The Libya thread

Moderators: Elvis, DrVolin, Jeff

Re: The Libya thread

Postby JackRiddler » Fri May 25, 2012 11:48 pm



http://www.counterpunch.org/2012/05/25/ ... icom/print

Weekend Edition May 25-27, 2012

An Ongoing Disaster
Libya, Africa and Africom


by DAN GLAZEBROOK


The scale of the ongoing tragedy visited on Libya by NATO and its allies is becoming horribly clearer with each passing day. Estimates of those killed so far vary, but 50,000 seems like a low estimate; indeed the British Ministry of Defence was boasting that the onslaught had killed 35,000 as early as last May. But this number is constantly growing. The destruction of the state’s forces by British, French and American blitzkrieg has left the country in a state of total anarchy – in the worst possible sense of the word. Having had nothing to unite them other than a temporary willingness to act as NATO’s foot soldiers, the former ‘rebels’ are now turning on each other. 147 were killed in in-fighting in Southern Libya in a single week earlier this year, and in recent weeks government buildings – including the Prime Ministerial compound – have come under fire by ‘rebels’ demanding cash payment for their services. $1.4billion has been paid out already – demonstrating once again that it was the forces of NATO colonialism, not Gaddafi, who were reliant on ‘mercenaries’- but payments were suspended last month due to widespread nepotism. Corruption is becoming endemic – a further $2.5billion in oil revenues that was supposed to have been transferred to the national treasury remains unaccounted for. Libyan resources are now being jointly plundered by the oil multinationals and a handful of chosen families from amongst the country’s new elites; a classic neo-colonial stitch-up. The use of these resources for giant infrastructure projects such as the Great Manmade River, and the massive raising of living standards over the past four decades (Libyan life expectancy rose from 51 to 77 since Gaddafi came to power in 1969) sadly looks to have already become a thing of the past.

But woe betide anyone who mentions that now. It was decided long ago that no supporters of Gaddafi would be allowed to stand in the upcoming elections, but recent changes have gone even further. Law 37, passed by the new NATO-imposed government last month, has created a new crime of ‘glorifying’ the former government or its leader – subject to a maximum sentence of life imprisonment. Would this include a passing comment that things were better under Gaddafi? The law is cleverly vague enough to be open to interpretation. It is a recipe for institutionalised political persecution.

Even more indicative of the contempt for the rule of law amongst the new government – a government, remember, which has yet to receive any semblance of popular mandate, and whose only power base remains the colonial armed forces – is Law 38. This law has now guaranteed immunity from prosecution for anyone who committed crimes aimed at “promoting or protecting the revolution”. Those responsible for the ethnic cleansing of Tawergha – such as Misrata’s self-proclaimed “brigade for the purging of black skins” – can continue their hunting down of that cities’ refugees in the full knowledge that they have the new ‘law’ on their side. Those responsible for the massacres in Sirte and elsewhere have nothing to fear. Those involved in the widespread torture of detainees can continue without repercussions – so long as it is aimed at “protecting the revolution” – i.e. maintaining NATO-TNC dictatorship.

This is the reality of the new Libya: civil war, squandered resources, and societal collapse, where voicing preference for the days when Libya was prosperous and at peace is a crime, but lynching and torture is not only permitted but encouraged.

Nor has the disaster remained a national one. Libya’s destabilisation has already spread to Mali, prompting a coup, and huge numbers of refugees – especially amongst Libya’s large black migrant population – have fled to neighbouring countries in a desperate attempt to escape both aerial destruction and lynch mob rampage, putting further pressure on resources elsewhere. Many Libyan fighters, their work done in Libya, have now been shipped by their imperial masters to Syria to spread their sectarian violence there too.

Most worrying for the African continent, however, is the forward march of AFRICOM – the US military’s African command – in the wake of the aggression against Libya. It is no coincidence that barely a month after the fall of Tripoli – and in the same month Gaddafi was murdered (October 2011) – the US announced it was sending troops to no less than four more African countries – the Central African Republic, Uganda, South Sudan and the Democratic Republic of Congo. AFRICOM have now announced an unprecedented fourteen major joint military exercises in African countries for 2012. The military re-conquest of Africa is rolling steadily on.

None of this would have been possible whilst Gaddafi was still in power. As founder of the African Union, its biggest donor, and its one-time elected Chairman, he wielded serious influence on the continent. It was partly thanks to him that the US was forced to establish AFRICOM’s HQ in Stuttgart in Germany when it was established in February 2008, rather than in Africa itself; he offered cash and investments to African governments who rejected US requests for bases. Libya under his leadership had an estimated $150 billion of investments in Africa, and the Libyan proposal, backed with £30billion cash, for an African Union Development Bank would have seriously reduced African financial dependence on the West. In short, Gaddafi’s Libya was the single biggest obstacle to AFRICOM penetration of the continent.

Now he has gone, AFRICOM is stepping up its work. The invasions of Iraq and Afghanistan showed the West that wars in which their own citizens get killed are not popular; AFRICOM is designed to ensure that in the coming colonial wars against Africa, it will be Africans who do the fighting and dying, not Westerners. The forces of the African Union are to become integrated into AFRICOM under a US-led chain of command. Gaddafi would never have stood for it; that is why he had to go.

And if you want a vision of Africa under AFRICOM tutelage, look no further than Libya, NATO’s model of an African state: condemned to decades of violence and trauma, and utterly incapable of either providing for its people, or contributing to regional or continental independence. The new military colonialism in Africa must not be allowed to advance another inch.


DAN GLAZEBROOK writes for the Morning Star newspaper and is one of the co-ordinators for the British branch of the International Union of Parliamentarians for Palestine. He can be contacted at danglazebrook2000@yahoo.co.uk

We meet at the borders of our being, we dream something of each others reality. - Harvey of R.I.

To Justice my maker from on high did incline:
I am by virtue of its might divine,
The highest Wisdom and the first Love.

TopSecret WallSt. Iraq & more
User avatar
JackRiddler
 
Posts: 15987
Joined: Wed Jan 02, 2008 2:59 pm
Location: New York City
Blog: View Blog (0)

Re: The Libya thread

Postby seemslikeadream » Wed Sep 05, 2012 7:12 pm

Abdullah al-Senussi: spy chief who knew Muammar Gaddafi's secrets
Trial of feared and hated Libyan enforcer is likely to expose repression and crimes of more than four decades

Ian Black, Middle East editor
guardian.co.uk, Wednesday 5 September 2012 16.01 EDT

Abdullah al-Senussi with Muammar Gaddafi. Photograph: Sabri Elmhhedwi/EPA
If any single person can be said to know the darkest secrets of Muammar Gaddafi's Libya, it is Abdullah al-Senussi, now facing a dramatic trial in which the repression and crimes of more than four decades stand to be exposed for the first time.

Just over a year since Gaddafi's overthrow by Nato-backed rebels, Libya's new government faces grave political and security challenges. But nothing is more likely to create a sense of closure than the dictator's hated spy chief and enforcer being held to account. When it was announced recently that he was suffering from cancer, 15 Libyan civil society organisations appealed to his Mauritanian captors to look after "the criminal Abdullah al-Senussi" so he could finally face justice in his homeland.

Senussi is 62, stocky and tousle-haired, and was sporting an unfamiliar bushy beard when he was flown to Tripoli on Wednesday. Libyans outside the narrow circle of Gaddafi's family and cronies always feared and loathed him.

For the US and Britain, his name is linked with the 1988 Lockerbie bombing – though police and security agencies have no proof and are only making assumptions about his involvement.

The UK has already asked the Tripoli authorities to facilitate enquiries by Dumfries and Galloway police, still investigating what was the world's worst terrorist incident until the 9/11 attacks, with 270 deaths.

Senussi's most notorious foreign exploit was masterminding the bombing of a French airliner over Niger in 1989 in which 170 people were killed. That led to a 1999 case in which he was convicted in absentia in France. He had been unable to travel abroad freely since then – until fleeing to Nouakchott in Mauritania via Morocco.

