Why Libya? November 5,
2014 by Robert Barsocchini
http://worldtraining.net/Libya8.htm
See also these series: http://worldtraining.net/GreatGame.htm /GreatGame1.htm etc.
See also series following
this pattern: http://worldtraining.net/NWO.htm and http://worldtraining.net/FedReserve.htm
and http://worldtraining.net/Bush.htm
Following the standard US playbook, the Obama
regime and its accomplices made up crimes to propagandize their populations
into accepting illegal aggression and terrorism against Libya in 2011, and now
ignore the actual crimes being committed in the Libya shoved, by the West, into
Òthe abyssÓ. Journalist
Patrick Cockburn yesterday noted the fabrications Òthat were used to
fuel popular support for the air war in the US, Britain, France and
elsewhereÓ: Human rights
organisations É discovered that there was no evidence for several highly
publicised atrocities supposedly carried out by GaddafiÕs forcesÉ These included the story of the mass
rape of women by GaddafiÕs troops that Amnesty International exposed as being without
foundation. [Not to mention the US military protects its own rapists and
supports other regimes that do use rape as a weapon.]
The uniformed bodies of government soldiers were
described by rebel spokesmen as being men shot because they were about to
defect to the opposition. Video film showed the soldiers still alive as rebel
prisoners so it must have been the rebels who had executed them and put the
blame on the government.
Cockburn further notes that, after lying to fabricate the pretext
for aggression, the Western governments and media outlets have fallen
mysteriously silent on Libya as the country has spiraled into oblivion.
The West thus again all but insists we notice that humanitarian crises
play no role in drawing their attention, and that they only trumpet – or
invent – human rights violations to cover Western aggression, which is
carried out, Cockburn notes, Òalways in the interests of the country
intervening.Ó
The West immediately lost its feigned concern
over the Òhuman rightsÓ violations it exaggerated or simply made up regarding
Libya because they were never of concern to begin with, and the West made
things much worse: the illegal US-led attack instantly killed or led to the
deaths of up to hundreds of thousands. Since then, Cockburn documents, [W]arring militias [have] reduce[d]
Libya to primal anarchy in which nobody is safeÉ Of these ÒmilitiasÓ, WashingtonÕs Blog noted in April that they were: Élargely comprised of Al Qaeda terrorists. And: The United States É knowingly facilitat[ed] the
provision of weapons to known al-Qaeda militias and figures,Õ Clare Lopez
É former CIA officer, told MailOnline.
Cockburn continues: The majority of Libyans are demonstrably worse off today
than they were under GaddafiÉ
Foreign governments and media alike have good reason to forget what they
said and did in Libya in 2011, because the aftermath of the overthrow of Gaddafi
has been so appalling. The extent of the calamity is made clear by two
reports on the present state of the country, one by Amnesty International
called ÒLibya: Rule of the gun – abductions, torture and other militia
abuses in western LibyaÓ and a second by Human Rights Watch, focusing on
the east of the country, called ÒLibya: Assassinations May Be Crimes Against
HumanityÓ.
Amnesty says that torture has become
commonplace with victims being Òbeaten with plastic tubes, sticks, metal
bars or cables, given electric shocks, suspended in stress positions for hours,
kept blindfolded and shackled for days.Ó
It is well known that the Obama regime simply continued the leaked Bush
Jr. agenda to Òtake outÓ Libya and six other countries. But the Bush agenda was also a
continuation of longstanding US policy. The US, immediately after World
War II, made internal plans to try to dominate the
resources of the Middle East.
Specifically, for a few examples, the US commenced terrorist operations
to try to overthrow and install a puppet in Syria in 1948, Iran in 1953 (which it did successfully
until 1979), and since the 1930s has been closely partnered with
the terrorist organization ruling Saudi Arabia. The US has been engaged in terrorist operations against
Libya since at least 1986, when the US carried
out Òthe major single terrorist actÓ of the year when it planted and
detonated explosives there, attempting to assassinate Gaddafi but succeeding
only in killing his daughter and many others. With the Òleading terrorist stateÒ, the US, caging
more women than any other country, cracking down on speech, supporting the mass rapist Mubarak of Egypt
for thirty years, through 2011, then transitioning to supporting the new mass
rapist Sisi in Egypt now, along with scores of other terrorist regimes, one
must look beyond official propaganda to determine why the US overthrew Gaddafi.
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Taking into account that the US decided long ago
to try to dominate the largely Mid East-based and global oil economy (as it
earlier had decided to dominate cotton), US actions can be understood by using
SyriaÕs Assad as an analogy. In
trying to control Syria, what would Assad prefer: for any existing opposition
to be strong and united against him, or for it to consist of disparate,
disorganized, weak factions mostly battling and killing each other, if
anyone? The answer is obvious.
