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“Socialism is not dead, it is not yet born.”

— Muammar Al Qadhafi
survivor of numerous CIA assassination attempts


Why America Hates Qadhafi


by Husayn Al-Kurdi
Article in The Final Call
January 11, 1995

Sanctions and embargoes are increasingly being used in international conflicts as methods of warfare which frequently produce horrifying results. [....]

Iraq’s people are undergoing immense hardship due to the sanctions imposed there. Thousands of people are going blind in Cuba due to the quarantine imposed on that island nation by the United States. Due to an external blockade, thousands of children, old people and people with curable diseases are dying.

The Saharan country of Libya, located in the heart of North Africa, has been subject to U.N. Security Council sanctions for nearly three years (as of 1995). The pretext used for imposing these sanctions is the alleged involvement of two Libyans in the bombing of Pan Am Flight 103, which exploded over Lockerbie, Scotland, on Dec. 21, 1988, killing all 271 on board.

The context for the continuing assault on Libya is one in which no country can decide its destiny for itself or disregard American plans for the fate of its own people.

Libya has formed a target of opportunity for U.S. assaults since it broke the shackles of dependence on Sept. 1, 1969. On that date, a revolution led by a young junior officer named Mu’ammar Qadhafi succeeded in overthrowing the Senoussi monarchy and announced its determination to change the course of poverty, dependence and humiliation which had been the lot of the Libyan people in this century.

Editorial cartoon showing a group of predatory beasts sitting around a circular table. In the center of the table is a gasoline pump labeled 'Libya'.  A vulture labeled 'USA' sits atop a human skull; a snarling bear is labeled 'Russia'; a snarling tiger is labeled 'France'; a sharp-toothed alligator is labeled 'Britain'.  All these beasts are snarling at and intimidating a baboon who sits at the table in a chair labeled 'UN Security Council'.  The baboon has a gavel and a bell and is supposed to be an authority but it has its hands up in the air in a gesture of frightened surrender.

Libya had experienced over three decades of Italian colonial rule from 1912 until World War II, when the U.S.-led allies swept the Italian and German presence out of North Africa. After the war, Libya was granted independence, with King Idris installed as a compliant regent with a demonstrated propensity to take orders from the U.S. and Britain. The U.S. maintained a huge Air Force base near Tripoli, the Libyan capital, with the British holding on to their military barracks at Azizia.

When oil was discovered, the oil companies moved in to drive a hard bargain with the monarch. The royal retinue would batten off a small part of the proceeds while the conglomerates made off with the wealth generated by Libya’s new found natural resource.

The Libyan people, who had suffered to the tune of having over one million of their number killed in the resistance to Italian colonization earlier, continued to live in makeshift shacks and lean-tos while a small, Westernized elite tried to emulate their benefactors.



Domestic benefits of Libya’s Green Revolution

Muammar Qadhafi brought a number of notions with him which were unacceptable to “American interests.”



International benefits of Libya’s Green Revolution

To make matters worse for Libya, it chose to pursue an active foreign policy entailing support for national liberation and social justice movements around the world.

It was political and economic defiance of the U.S. which put Libya and Qadhafi on the hit list of those countries slated for death and destruction in what is now called the “New World Order.”

Libya has been repeatedly attacked ever since it took its bold stand on behalf of those silenced majorities who suffer the consequences of U.S. hegemony. American jets repeatedly attacked Libya during the reign of Ronald Reagan. An attack on Tripoli and Benghazi in April 1986 claimed more than one hundred lives, including that of Qadhafi’s stepdaughter. It was one of many attempts made on the Libyan leader’s life, all of them failing, as his continued presence makes clear.

The Libyan revolution is hanging on after [over three decades] of resistance to constant attacks of all sorts, ranging from internal CIA subversion to armed attacks in over 10 cities.



CIA Propaganda Campaigns

The CIA and the State Department issued periodic scare stories which are disseminated by their accomplice media to keep Libya in the public eye as a “terrorist” threat to the well-being of Americans.

At one point in the build-up to the 1986 bombings, Libyans were alleged to be infiltrating the U.S. via Tijuana to assassinate Reagan and otherwise wreak havoc on America. Columnist Jack Anderson was exasperated that he had been used as a conduit for this false information, declaring that he had been “spooked by the spooks.” At other times, CIA disinformation had Libya manufacturing chemical and even nuclear weapons, promoting all forms of “terrorism” around the world and stirring up trouble where there was none previously to be found.

Domestically, the Libyan experiment in social equity greatly disturbed their ex-patrons. Such notions as “The house to those who live in it” are anathema to a country that has over five million homeless persons residing in it, as the U.S. does now.

The idea that emancipation from want, ignorance and injustice was to be actually implemented somewhere is unacceptable to an entity that foments poverty and dependence everywhere.

Libya, a nation of some four million people, over half of whom are under 15 years of age and spread out over 680,000 square miles of Sahara Desert-dominated North Africa had become a perpetual target for the bellicose designs of the U.S.-led “New World Order.”



The Lockerbie Lie

The Lockerbie Pan Am crash formed the most recent cover for action against Libya. Even though all evidence pointed to Syria as being the perpetrator of the bombing, and a Hollywood movie even made the case against Syria and Iran, attention shifted to Libya as the culprit when a tiny electronic chip was “found” by investigators in April 1990, over 16 months after the calamity. This tiny, thumbnail-sized chip was alleged to be part of the radio which contained less than a pound of plastic explosive, enough to scatter the contents of the plane over 845 square miles of Scottish countryside.