For ordinary Libyans, his name will always be associated with the notorious 1996 massacre of 1,200 inmates at Tripoli's Abu Salim prison. "On Abu Salim there is no doubt," said Ashour Shamis, a veteran anti-Gaddafi activist. "He oversaw and executed every detail." It is an event of central and enduring resonance in Libya's modern history. The arrest of a leader of the victims' families association in Benghazi in February 2011 sparked protests that quickly spread when the government responded with force.

"Senussi is by far and away the most important Gaddafi-era figure who was still wanted," said Oliver Miles, a former British ambassador to Libya. "If anyone knows the truth about all the various horrors of the past it is him. Everyone will be expecting that beans will be spilt."

But a trial will be complicated and raise highly sensitive issues: Libyans will have to balance the desire for revenge against the demands of justice represented by the international criminal court, which indicted Senussi along with Gaddafi himself and his son Saif al-Islam. Senussi will probably try to implicate other former regime loyalists, some still in Libya, many in exile elsewhere in North Africa.

Senussi's name first surfaced in the 1970s when he was involved in arresting and torturing students opposed to Gaddafi. Marriage to the "brother leader's" sister cemented a lasting relationshiptheir ties. By the early 1980s, he led Libya's feared external security organisation, when he is said to have recruited Abdelbaset al-Megrahi, the only man convicted of the Pan Am 103 attack. For many years he stayed was in the shadows. "You never saw him in public or his picture in the papers," said Shamis, now an adviser to the new government. "It was only much more recently that his photograph was published."

After the Iraq war in 2003, when Gaddafi surrendered his weapons of mass destruction and renounced terrorism, the key international role was played by the foreign minister, Moussa Koussa, who defected to Britain at the start of the uprising. Senussi was also involved in targeting influential western academics with the aim of highlighting the emergence of a "new Libya". But he never shed his deeply sinister image.

"Senussi had a tendency to rant," a diplomat who dealt with him at that time told the Guardian last year. "You could never be entirely sure he was fully rational. He could suddenly let fly with revolutionary or anti-western rhetoric, and you would wonder whether you could actually negotiate with him. I could well believe he has had a hand in every horrible thing the Libyans have ever done."

US embassy cables released by WikiLeaks described him as a confidant of the leader who makes "many of his [Gaddafi's] medical arrangements". Like other senior Libyan figures, Senussi had extensive private business interests. Libyan, Arab and western sources all described him as a thuggish figure who would beat and abuse prisoners himself.

Still, in 2006 he met visiting US congressmen and called for "increased co-operation in all aspects" of the relationship, specifically technology and knowledge transfer. He reiterated Gaddafi's deep concern with Wahabism and Saudi government links to al-Qaida. Senussi also took credit for putting Osama bin Laden on an Interpol watch list in 1997.

In 2011 Senussi was blamed for deaths in Benghazi as well as recruiting foreign mercenaries. Later reports from the rebel capital described how he had been sent there to "keep a lid on the situation". Senussi first appealed for an end to protests but made it clear that if they persisted there would be a violent response. Bloody repression followed and the uprising spread. He disappeared after the fall of Tripoli in August 2011. By the time Gaddafi was killed in Sirte last October, he had gone underground, crisscrossing the desert by armed convoy with an escort of loyal Tuareg fighters from Niger.

Until the end officials in Tripoli still spoke of him with a mixture of respect and fear. The ICC described him as "personal adviser to Gaddafi on security services, policy and military matters", saying he was still active as head of military intelligence. Whatever his formal position, Senussi was always one of the Libyan leader's ahl al-khaimah (people of the tent) – Gaddafi's very closest entourage. That means that his day in court is certain to be closely watched – in Libya and around the world.
Mazars and Deutsche Bank could have ended this nightmare before it started.
They could still get him out of office.
But instead, they want mass death.
Don’t forget that.
User avatar
seemslikeadream
 
Posts: 32090
Joined: Wed Apr 27, 2005 11:28 pm
Location: into the black
Blog: View Blog (83)

Re: The Libya thread

Postby hanshan » Thu Sep 06, 2012 7:42 am

...


http://www.guardian.co.uk/commentisfree/2012/sep/05/extradition-abdullah-al-senussi-justice


Extradition of Abdullah al-Senussi is a blow to international justice

Muammar Gaddafi's spy master should have been tried at the international criminal court which indicted him last year
Share


Email
Geoffrey Robertson
guardian.co.uk, Wednesday 5 September 2012 15.32 EDT
Jump to comments (…)

Abdullah al-Senussi arrives at a high security prison facility in Tripoli. Photograph: AFP/Getty Images


The extradition of Abdullah al-Senussi, Gaddafi's spy master, from Mauritania for trial in Tripoli is a blow to international justice – and to the government's pretended support for it. Although one of the worst men left in the world, Senussi should have been tried, first and fairly, at the international criminal court (ICC) which indicted him last year.

Afterwards, there are claims from France (where he was convicted in absentia for organising the bombing of a UTA passenger plane) and he should face questioning over his role in Lockerbie. Instead, without a murmur of protest from Britain or the UN security council, he has been returned to Libya where he will receive not justice, but revenge.

Not that he is undeserving of punishment if found guilty of domestic crimes – notably the mass murder of 1,200 prisoners at Abu Salim jail in 1996. However, Libya is under an international duty to co-operate with – ie give precedence to – the ICC, a duty that it has breached in the case of Saif Gaddafi and will breach again with Senussi.

The reason, of course, is the death penalty. Libya wants to see both men at the end of a rope. The ICC cannot execute and could not properly send them back to Libya after trial in The Hague without an undertaking that he would not be strung up. So Libya, with the connivance of Interpol (whose red notice system is abused by vengeful governments) got hold of Senussi first, for a trial that will be about as fair as that of Saddam Hussein, and which will doubtless end in the same way.

These cases expose a design fault in the ICC. It is meant to be a court of last resort, leaving international criminals to their fate in their own country unless trial there is impossible. After a revolution, trial is always possible but fair trial usually is not. New governments want to execute old leaders as quickly as possible. There is overwhelming prejudice, usually a new set of judges hand-picked by the victors, and a public eager to see their past tormentors on the gallows. When the ICC indicts a political or military leader it contributes to their fall (as it did in the cases of Milosevic and Colonel Gaddafi) and has a moral duty to protect them from an unfair local trial and consequent death sentence.

But the ICC cannot even protect its own lawyers in Libya – that government's unfitness to try Saif Gaddafi was demonstrated when it defamed Melinda Taylor, an ICC defender captured by the militia that was holding her client. He goes on trial this month, apparently, and it will be a sorry end for Nato's intervention when these two men are topped while the murderers of Colonel Gaddafi are free and fêted.

So what did the British government do to ensure that international justice ran its proper course? Absolutely nothing. The Libyan prime minister visited Mauritania to lobby its government successfully. The UK made no effort to press for him to be sent to The Hague, where he should have been interviewed about Lockerbie (he was Abdelbaset al-Megrahi's boss and so more guilty than he was, if he was guilty). As a permanent member of the security council, the UK had a duty to make sure Libya complied with resolution 1970, which places upon it an obligation to co-operate with the ICC prosecutor.

We have become too blasé about death sentences on our enemies – the murder of bin Laden and of drone victims, and executions after biased trials – like that of Saddam. Hague has been threatening Assad and his relatives with an ICC indictment, but this is not much of a threat if the Free Syrian Army is ever in a position to put them on what it may call a "trial" (which would be as speedy as that of Ceaucescu). The British government must insist that both Senussi and Gaddafi be delivered to The Hague, on pain of sanctions for breach of resolution 1970.

However much it may be an irony that the ICC protects fallen tyrants from the death they once decreed for thousands of their subjects, international justice must pursue its commitment to fair trial. Once indicted, a defendant should be prosecuted by his own country only if his trial can be fair and his fate, at worst, imprisonment for life.