We can then extend the analogy to the US (while remembering that the US
formerly used Assad as an ally in the US global torture network). In trying to dominate the worldÕs oil
market – and the world in general – what would the Òleading
terrorist stateÓ prefer: unified, strong opposition or weak, small, disparate,
warring factions killing and wiping each other out? Again, the answer is obvious, so we can move on to asking:
since ÒGaddafiÕs overthrow was very much NatoÕs doingÓ (Cockburn), what
was Libya before 2011 when it was destroyed by the US-led NATO terrorist
network? Harvard research scholar
Garikai Chengu, on October 19, published a report called ÒLibya: From AfricaÕs
Richest State Under Gaddafi, to Failed State After NATO InterventionÓ. Chengu: In 1967 Colonel Gaddafi inherited one of the poorest nations
in Africa; however, by the time he was assassinated, Gaddafi had turned
Libya into AfricaÕs wealthiest nation. Libya had the highest GDP per capita and life expectancy on
the continent. Less people lived below the poverty line than in the
Netherlands. [Libya is now plagued
by] widespread rape, assassinations and tortureÉ AmericaÉ is now backingÉ long-time CIA asset, General
Khalifa Hifter, who aims to set himself up as LibyaÕs new dictator. [Hifter] has taken part in
numerous American regime change efforts, including the aborted attempt to
overthrow Gaddafi in 1996.
Hifter is currently receiving logistical and air
support from the U.S. because his faction envision a mostly secular Libya open
to Western financiers, speculators, and capital. Perhaps, GaddafiÕs greatest crime, in
the eyes of NATO, was his desire to put the interests of local labour above
foreign capital and his quest for a strong and truly United States of Africa.
In fact, in August 2011, President Obama confiscated $30 billion from LibyaÕs
Central Bank, which Gaddafi had earmarked for the establishment of the
African IMF and African Central Bank.
In 2011, the WestÕs objective was clearly not to help the Libyan people,
who already had the highest standard of living in Africa, but to oust
Gaddafi, install a puppet regime, and gain control of LibyaÕs natural
resources.
For over 40 years, Gaddafi promoted economic
democracy and used the nationalized oil wealth to sustain progressive social
welfare programs for all Libyans. Under GaddafiÕs rule, Libyans enjoyed not
only free health-care and free education, but also free electricity and
interest-free loans. One group
that has suffered immensely from NATOÕs bombing campaign is the nationÕs women.
Unlike many other Arab nations, women in GaddafiÕs Libya had the right to
education, hold jobs, divorce, hold property and have an income. The United
Nations Human Rights Council praised Gaddafi for his promotion of womenÕs
rights. When the colonel seized
power in 1969, few women went to university. Today, more than half of LibyaÕs
university students are women. One of the first laws Gaddafi passed in 1970 was
an equal pay for equal work law.
[Libya is now] clamping down on womenÕs rights.
Given that Libya sits atop the strategic
intersection of the African, Middle Eastern and European worlds, Western
control of the nation, has always been a remarkably effective way to project
power into these three regions and beyond. Libya, it appears, was, indeed, an
outstandingly strong source of opposition to Western domination of the region,
as well as a Òthreat of a good exampleÓ for successfully carrying out policies hated by the USA, such as free healthcare,
electricity, and education. In one
particularly egregious move, Gaddafi had even allied with Nelson Mandela in the fight
against Apartheid, while the US, particularly Ronald Reagan, strongly supported and fought hard to maintain Apartheid,
including by imprisoning Mandela and putting him on the
US ÒterroristÓ list (while taking Saddam Hussein off) until Bush Jr. finally
changed MandelaÕs classification in 2008. Reagan and US efforts to topple
Gaddafi were thus integral to the US white supremacist jihad to maintain
Apartheid. Indeed, to ask ÒWhy
Libya?Ó is to ask ÒWhy anywhere?Ó
Chengu notes of ÒWestern intervention in É Libya, Iraq, and SyriaÓ: Éprior to western military involvement
in these three nations, they were the most modern and secular states in the
Middle East and North Africa with the highest regional womenÕs rights and
standards of living.
As confirmation, the 2014 UN Development
Report also found, as Patrick Martin notes: The steepest decline in living
conditions during 2013 occurred in Central African Republic, Libya and
Syria—three countries targeted by US and French imperialism for military
intervention and political subversion. When we mute Western government and integrated corporate propaganda (what they say)
and look at what they actually do, what is left? The bare reality
of a brutal Western terror axis butchering, as it always has, any group of
people that could potentially deter Western domination and thus cut into the
percentage of global wealth captured by Western predators. Depressing, but Carl
Herman nicely expresses how we can deal with this. Robert Barsocchini is a
researcher focusing on global force dynamics. He also writes
professionally for the film industry. Here is
his blog. Also see his free e-book, Whatever
it Takes – Hillary ClintonÕs Record of Support for War and other
Depravities. Click here to follow Robert and
his UK-based colleague, Dean Robinson, on Twitter.