It so happened that the U.S. was building its coalition to destroy Iraq in Desert Storm at the time. Syria was one of the prime components of the force, joining Egypt, the Gulf States and Saudi Arabia in turning on their Arab compatriots, who had made the mistake of ignoring U.S. wishes by annexing Kuwait. Iraq and Saddam Hussein were the new targets of opportunity along with Libya. All was forgiven with their new-found ally, Syria.

After “going over” the evidence once again, the investigators decided to pin the blame for Pan Am 103 on Libya, specifically charging two Libyan airline employees with involvement in the act. The U.S. and U.K. further demanded that the two “suspects” be handed over for trial to them. The Libyan government has refused, suggesting the International Court of Justice as a fairer tribunal to judge the case. What are termed “limited sanctions” have been in place against Libya since April 15, 1992, served up by a United Nations Security Council which is increasingly compliant with U.S. demands.

See also:

Lockerbie-Pan Am 103: Prosecution case evaporates
http://www.wsws.org/articles/2000/oct2000/lock-o17.shtml


Pan Am 103 / Lockerbie verdict politically motivated
http://www.wsws.org/articles/2001/feb2001/lock-f07.shtml

“The guilty verdict issued on January 31 [2001] by three Scottish judges at the conclusion of the Pan Am 103/Lockerbie trial is unsound by all normal legal criteria.”



American State terrorism of Libya continues

Meanwhile the ongoing terrorism against Libya has continued unabated. One hundred and fifty eight people perished in the crash of a Libyan civilian airplane near Tripoli on December 22, 1992. Twenty years earlier, another Libyan civil airliner was blown out of the air over Egypt by Israeli forces.

Continuing efforts to organize and equip groups inside Libya to overthrow Qadhafi have met with the usual lack of success.

The Libyan people, especially the younger generations, do not want to return to the pre-Jamahiriya era in which squalor and misery prevailed. Giant strides in education, housing, medicine and agriculture have taken place in a country in which the literacy rate has increased tenfold since the revolution.



The weapon of sanctions

The Libyan people are suffering as a result of the “limited” sanctions. Thousands of people have not been able to travel abroad for medical treatment of grave illnesses and have died as a result. Hundreds of medical personnel have been prevented from entering the country. Traffic accidents and deaths have doubled due to the increase in highway traffic caused by the shutdown in international air travel which the sanctions enforced. Over $1 billion has been lost to Libya in agricultural and livestock production. In all, over 10,000 lives have been needlessly cut short.

According to U.S. policies, the Libyan experiment can not be allowed to work. It may influence others to emulate its example, or, more precisely, set about their own independent course of development. The sanctions weapon, used “successfully” in Cuba, Iraq and Nicaragua in recent years, is a relatively “cost-free” method of bringing populations to heel.

The danger of Arabs, Africans and Muslims getting together must also be averted in the calculations of U.S. policy makers. Libya happens to be a nation whose people match all three descriptions. It will remain a perpetual target of opportunity until it ceases and desists in trying to create a just society at home and in supporting struggling people around the world in their aspirations for self-determination.


Husayn Al-Kurdi is senior editor of News International Press Service. He grew up in Libya and currently resides in southern California.


For more information concerning American state terrorism against the people of Libya:

The Continuing Terror Against Libya

Chronology of Terror



German TV exposes CIA, Mossad links to 1986 Berlin disco bombing
http://www.wsws.org/news/1998/aug1998/bomb1-a27.shtml

“It may come as a shock to many Americans, all the more so given the utterly venal and lying role of the US media, but US intelligence services are well versed in the most unscrupulous and bloody methods, not excluding those that result in injury or death to Americans.”



For information about Libyan society, culture and history:

The Great Libyan Jamahiriya

Libya’s Black Day: Italian Fascist Terrorism

Libya, Qadhafi and the Green Revolution

http://mathaba.net/info/info.htm




Bibliography


Pirates and Emperors, Old and New:
International Terrorism in the Real World
by Noam Chomsky


Rogue State:
A Guide to the World’s Only Superpower
by William Blum


Killing Hope:
U.S. Military and CIA Interventions Since WWII
by William Blum


The Continuing Terror Against Libya
by Fan Yew Teng


The Real Terror Network:
Terrorism in Fact and Propaganda
by Edward S. Herman


The Fire This Time:
U.S. War Crimes in the Gulf
by Ramsey Clark


Desert Slaughter:
The Imperialist War Against Iraq
by the Workers League


Western State Terrorism
Alexander George, editor; essays by Noam Chomsky, Edward S. Herman, Gerry O’Sullivan and others


Terrorizing the Neighborhood:
American Foreign Policy in the Post-Cold War Era
by Noam Chomsky
Pressure Drop Press, 1991


The Culture of Terrorism
by Noam Chomsky


Apocalypse 1945:
The Destruction of Dresden
by David Irving


Against Empire
by Michael Parenti


The Habits of Highly Deceptive Media:
Decoding Spin and Lies in Mainstream News
by Norman Solomon


Inventing Reality:
The Politics of News Media
by Michael Parenti


Manufacturing Consent:
The Political Economy of the Mass Media
by Edward S. Herman and Noam Chomsky


Deadly Deceits:
My 25 years in the CIA
by Ralph W. McGehee


War, Lies & Videotape:
How media monopoly stifles truth
edited by Lenora Foerstel; multiple authors




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