Geoffrey Robertson QC is author of Crimes against Humanity (Penguin)




...
hanshan
 
Posts: 1673
Joined: Fri Apr 22, 2005 5:04 pm
Blog: View Blog (0)

Re: The Libya thread

Postby seemslikeadream » Wed Sep 12, 2012 10:33 pm

U.S. Positions Two Warships Off Libya

Two U.S. destroyers equipped with Tomahawk missiles are moving into Mediterranean waters north of Libya after attacks on a U.S. consulate in Benghazi and another in the Egyptian capital of Cairo.

Libyans in Benghazi sympathetic to the United States poured into the streets to peacefully protest what the Obama administration suspects was an attack organized by anti-American groups.

Initial reports suggested the attack in Benghazi was a spontaneous response to a film that mocked Muslims and the Prophet Muhammad. “Innocence of Muslims” was supposedly made by a 56-year-old Israeli-born Jewish writer and director named Sam Bacile. Israeli officials claimed no such citizen existed according to their records and similarly denied a connection to the film. Bacile has since been revealed to be 55-year-old Nakoula Basseley Nakoula, a Coptic Christian living near Los Angeles. Nakoula initially denied that he directed the film, but a phone call The Associated Press made to the number belonging to “Bacile” traced to an address where its reporters found Nakoula. Federal court papers have since revealed Nakoula to have used several aliases.


US moving Navy destroyers off coast of Libya

From Barbara Starr, CNN's Pentagon Correspondent

Two US Navy warships are moving towards the coast of Libya, two US officials tell CNN. The destroyers are the USS Laboon and the USS McFaul. Both ships are equipped with tomahawk missiles that could be used if a strike was ordered. Tomahawks are satellite-guided cruise missiles that can be programmed to hit specific targets.

"These ships will give the administration flexibility," a senior official said, if the administration orders action against targets in Libya.

The USS Laboon was making a port call in Crete, a few hours from Libya, when it was ordered to reposition. The USS McFaul was outside the Strait of Gibraltar, a few days sail from Libya, and is headed to the Libyan coast.

The US Navy typically keeps up to four Aegis-equipped missile warships ships in the eastern Mediterranean to aid in defending Israel and missile defense for southern Europe. The McFaul and Laboon were part of that deployment.


Drones expected to hunt for suspects in Libya attack
updated 6:39 PM EDT, Wed September 12, 2012

Washington (CNN) -- The Pentagon dispatched a contingent of Marines to Libya, moved warships toward its coast, and planned to use drones in a stepped up search for those responsible for an attack on a U.S. consulate that killed the American ambassador and three others.

A senior military official told CNN that the Pentagon and other agencies would review a video of Tuesday's assault by heavily armed militants on the diplomatic compound in Benghazi that killed Ambassador Chris Stevens, another diplomat and two security personnel.

The official had not viewed the video and provided no details about its source.

American drones also were expected to join the hunt for potential targets. They would be part of "a stepped-up, more focused search" for a particular insurgent cell that may have been behind the attack, the official said.

The unmanned surveillance aircraft are expected to fly over Benghazi and other areas of eastern Libya to look for militant encampments, another official said, adding that drones would gather intelligence and hand the information to the Libyans to strike any targets.

A senior Libyan official told CNN in June that U.S. controllers were already flying the unmanned craft over suspected militant training camps in eastern Libya because of concerns about rising activity by al Qaeda and like-minded groups.

About 50 Marines from a rapid reaction force headed to Tripoli to enhance security. The unit is trained to retake or guard diplomatic installations and other facilities in troubled regions.

And a pair of Navy destroyers moved toward the Libyan coast, two U.S. officials told CNN late on Wednesday.

The USS Laboon and USS McFaul are each equipped with tomahawk cruise missiles that could be fired if a strike were ordered.

"These ships will give the administration flexibility" if the Obama administration orders action against targets in Libya, a senior official said.

The Navy typically maintains up to four Aegis-equipped missile ships in the eastern Mediterranean and the McFaul and Laboon were part of that deployment.

Separately, the FBI opened an investigation, saying that it would coordinate with other federal agencies and Libyan authorities.

The FBI would not speculate on facts or circumstances of the attack.
Mazars and Deutsche Bank could have ended this nightmare before it started.
They could still get him out of office.
But instead, they want mass death.
Don’t forget that.
User avatar
seemslikeadream
 
Posts: 32090
Joined: Wed Apr 27, 2005 11:28 pm
Location: into the black
Blog: View Blog (83)

Re: The Libya thread

Postby 8bitagent » Thu Sep 13, 2012 12:03 am

Couldn't the Pentagon just look at arms receipts to track the militants? Oh man, I'm cracking myself up
"Do you know who I am? I am the arm, and I sound like this..."-man from another place, twin peaks fire walk with me
User avatar
8bitagent
 
Posts: 12243
Joined: Fri Aug 24, 2007 6:49 am
Blog: View Blog (0)

Re: The Libya thread

Postby JackRiddler » Thu Sep 13, 2012 3:21 am

It's not funny, except from a very long perspective we do not yet possess, but after a process that took 30 years (and several cycles) with Iraq, Libya may become the fastest-ever case of maturing from "Incipient Democracy for US to Liberate From Hitler-man by Humanitarian Intervention" to newly "Designated Enemy We No Longer Remember Setting Up in the First Place."
We meet at the borders of our being, we dream something of each others reality. - Harvey of R.I.

To Justice my maker from on high did incline:
I am by virtue of its might divine,
The highest Wisdom and the first Love.

TopSecret WallSt. Iraq & more
User avatar
JackRiddler
 
Posts: 15987
Joined: Wed Jan 02, 2008 2:59 pm
Location: New York City
Blog: View Blog (0)

Re: The Libya thread

Postby 8bitagent » Thu Sep 13, 2012 4:04 am

JackRiddler wrote:It's not funny, except from a very long perspective we do not yet possess, but after a process that took 30 years (and several cycles) with Iraq, Libya may become the fastest-ever case of maturing from "Incipient Democracy for US to Liberate From Hitler-man by Humanitarian Intervention" to newly "Designated Enemy We No Longer Remember Setting Up in the First Place."


Actually, that is not just spot on but pretty much on track.

Oh the goldfish memory everyone had back in February 2011...as, this was what, a couple years before that?

"Ghaddafi is our friend! We'll hold world defense expos in Tripoli. Everyone in Europe can get oil from him. Lockerbie mastermind? Aww, he's cool now. Just give us exclusive BP contracts"


Image
"Do you know who I am? I am the arm, and I sound like this..."-man from another place, twin peaks fire walk with me
User avatar
8bitagent
 
Posts: 12243
Joined: Fri Aug 24, 2007 6:49 am
Blog: View Blog (0)

Re: The Libya thread

Postby JackRiddler » Thu Sep 13, 2012 9:56 am

Image

Image

Image

Image

Image
We meet at the borders of our being, we dream something of each others reality. - Harvey of R.I.

To Justice my maker from on high did incline:
I am by virtue of its might divine,
The highest Wisdom and the first Love.

TopSecret WallSt. Iraq & more
User avatar
JackRiddler
 
Posts: 15987
Joined: Wed Jan 02, 2008 2:59 pm
Location: New York City
Blog: View Blog (0)

Re: The Libya thread

Postby JackRiddler » Thu Dec 20, 2012 8:23 pm


http://www.counterpunch.org/2012/12/20/ ... ubversion/

December 20, 2012

The State Department’s “Report” on the Attack in Benghazi
The Effects of Diplomacy as Subversion


by MAXIMILIAN FORTE


Almost immediately after the armed attack in Benghazi, Libya, on September 11, 2012, which resulted in the death of U.S. Ambassador Christopher Stevens, along with Sean Smith, Tyrone Woods, and Glen Doherty, added to the destruction and looting of the U.S. facility in Benghazi, various columnists immediately took to issuing pronouncements on what had happened in Libya and what it meant. They all sounded so certain. Yet, the only certainty has been the deliberate production of uncertainty, with multiple layers of obfuscation, questions asked and never answered, and some questions not even asked yet. This is largely the case even now, four months after the attack and with the December 18 release of the findings of a State Department investigation into the attack. The report was produced by the “Accountability Review Board” convened by Secretary of State Hillary Clinton herself, and is thus lacking the impartiality of an independent body without ties to the Obama administration or the vested interests of those in charge of the State Department. The investigation was led by Thomas R. Pickering (a former U.S. ambassador to El Salvador during the height of its dirty war against opposition movements and guerrillas tied to the FMLN), and Admiral Michael Mullen.

