, neither a mass grave or anything else; the massacre stories appear to 
be on a par with the Viagra-rape stories spread by al Jazeera (the Fox News of 
the Libyan uprising). Qatar, it should be noted, has played an active military 
role in the civil war on the side of NATO. It should be further noted that the 
main massacre in Libya has been six months of daily Triumvirate bombing, 
killing an unknown number of people and ruining much of the infrastructure. 
Michigan U. Prof. Juan Cole, the quintessential true-believer in the good 
intentions of American foreign policy who nevertheless manages to have a 
regular voice in progressive media, recently wrote that "Qaddafi was not a man 
to compromise ... his military machine would mow down the revolutionaries if it 
were allowed to." Is that clear, class? We all know of course that Sarkozy, 
Obama, and Cameron made compromises without end in their devastation of Libya; 
they didn't, for example, use any nuclear weapons. 
* The United Nations gave its approval for military intervention; i.e., the 
leading members of the Triumvirate gave their approval, after Russia and China 
cowardly abstained instead of exercising their veto power; (perhaps hoping to 
receive the same courtesy from the US, UK and France when Russia or China is 
the aggressor nation). 
* The people of Libya are being "liberated", whatever in the world that means, 
now or in the future. Gaddafi is a "dictator" they insist. That may indeed be 
the proper term to use for the man, but it must still be asked: Is he a 
relatively benevolent dictator or is he the other kind so favored by 
Washington? It must also be asked: Since the United States has habitually 
supported dictators for the entire past century, why not this one? 
    
 The Triumvirate, and its fawning media, would have the world believe that 
what's happened in Libya is just another example of the Arab Spring, a popular 
uprising by non-violent protestors against a dictator for the proverbial 
freedom and democracy, spreading spontaneously from Tunisia and Egypt, which 
sandwich Libya. But there are several reasons to question this analysis in 
favor of seeing the Libyan rebels' uprising as a planned and violent attempt to 
take power in behalf of their own political movement, however heterogeneous 
that movement might appear to be in its early stage. For example: 
   
1. They soon began flying the flag of the monarchy that Gaddafi had overthrown 
2. They were an armed and violent rebellion almost from the beginning; within a 
few days, we could read of "citizens armed with weapons seized from army 
bases"3 <http://killinghope.org/bblum6/aer97.html#note-3>  and of "the 
policemen who had participated in the clash were caught and hanged by 
protesters"4 <http://killinghope.org/bblum6/aer97.html#note-4> 
3. Their revolt took place not in the capital but in the heart of the country's 
oil region; they then began oil production and declared that foreign countries 
would be rewarded oil-wise in relation to how much each country aided their 
cause 
4. They soon set up a Central Bank, a rather bizarre thing for a protest 
movement 
5. International support came quickly, even beforehand, from Qatar and al 
Jazeera to the CIA and French intelligence 
    
 The notion that a leader does not have the right to put down an armed 
rebellion against the state is too absurd to discuss. 
   
 Not very long ago, Iraq and Libya were the two most modern and secular states 
in the Mideast/North Africa world with perhaps the highest standards of living 
in the region. Then the United States of America came along and saw fit to make 
a basket case of each one. The desire to get rid of Gaddafi had been building 
for years; the Libyan leader had never been a reliable pawn; then the Arab 
Spring provided the excellent opportunity and cover. As to Why? Take your pick 
of the following: 
   
* Gaddafi's plans to conduct Libya's trading in Africa in raw materials and oil 
in a new currency — the gold African dinar, a change that could have delivered 
a serious blow to the US's dominant position in the world economy. (In 2000, 
Saddam Hussein announced Iraqi oil would be traded in euros, not dollars; 
sanctions and an invasion followed.) For further discussion see