As someone with a background in ethnohistory and archival research of colonial documents, plus seeing that this report is “unclassified” and is thus being circulated to various media, it struck me that the intent of this release was to produce not answers to a problem, but rather the State Department’s preferred version of events as the party to a conflict in Libya that the U.S. internationalized, widened and escalated since February 2011. There is actually little that is new in the report that has not already been presented and debated and left unsettled in the public sphere. Indeed, the report itself ultimately reduces everything to a need for more security measures and better training. This report is a very stark contrast to what some journalists were promising us would be a “State Department bombshell.” Well it’s a dud.

The Untold Story

Imagine this: a government that regularly executes alleged enemies abroad, using drone strikes based on supposed “intelligence,” that routinely claims to kill “terrorist” leaders and prevent “impending” attacks, is still not able—not even four months later—to identify the group responsible for the attack in Benghazi. Not able, or perhaps not willing. Instead, this report refers us to the FBI, which still has an investigation underway. This is the same FBI that was too frightened to send agents to Benghazi to investigate the attack, even weeks after the attack, and well after the “crime scene” had been extensively looted and “degraded.” Instead, this is the state of U.S. intelligence on Benghazi: “the key questions surrounding the identity, actions and motivations of the perpetrators remain to be determined by the ongoing criminal investigation” (p. 2). Even if we take the report at face value, this missing element—who are the attackers—should give anyone reason enough for lengthy pause. The U.S. government is claiming to not know which group attacked its staff in Benghazi, let alone the identities of the individual attackers. This says something about the state of U.S. “knowledge” of Libya. If we do not take the report at face value, then it reads like a deliberate attempt to cover up what the U.S. does not want the public to know.

In this regard, there are many possibilities, and no certainties. The report itself offers passing acknowledgment of the “continued presence of pro-Qaddafi supporters” (p. 15)—but does not even for a moment consider who might have a motive to attack the U.S. facility in Benghazi. The report does not even once mention the presence of CIA agents in its so-called “Special Mission Compound” in Benghazi, even though multiple reports surfaced that the attack had targeted a CIA base, exposing the presence of CIA personnel in significant numbers, and delivered a huge blow to CIA efforts in Libya—and to efforts to illicitly send arms to Syrian rebels via Turkey. And what was the CIA doing there? Reportedly their work focused on “securing” weaponry looted from Libyan government arsenals during the NATO war, such as surface-to-air missiles, the SA-7’s. It was also reported that Ambassador Chris Stevens’ work in Benghazi involved the transshipment of heavy weapons from Libya and into the hands of jihadists fighting to overthrow the government of Syria. Is it just a coincidence then that Syrian rebels have started using SA-7’s that they never had before? A CIA operation such as this would thus not only be violating international law, it would also reveal the lie that is Obama’s claim that the U.S. is not supplying Syrian rebels with weapons. This again widens the options concerning the motives of possible attackers, including those who might want to put a stop to such covert operations against Syria.

What is not clear is why “Islamists” in Libya would want to attack the Benghazi “mission.” After all, these would be some of the same people who benefitted from NATO’s air cover, for which they pleaded, and from Western weapons shipments during the war to overthrow the Libyan government, and who are reportedly benefitting again by being supported by the U.S. and its NATO partner, Turkey, in sending weapons to Syria, with some Libyans already active in that war. How would they gain anything, and would they not lose a great deal in launching such an inexplicable attack against their own partners?

Unmentionable Friends

Indeed this is a major conceptual shortcoming of the report: how it abruptly converts “militias” into “terrorists” (see p. 4). For all of the report writers’ insistence that their job is not to identify the attackers, the report speaks of the activities and nature of Al Qaeda and its affiliates (p. 2). But then a question arises: if “Islamists” and “jihadists” are a problem, why does the U.S. work with them in Libya? Likewise, if they are as “anti-American” as is commonly assumed, why do some actively collaborate with the U.S.? How among what the report acknowledges is a dizzying array of militias, do U.S. officials determine which are the good “Islamists” and which are the bad ones? The report itself provides some interesting answers.

The authors of the report comment on how the U.S. backed war against the USSR in Afghanistan, and the U.S.’ subsequent invasion and occupation of Iraq, provided the networks, training, and experience that empowered the “jihadis” that Gaddafi fought, and that continue to destabilize Libya under U.S. auspices. Here there is not even a pause in the report when the former monarchy based in Benghazi, U.S. interests, and jihadists all cohabit the same paragraph, as if they were natural partners (p. 13). Indeed, the report casually notes that the “Special Mission’s Libyan security contingent was composed of four armed members of the February 17 Martyrs’ Brigade (February 17)—a local umbrella organization of militias dominant in Benghazi (some of which were Islamist)” (p. 19). Some of which were Islamist?

Then there is the assertion of the Libyans’ supposed love affair with Ambassador Stevens. If Stevens, and other foreign officials, had truly “earned the admiration of countless numbers of Libyans” (p. 14) as presented in the State Department’s hagiography, there should not have been a river of attacks (a list of 20 attacks is provided, pp. 15-16, for Benghazi alone) against U.S. and related Western targets, and Stevens should still be alive today. In this inability to get over themselves, the obsessive self-praise of U.S. officialdom, amounting to what often seems like an institutionalized narcissism and hubris, there is no discussion of why the reality of Libya is one where U.S. officials get killed. The report only offers a remarkably simplified picture of two kinds of potential Libyan opponents: protesters and terrorists.

The report, however, does note that a kind of tunnel vision developed among U.S. officials in Libya—perhaps blaming them for their own demise—a vision in which violence against the U.S. and other international targets was normalized and effectively pushed aside. The report comments on the possibility—at least this possibility earns their commentary—that with so many attacks against U.S. and international targets, it all came to be seen as normal: “the longer a post is exposed to continuing high levels of violence the more it comes to consider security incidents which might otherwise provoke a reaction as normal, thus raising the threshold for an incident to cause a reassessment of risk and mission continuation” (p. 16). On the other hand, the concept of “resistance” appears to be forbidden, precluded from discussion. Moreover, as I will discuss below, this line of argument holds no water and is part of a subtle subtext of the report that places the blame for Stevens’ death partly on Stevens himself.

Questionable Friends

It is odd, but not surprising, that the report offers the public no considerations of the risk that results as a blowback effect of U.S. destabilization, just as it erases any notion of resistance. Instead all the U.S. has is friends in Libya. So how did four Americans get killed? They were, we are told, guarded by a local militia, the February 17 militia. Unfortunately, “February 17 militia members had stopped accompanying Special Mission vehicle movements in protest over salary and working hours” (p. 5). Moreover, the investigators “found little evidence that
the armed February 17 guards offered any meaningful defense” of the “special mission” (p. 6). As for the Libyan government, the investigators found “the Libyan government’s response to be profoundly lacking on the night of the attacks, reflecting both weak capacity and near absence of central government influence and control in Benghazi” (pp. 6-7). That sounds like the Libyan “government,” such as it is, had no capacity to help—which is quite likely true. However, that does not explain why “an unknown individual in a Libyan Supreme Security Council (SSC) police uniform” was spotted on the day of the attack “apparently taking photos of the compound villas with a cell phone from the second floor of a building under construction across the street to the north” of the “special mission” (p. 19).

Rewriting History

The authors of this report seem compelled to provide the preferred rendition of Libyan history, consistently making remarks that are noteworthy for lacking almost any relevance at all to the nature and purpose of their report. At the same time, the report adds to recent official comments that go strikingly against the Obama narrative at the start of the war in 2011, as if these officials suffered from amnesia and forgot what was in the last set of talking points on the approved and authorized view of Libya.

For example, while Obama repeatedly insisted he was against regime change back in March of 2011, and that international intervention was needed to protect civilians, his sole concern, there is no attempt to maintain this illusion any longer. Thus the report, like Secretary Clinton earlier, points out that Christopher Stevens was the U.S. “Special Envoy” to “the rebel-led government that eventually toppled Muammar Qaddafi in fall 2011,” and that was even before the U.S. publicly recognized that “government” as the “sole, legitimate representative of the Libyan people.” Stevens and his “special mission,” worked to bolster “U.S. support for Libya’s democratic transition through engagement with eastern Libya, the birthplace of the revolt against Qaddafi and a regional power center” (p. 2). Put simply, this was a diplomat actively working to overthrow a foreign government. This was a “diplomat” whose work consisted of regime change—despite early official pronouncements to the contrary—and in addition one whose commitment to Libya was restricted to the eastern portion. Subverting a government was accompanied by pandering to regionalist sentiments that have worked to divide and destabilize Libya since the bloody coup against Gaddafi.

If anything, the report seems to suggest that “diplomacy as subversion” is the State Department’s favored model for international engagement, noting: “significantly increased demands on U.S. diplomats to be present in the world’s most dangerous places to advance American interests and connect with populations beyond capitals, and beyond host governments’ reach” (p. 2). “Beyond host governments’ reach” is a pleasant way of saying that U.S. diplomats advance U.S. interests by circumventing the same legally constituted national authorities that the U.S. officially recognizes because it requires their prior permission to even establish an embassy. However, this model does not necessarily rely on establishing formal embassies, a formality that can be dispensed with in the new American diplomacy. This is the case even with Libya today, after Gaddafi—the so-called “consulate” in Benghazi, as some media called it, “was never a consulate,” and the report states that its presence was “never formally notified to the Libyan government”—the current government (pp. 14-15). Elsewhere the report speaks of the “special mission” as having a “non-status” as a “temporary, residential facility” (p. 5). One wonders how the Libyan government was supposed to come to the rescue of an entity that remained a mystery.

With reference to at least unofficially legitimizing Libyan regionalism, which reaches the point of organized secessionism in eastern Libya, the report acknowledges that “Stevens’ presence in the city [Benghazi] was seen as a significant sign of U.S. support for the TNC and a recognition of the resurgence of eastern Libya’s political influence” (p. 13). The report then validates without any question the Benghazi narrative that, “throughout Qaddafi’s decades-long rule, eastern Libya consistently lagged behind Tripoli in terms of infrastructure and standard of living even as it was responsible for the vast majority of Libya’s oil production” (p. 13). (Perhaps the U.S. should consider moving its capital to Texas.) What the report does not consider is that under Gaddafi other historically much more neglected areas—those that were not the privileged seat of the old monarchy—finally began to receive attention, and this bothered some in Benghazi who then (as now) continue to demand nearly exclusive attention to their own interests.

There are many other examples of the rewriting of history to better accord with U.S. interests and designs, but none is more glaring than the complete absence of any mention of U.S. and NATO bombings over eight months and the presence of U.S. and British special forces on the ground, along with hundreds of Qatari troops. The war against Libya never happened. Instead we get a pretty portrait of valiant rebels single-handedly defeating Gaddafi, for example: “The TNC continued attacking the remaining Qaddafi strongholds, and Tripoli fell earlier than expected at the end of August” (p. 14). Indeed, Libya had been visited by “a popular uprising” (p. 13), one so popular that it required U.S. intervention because it had no chances of success otherwise. There is a reminder also that the U.S. Embassy in Tripoli shut down merely days after the first street protests began—a curiously rapid decision (p. 13).

“Oh for the love of Chris!”

The production of this report, and its intended public consumption, is part of what might be kindly called the U.S. government’s “public diplomacy” effort, or in more disquieting terms, strategic information operations. The report is largely an exercise in impression management. The result is hagiography. Ambassador Stevens, we are told, “personified the U.S. commitment to a free and democratic Libya” (p. 2). The Americans who were killed possessed “selfless courage” (p. 3), and their duties were also “performed with courage” (p. 7). Lest ye forget, the report writers recommend that government agencies take yet another opportunity “to recognize their exceptional valor and performance, which epitomized the highest ideals of government service” (p. 12). Christopher Stevens was loved, as reflected by “his ability to move in all sectors of the population” (p. 2)—all sectors. Indeed, then he must still be moving. Often the report reads like a self-aggrandizing lobbying effort, self-conscious of its role as a means of marketing State Department goals in a time of reduced budgets, and often seems as if it had been penned directly by Secretary Clinton herself.

What is odd is that at times the report seems to almost blame Stevens for his own death: “Embassy Tripoli did not demonstrate strong and sustained advocacy with Washington for increased security for Special Mission Benghazi” (p. 4). This is despite publicly available evidence to the contrary, with a number of emails from Stevens that have been published, showing that Stevens had issued “multiple warnings” of security threats. The report nevertheless seems to find fault with him—“but you did not persuade me” you can almost hear them say. And yet, elsewhere the report states that Washington gave “unusual deference to his judgments” (p. 6)—so there is a bit of a contradiction that remains unresolved.

As part of the fog of diplomacy, what remains occluded by this report is the real story of “Benghazi Gate.” That Obama may have been keen to cover up any role of Al Qaeda, which he had loudly proclaimed to be decimated and left adrift after the execution of Bin Laden, is possible. His limited symbolic capital going into the last elections, which he barely won, could not stand to be tarnished. What seems more compelling, occurring precisely at the time when Syria is being targeted by the U.S. and its allies, is the role of Libya as a proxy in a covert war against Syria. This is, after all, an administration that is almost neurotic when it comes to maintaining secrecy (except for when leaks serve the greater glory of the leader’s reputation). In a report that does not even conceive of a Libyan resistance, in the midst of so many dubious friends with agendas that may sometimes overlap with those of the U.S. (and others times, not), one cannot expect to find a sober and rational engagement with the realities of a Libya dismantled by U.S. intervention. That would be like accepting blame, and the report is driven by the need to (re)gain credit, at the expense of continuing to sow misinformation and confusion.


Maximilian Forte, an anthropologist at Concordia University in Montreal, is the author of Slouching Towards Sirte: NATO’s War on Libya and Africa, and is a CounterPunch contributor to Hopeless: Barack Obama and the Politics of Illusion. Readers can also view his documentary website on the war in Libya. He usually writes for Zero Anthropology.

We meet at the borders of our being, we dream something of each others reality. - Harvey of R.I.

To Justice my maker from on high did incline:
I am by virtue of its might divine,
The highest Wisdom and the first Love.

TopSecret WallSt. Iraq & more
User avatar
JackRiddler
 
Posts: 15987
Joined: Wed Jan 02, 2008 2:59 pm
Location: New York City
Blog: View Blog (0)

Re: The Libya thread

Postby cptmarginal » Wed Oct 30, 2013 10:07 pm

hanshan » Thu Sep 06, 2012 6:42 am wrote:
http://www.guardian.co.uk/commentisfree/2012/sep/05/extradition-abdullah-al-senussi-justice


Extradition of Abdullah al-Senussi is a blow to international justice

Muammar Gaddafi's spy master should have been tried at the international criminal court which indicted him last year

[...]

So what did the British government do to ensure that international justice ran its proper course? Absolutely nothing. The Libyan prime minister visited Mauritania to lobby its government successfully. The UK made no effort to press for him to be sent to The Hague, where he should have been interviewed about Lockerbie (he was Abdelbaset al-Megrahi's boss and so more guilty than he was, if he was guilty). As a permanent member of the security council, the UK had a duty to make sure Libya complied with resolution 1970, which places upon it an obligation to co-operate with the ICC prosecutor.



http://www.independent.co.uk/news/world ... 13950.html

Is The Hague making a mockery of justice so the CIA and MI6 can save face?