                here 
<http://www.finalcall.com/artman/publish/World_News_3/article_7886.shtml> . 
* A host-country site for Africom, the US Africa Command, one of six regional 
commands the Pentagon has divided the world into. Many African countries 
approached to be the host have declined, at times in relatively strong terms. 
Africom at present is headquartered in Stuttgart, Germany. According to a State 
Department official: "We've got a big image problem down there. ... Public 
opinion is really against getting into bed with the US. They just don't trust 
the US."5 <http://killinghope.org/bblum6/aer97.html#note-5> 
* An American military base to replace the one closed down by Gaddafi after he 
took power in 1969. There's only one such base in Africa, in Djibouti. Watch 
for one in Libya sometime after the dust has settled. It'll perhaps be situated 
close to the American oil wells. Or perhaps the people of Libya will be given a 
choice — an American base or a NATO base. 
* Another example of NATO desperate to find a raison d'être for its existence 
since the end of the Cold War and the Warsaw Pact. 
* Gaddafi's role in creating the African Union. The corporate bosses never like 
it when their wage slaves set up a union. The Libyan leader has also supported 
a United States of Africa for he knows that an Africa of 54 independent states 
will continue to be picked off one by one and abused and exploited by the 
members of the Triumvirate. Gaddafi has moreover demanded greater power for 
smaller countries in the United Nations. 
* The claim by Gaddafi's son, Saif el Islam, that Libya had helped to fund 
Nicolas Sarkozy's election campaign6 
<http://killinghope.org/bblum6/aer97.html#note-6> could have humiliated the 
French president and explain his obsessiveness and haste in wanting to be seen 
as playing the major role in implementing the "no fly zone" and other measures 
against Gaddafi. A contributing factor may have been the fact that France has 
been weakened in its former colonies and neo-colonies in Africa and the Middle 
East, due in part to Gaddafi's influence. 
* Gaddafi has been an outstanding supporter of the Palestinian cause and critic 
of Israeli policies; and on occasion has taken other African and Arab 
countries, as well as the West, to task for their not matching his policies or 
rhetoric; one more reason for his lack of popularity amongst world leaders of 
all stripes. 
* In January, 2009, Gaddafi made known that he was considering nationalizing 
the foreign oil companies in Libya.7 
<http://killinghope.org/bblum6/aer97.html#note-7>  He also has another 
bargaining chip: the prospect of utilizing Russian, Chinese and Indian oil 
companies. During the current period of hostilities, he invited these countries 
to make up for lost production. But such scenarios will now not take place. The 
Triumvirate will instead seek to privatize the National Oil Corporation, 
transferring Libya's oil wealth into foreign hands. 
* The American Empire is troubled by any threat to its hegemony. In the present 
historical period the empire is concerned mainly with Russia and China. China 
has extensive energy investments and construction investments in Libya and 
elsewhere in Africa. The average American neither knows nor cares about this. 
The average American imperialist cares greatly, if for no other reason than in 
this time of rising demands for cuts to the military budget it's vital that 
powerful "enemies" be named and maintained. 
* For yet more reasons, see the article "Why

                Regime Change in Libya? 
<http://www.globalresearch.ca/index.php?context=va&amp;aid=25317> " by Ismael 
Hossein-zadeh, and the US diplomatic cables released by Wikileaks — Wikileaks 
reference 07TRIPOLI967

                11-15-07 <http://wikileaks.org/cable/2007/11/07TRIPOLI967.html> 
 (includes a complaint about Libyan "resource nationalism") 
    
   
 A word from the man the world's mightiest military powers have been trying to 
kill: 
   
 "Recollections of My Life", written by Col. Muammar Gaddafi, April 8, 2011, 
excerpts: 
   
 Now, I am under attack by the biggest force in military history, my little 
African son, Obama wants to kill me, to take away the freedom of our country, 
to take away our free housing, our free medicine, our free education, our free 
food, and replace it with American style thievery, called "capitalism," but all 
of us in the Third World know what that means, it means corporations run the 
countries, run the world, and the people suffer, so, there is no alternative 
for me, I must make my stand, and if Allah wishes, I shall die by following his 
path, the path that has made our country rich with farmland, with food and 
health, and even allowed us to help our African and Arab brothers and sisters 
to work here with us ... I do not wish to die, but if it comes to that, to save 
this land, my people, all the thousands who are all my children, then so be it. 
... In the West, some have called me "mad", "crazy". They know the truth but 
continue to lie, they know that our land is independent and free, not in the 
colonial grip. 
    
 
 Notes:
 
1. For example, see: The Telegraph (London), August 30, 2011: "Abdel-Hakim 
al-Hasidi, the Libyan rebel leader, has said jihadists who fought against 
allied troops in Iraq are on the front lines of the battle against Muammar 
Gaddafi's regime." There is a plethora of other reports detailing the ties 
between the rebels and radical Islamist groups.  
<http://killinghope.org/bblum6/aer97.html#link-1> 
2. Washington Post, August 31, 2011 
3. McClatchy Newspapers, February 20, 2011  
<http://killinghope.org/bblum6/aer97.html#link-2> 
4. Wikipedia, Timeline

                of the 2011 Libyan civil war, February 19, 2011 
<http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Timeline_of_the_2011_Libyan_civil_war>   
<http://killinghope.org/bblum6/aer97.html#link-3> 
5. The Guardian (London), June 25, 2007 
<http://killinghope.org/bblum6/aer97.html#link-4> 
6. The Guardian (London), March 16, 2011  
<http://killinghope.org/bblum6/aer97.html#link-5> 
7. Reuters, January 21, 2009  
     
 
From: http://killinghope.org/bblum6/aer97.html 
   
 
   

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