Robert Fisk investigates an alleged double standard over two prominent Libyans accused of crimes against humanity

Wednesday, 30 October 2013

There’s a spot of skulduggery going on in the International Criminal Court (ICC) at The Hague. Not to put too fine a point upon it, a lot of questions are being asked about why the worshipful judges have, at least publicly, demanded a trial in Europe for Saif el-Islam al-Gaddafi – son of the late Muammar – but have blithely accepted that the dictator’s ruthless security boss, Abdullah al-Senussi, should be tried in the militia-haunted chaos of Libya.

Was this because the court didn’t want to upset Libya’s anarchic authorities by insisting that it try both men at The Hague? Or is there an ulterior, far more sinister purpose: to prevent Senussi blurting out details in The Hague of his cosy relationship with Western security services when he was handling relations between Gaddafi, the CIA and MI6?

Ben Emmerson, who is Senussi’s UK counsel – and, by chance, the UN’s special rapporteur on counter-terrorism and human rights – has described this month’s pre-trial decision by the International Court to refuse to try Senussi in The Hague as “shocking and inexplicable” because there is “overwhelming evidence… that the Libyan justice system is in a state of total collapse and that it is incapable of conducting fair trials”.

While making no assumptions about the reasons for the pre-trial hearing’s decision, Mr Emmerson told The Independent that when lawyers for Senussi demanded to know if MI6 operatives had interrogated him during his stay in Mauretania – and before his illegal rendition to Libya – Foreign Secretary William Hague declined to reply. Senussi was deported to Libya, according to several Libyan parliamentarians, after the Mauretanians received a bribe of $200m; the state should have handed him over to The Hague tribunal. And since Senussi has been held in Tripoli, Mr Emmerson and the defendant’s other lawyers have been refused permission to see him.

Senussi’s 20-year-old daughter, Anoud, has described to The Independent how she saw her father in prison in Libya “apparently beaten on the eyes and nose, very weak and weighing less than 35 kilos”. After arriving in Libya in late 2012, Ms Senussi was imprisoned on charges of using a false passport, but on her release last month, she was kidnapped on her way to the airport “for her own protection” by armed men. Freed unharmed later in the same week, she said she was not sure who had abducted her – but reports suggested one group of Libyan policemen had kidnapped her from other Libyan security men.

“When I saw my father, I was not allowed to be alone with him and I couldn’t talk to him out of earshot,” she said. “He had been threatened he would be hurt if he spoke about his treatment. There will not be a safe court for my father in Libya with the present government – which is powerless to do anything.” Ms Senussi is now living in Cairo.

No one doubts that Senussi is a man who holds many secrets – nor that he had a reputation as one of Muammar Gaddafi’s fiercest and most loyal henchmen. He is wanted for crimes against humanity, and there is no doubt that the torture of Libyan exiles – after their rendition to Libya with the help of MI6 and other Western security agencies after Tony Blair’s “deal in the desert” with Gaddafi – fell under his remit. Senussi was, in effect, the receiving end of the renditions and of the information about Libyan exiles furnished by the West to Gaddafi.

Human rights activists regard Senussi as the black box recorder of the secret liaison between MI6, the CIA and Gaddafi’s security regime. And the longer Senussi remains imprisoned and incommunicado in Libya, banned from meeting his international lawyers, unable to speak freely even to his own daughter and liable to face a fraudulent Libyan “trial” – always supposing it takes place – the secrets of MI6 and the CIA are likely to remain safe. An open trial at The Hague could reveal the full and scandalous relationship between Gaddafi’s thugs and British and American intelligence agencies.

Ben Emmerson is outraged at Senussi’s predicament: “All international monitors have found evidence of systematic torture, abduction and even killings inside Libyan jails and… the Libyan Prime Minister himself was abducted by armed militias,” Mr Emmerson said in Cairo after meeting Anoud earlier this month. Even Libya’s own foreign minister said about this incident that ‘in the absence of a functional, strong and humane criminal justice system in Libya, these things could happen any time’. The Prime Minister confessed that Libya ‘is not a failing state… the state of Libya doesn’t exist yet’.”

Mr Emmerson remarked that a photograph of Senussi taken at his last Libyan court appearance on 3 October – eight days’ before the ICC refused to try him at The Hague – showed him to have lost “a significant amount of weight and his face appeared bruised.”

He had been detained for 14 months in Libya “without access to any lawyer despite his repeated requests to see a lawyer”.

“By any standards, this is an appalling and totally unacceptable violation of fundamental due process,” said Mr Emmerson. “We, the ICC defence team, have been prevented by the Libyan authorities from having any contact with Mr Senussi. It is astonishing that Libya has simply refused to allow us, as Mr Senussi’s defence lawyers, to consult in any way with our client.”

The ICC had ruled that Libya was “not fit to try Saif Gaddafi”, said Mr Emmerson. “The same standard must equally apply to Mr Senussi who is charged in the same case with Saif Gaddafi in Libya.”

Human rights groups suspect that the ICC, anxious to maintain its prestige after criticism from African states that it is concentrating only on African defendants, is also fearful that if it appeals to the UN Security Council – of which the US is a voting member – to have Senussi’s trial held in The Hague, it may be rebuffed.

A notice of appeal has been lodged by Mr Emmerson and his colleagues at The Hague to prevent domestic proceedings continuing in Libya.

Senussi is widely believed by Libyans to have been responsible for the 1996 massacre of more than a thousand prisoners at the Abu Salim jail, and he has been convicted in absentia in France for his alleged role in the 1989 bombing of a French UTA passenger airliner in which 170 people were killed.

Senussi married the sister of Gaddafi’s wife. During the 2011 insurrection in which Gaddafi was himself murdered by rebels, Senussi was blamed for the deaths of regime opponents in Benghazi.


:whisper:
cptmarginal
 
Posts: 2741
Joined: Tue Apr 10, 2007 8:32 pm
Location: Gordita Beach
Blog: View Blog (0)

Re: The Libya thread

Postby cptmarginal » Thu Oct 31, 2013 11:54 pm

seemslikeadream » Sun Oct 06, 2013 10:39 pm wrote:
Capture of bombing suspect in Libya represents rare ‘rendition’ by U.S. military


By Ernesto Londoño, Updated: Sunday, October 6, 5:43 PM E-mail the writer

The capture of an alleged al-Qaeda operative outside his home by Special Operations forces in Tripoli on Saturday and his secret removal from Libya was a rare instance of U.S. military involvement in “rendition,” the practice of grabbing terrorism suspects to face trial without an extradition proceeding and long the province of the CIA or the FBI.

U.S. officials hailed the capture of Nazih Abdul-Hamed al-Ruqai, who was wanted in connection with the 1998 bombings of the U.S. embassies in Tanzania and Kenya, as an intelligence coup that will disrupt efforts by al-Qaeda to strengthen its franchise in North Africa.


Damascus is consolidating its arsenal as international teams prepare for a demolition mission.

The raid in Tripoli came hours after U.S. Navy SEALs stormed a beachside compound in Somalia in a failed attempt to nab a senior militant leader from the East African country’s al-Qaeda franchise, known as al-Shabab. The two operations suggested that the Obama administration, which has been criticized for its heavy use of drone strikes against terrorism suspects, is increasingly willing to deploy ground troops, despite the risks, to seize high-value targets.

“These operations in Libya and Somalia send a strong message to the world that the United States will spare no effort to hold terrorists accountable, no matter where they hide or how long they evade justice,” Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel said in a statement. “We will continue to maintain relentless pressure on terrorist groups that threaten our people or our interests, and we will conduct direct action against them, if necessary, that is consistent with our laws and our values.”

The Libyan government on Sunday condemned what it called the “kidnapping” of one of its citizens after Ruqai, known by the alias Anas al-Libi, was forced out of his car and bundled away by men his brother described as foreign-looking “commandos.”

As they celebrated Ruqai’s detention, administration officials on Sunday were largely silent on a strike by Navy SEALs on a terrorist target in Somalia that appears to have failed. SEALs stormed the suspected hideout of an al-Shabab leader Friday night, seeking to detain a senior operative of the group. The troops retreated after an intense gunfight unfolded, fearing that escalating it could result in civilian casualties, U.S. officials said.

The operation followed last month’s brazen attack on an upscale mall in Nairobi by al-Shabab that killed dozens of people and raised concerns about the reach of a group that had appeared to be in retreat and focused on Somalia.

A former U.S. Special Operations operative familiar with Somalia policy said that the seaside town of Baraawe, where Friday’s raid took place, has become a key hub for senior al-Shabab leaders after they lost control of other areas. The group exports charcoal from the town, which represents an important source of revenue.

“It’s where the leadership hangs out,” said the official, who spoke on the condition of anonymity to describe U.S. intelligence.

U.S. officials said both operations were lawful under war powers that Congress granted the executive branch after the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorism attacks


http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-us-canada-24633617

Libya terror suspect Abu Anas al-Liby in New York court

Image

23 October 2013

A suspected Libyan militant leader seized earlier this month in a US raid in Tripoli has appeared for a second time in a federal court in New York.

Abu Anas al-Liby was represented by a lawyer paid for by the Libyan government, a source involved in the case told the BBC.

Mr Liby is accused of having links with al-Qaeda and of involvement with the bombings of two US embassies in 1998.

He has pleaded not guilty to terrorism charges.

Mr Liby, 49, whose real name is Nazih Abdul-Hamed al-Ruqai, appeared in court to discuss his legal counsel.

At his previous hearing, Mr Liby was represented by court-appointed public defenders, having said he could not afford an attorney of his own.

A source involved in the case told the BBC's Nada Tawfik at the court that the Libyan government had decided to hire a lawyer to represent him.

His lawyer, Bernard Kleinman, declined to say who had retained him.

Mr Kleinman told the court that it would take several months to sort through hundreds of thousands of documents before the case could proceed.

He also requested the return of Mr Liby's personal copy of the Koran which he said had been confiscated during his capture.

Mr Kleinman said he had met Mr Liby for the first time earlier on Tuesday.

He told the judge that he represents at least one prisoner held at the US detention centre in Guantanamo Bay, Cuba.

Mr Liby's next court appearance was set for 12 December.

There has been anger in Libya over the US commando raid on 5 October, which many say was a breach of Libyan sovereignty.

Prime Minister Ali Zeidan argued that Libyan nationals should be tried in Libya. However, he said that ties between Tripoli and Washington would not be affected by the issue.

Mr Liby was first put on a US Navy ship for interrogation but brought to the US when his health began to deteriorate after he stopped eating and drinking, a US official said.

Mr Liby had been on the FBI's most wanted list for more than a decade, with a $5m (£3.1m) bounty on his head.

He was indicted by a New York grand jury in absentia in 2000.

The attacks on the US embassy in Nairobi, Kenya, and the US diplomatic mission in Dar es Salaam, Tanzania, killed more than 200 people and wounded thousands.

Most of the victims were civilians.


They took the unusual step of military rendition in order to bring him to New York to be tried in federal court? The guy who was said to work closely with both Ali Mohamed and western intelligence? Damn, what a joke. Gotta play it close to their chests, I guess. More people need to be aware of Peter Lance's Triple Cross, it's very difficult to explain away.

History Commons - 'Late 1993-Late 1994: Ali Mohamed and Anas Al-Liby Scout Targets in Africa'
Boiling Frogs Post - Capture of Abu Anas al-Liby Highlights Real Masters of Terrorism

See also:

http://www.theguardian.com/politics/200 ... vidshayler

MI6 'halted bid to arrest bin Laden'

9 November 2002

British intelligence paid large sums of money to an al-Qaeda cell in Libya in a doomed attempt to assassinate Colonel Gadaffi in 1996 and thwarted early attempts to bring Osama bin Laden to justice.

The latest claims of MI6 involvement with Libya's fearsome Islamic Fighting Group, which is connected to one of bin Laden's trusted lieutenants, will be embarrassing to the Government, which described similar claims by renegade MI5 officer David Shayler as 'pure fantasy'.

The allegations have emerged in the book Forbidden Truth , published in America by two French intelligence experts who reveal that the first Interpol arrest warrant for bin Laden was issued by Libya in March 1998.

According to journalist Guillaume Dasquié and Jean-Charles Brisard, an adviser to French President Jacques Chirac, British and US intelligence agencies buried the fact that the arrest warrant had come from Libya and played down the threat. Five months after the warrant was issued, al-Qaeda killed more than 200 people in the truck bombings of US embassies in Kenya and Tanzania.

The arrest warrant was issued in connection with the murder in March 1994 of two German anti-terrorism agents, Silvan and Vera Becker, who were in charge of missions in Africa. According to the book, the resistance of Western intelligence agencies to the Libyan concerns can be explained by MI6's involvement with the al-Qaeda coup plot.

The Libyan al-Qaeda cell included Anas al-Liby, who remains on the US government's most wanted list with a reward of $25 million for his capture. He is wanted for his involvement in the African embassy bombings. Al-Liby was with bin Laden in Sudan before the al-Qaeda leader returned to Afghanistan in 1996.

Astonishingly, despite suspicions that he was a high-level al-Qaeda operative, al-Liby was given political asylum in Britain and lived in Manchester until May of 2000 when he eluded a police raid on his house and fled abroad. The raid discovered a 180-page al-Qaeda 'manual for jihad' containing instructions for terrorist attacks.

The Observer has been restrained from printing details of the allegations during the course of the trial of David Shayler, who was last week sentenced to six months in prison for disclosing documents obtained during his time as an MI5 officer. He was not allowed to argue that he made the revelations in the public interest.

During his closing speech last week, Shayler repeated claims that he was gagged from talking about 'a crime so heinous' that he had no choice but to go to the press with his story. The 'crime' was the alleged MI6 involvement in the plot to assassinate Gadaffi, hatched in late 1995.

Shayler claims he was first briefed about the plot during formal meetings with colleagues from the foreign intelligence service MI6 when he was working on MI5's Libya desk in the mid-Nineties.

The Observer can today reveal that the MI6 officers involved in the alleged plot were Richard Bartlett, who has previously only been known under the codename PT16 and had overall responsibility for the operation; and David Watson, codename PT16B. As Shayler's opposite number in MI6, Watson was responsible for running a Libyan agent, 'Tunworth', who was was providing information from within the cell. According to Shayler, MI6 passed £100,000 to the al-Qaeda plotters.

The assassination attempt on Gadaffi was planned for early 1996 in the Libyan coastal city of Sirte. It is thought that an operation by the Islamic Fighting Group in the city was foiled in March 1996 and in the gun battle that followed several militants were killed. In 1998, the Libyans released TV footage of a 1996 grenade attack on Gadaffi that they claimed had been carried out by a British agent.

Shayler, who conducted his own defence in the trial, intended to call Bartlett and Watson as witnesses, but was prevented from doing so by the narrow focus of the court case.

During the Shayler trial, Home Secretary David Blunkett and Foreign Secretary Jack Straw signed Public Interest Immunity certificates to protect national security. Reporters were not able to report allegations about the Gadaffi plot during the course of the trial.

These restrictions have led to a row between the Attorney General and the so-called D-Notice Committee, which advises the press on national security issues.

The committee, officially known as the Defence, Press and Broadcasting Advisory Committee, has objected to demands by the prosecution to apply the Official Secrets Act retrospectively to cover information already pub lished or broadcast as a result of Shayler's disclosures. Members of the committee, who include senior national newspaper executives, are said to be horrified at the unprecedented attempt to censor the media during the trial.
cptmarginal
 
Posts: 2741
Joined: Tue Apr 10, 2007 8:32 pm
Location: Gordita Beach
Blog: View Blog (0)

Re: The Libya thread

Postby conniption » Fri Nov 01, 2013 6:35 am

Libya 360°

Safia Qaddafi Calls for Justice and the Intervention of the International Community

October 22, 2013

By John Robles

The widow of assassinated Libyan leader Muammar Gaddafi, Safia Farkash Gaddafi, has made a plea to the world community, finding a place for her voice to be heard on the Voice of Russia. Obviously this is something that may cause certain countries a bit of discomfort, especially as they have become accustomed to doing whatever they please with impunity.

Certain countries have grown entirely too comfortable and over-confident in their own power and their ability to demonize and marginalize anyone they wish and along with their having become accustomed to even assassinating with impunity, it must be quite a bad day indeed when one of their victims finally speaks out.

Seeing the grief and humanity in the face of the widow of Muammar Gaddafi, makes the infamous reaction to the brutal assassination of the late leader by former US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton seem that much more monstrous, namely her infamous and ever so gleeful: “We came, we saw, he died!” comment on US media!

Of course the western media is not going to allow someone such as Safia Farkash Gaddafi to speak out, nor are many in the rest of the world, but with it becoming clearer to the world that the Russian Federation and its leader Vladimir Putin are willing to take a hard stance for the rule of law, her reasonable calls for nothing more than a normal investigation and an accounting for the assassination of a head of state are being made on Russian media.

A pivotal moment in history occurred not long ago, which in my opinion has made the world, once again, a multi-polar place where one state is no longer going to dominate, dictate and get away with everything possible under the sun.

That moment occurred recently when Saudi Arabia, with the full backing of the United States, first attempted to bribe Russian President Vladimir Putin, then threatened the world leader and Russia with terrorists acts during the upcoming Olympics in Sochi.

In that single moment, when Russian President Vladimir Putin, said “NYET” [No] to Saudi Prince Bandar, the world became multi-polar again and it was made clear that the illegality of the “War on Terror Paradigm” is in its last days.

That event and the ensuing prevention of military aggression by the US against Syria, aggression which admittedly had one repeated goal “to forcibly remove President Bashar Al-Assad”, in other words to assassinate him, like Muammar Gaddafi and former Iraqi leader Saddam Hussein were, (as well as Yasser Arafat who not long ago was discovered to have been poisoned by Polonium), has shown the world that there is a leader and a country willing to stand up for the rule of law and more importantly to US aggression.

The Voice of Russia received a letter from Muammar Gaddafi’s widow Safia Farkash, which the VOR calls “a proclamation addressed to the entire world” and has been receiving other material from Libyan sources attempting to get the truth to the world. Something that of course has caused blowback for the VOR and staff (which may not be entirely relevant to this matter but it is something I think the staff of the VOR deserve to be applauded for).

In her letter to the VOR Mrs. Gaddafi writes:

“In the memory of NATO’s aggression against my country, which turned Libya into chaos, and in the memory of my husband, whom I consider to be a martyr, my dear son and the people who were with them on October 20, 2011, when NATO air forces shelled the cortege of Libya’s leader, and then, their wounded bodies were butchered by a crowd of people whom I can call no other way than criminals."


Some might say she is being restrained in her wording, I could think of much stronger words to describe the butchers, but that is to her credit.

Mrs. Gaddafi:

“What this crowd did to my husband and my son cannot be justified from the point of view of any religion. But I also consider it to be a no lesser crime that the remains of these martyrs are still being hid from their relatives, which is something unprecedented in the entire history.”


Her statement regarding the remains of her beloved husband and son are true and they must not be hidden, they deserve a proper burial, as any human does, (here we can recall how mass murders and maniacs in the United States are regularly offered normal burials as are nazi war criminals), yet it should be underlined that this is not an exception.

Mrs. Gaddafi:

“I demand that all the members of the UN Security Council, the European Union and everyone who has direct or indirect connection with this murder must tell where the remains of these martyrs are and allow their relatives to bury them in a proper way. I also demand that the African Union, of which Muammar Gaddafi was a founder, should investigate into the murder of him and all the people who were with him on that day.”

“I demand that the world community should help me to come in touch with my son Saif al-Islam, who has been isolated from all members of our family from the moment of his arrest. Saif’s only “crime” is that he has warned that this revolution can only lead Libya to a chaos – which is something that we are witnessing now.”


Her statement addressed to specific world bodies points to knowledge as to who was behind the invasion of her country and the assassination of her family and her pleas to know where her son are normal requests that any grieving mother would make, regardless of race or nation.

Hopefully the UN and the European Union will show that they understand humanity, despite the efforts of one state to demonize and marginalize anyone who they do not particularly care for.

Mrs. Gaddafi:

“Saif al-Islam has always been concerned about the situation with human rights in Libya. He has taken many former radical Islamists from American and European prisons and persuaded them to become law-abiding citizens. Many of them have promised him that they would never come back to terrorist activities. But now, some of the people whom Saif has saved from prison are demanding that he should be executed.”


This statement forces one to recall the way that Gaddafi and his sons were demonized, then befriended, then demonized again by the West at their convenience, and it is a sad statement indeed.

We recall how Saif met with Hillary Clinton and Gaddafi met with Tony Blair and they were openly considered friends not long ago but when the oil trade was to be changed to another currency they became enemies again and their country was decimated.

Mrs. Gaddafi:

“Two years after the barbarous murder of my husband, my son and their associates, I am demanding that my voice – the voice of an exiled widow of a country’s leader and a mother – must be heard.”


She has every right to be heard and with President Putin and the Russian Federation more energetically and unyieldingly defending sovereignty and the rule of law for the world community, we may be hearing more from the weak, demonized and oppressed.

With recent revelations that Yasser Arafat was poisoned by Polonium and the strange cancer epidemic which struck South American leaders and took Hugo Chavez from humanity, the voices may become a roar calling for a certain state to be held to account.


The views and opinions expressed here are my own. I can be reached at robles@ruvr.ru

___


Safia Qaddafi’s Original Letter to VOR:

Safia Qaddafi’s Message to the World on the Second Anniversary of the Martyrdom of Her Beloved Husband and Son

Related:
Press Release: Forum Of Kings Of Africa, May 2011 (Muammar Gaddafi and the Kings of Africa launch legal actions over NATO’s murder of civilians and use of depleted uranium.)
We Demand Saif Al Islam Gaddafi’s Immediate Release
We Demand Saif Al Islam Gaddafi’s Immediate Transfer To The ICC
Libya: Aisha Gaddafi Requests Full Investigation On Her Father’s Death
Aisha Gaddafi Wants Investigation Into The Murder Of Her Father And Brother
The Gaddafi Family Files A War Crimes Complaint Against NATO
Aisha Gaddafi Files Second Complaint Against NATO For War Crimes
Aisha Gaddafi Launches Legal Action Over NATO Airstrike That Killed Family Members
The Gaddafi Family Take Legal Action To Protect Saif Al Islam
Viva Libya Saif Al Islam Gaddafi Links
conniption
 
Posts: 2480
Joined: Sun Nov 11, 2012 10:01 pm
Blog: View Blog (0)

Re: The Libya thread

Postby cptmarginal » Wed Nov 13, 2013 4:52 am

When making my last post in this thread, I completely failed to notice that al-Libi was dying.

http://www.thedailybeast.com/articles/2 ... ayers.html

Anas al-Liby’s Health Care During Terror Trial Could Gouge Taxpayers

With new details emerging about Anas al-Liby’s advanced-stage Hepatitis C, experts predict his health-care costs could mount during a long terror trial in the U.S.


What an angle to take on this - such class!

Meanwhile, more details are beginning to emerge about the seriousness of al-Liby’s medical condition. Last week, al-Liby’s family disclosed that he suffered from a Hepatitis C infection, contracted while he was imprisoned in Iran. But it now appears his health is more precarious than previously reported, with the virus far advanced—causing, among other complications, cirrhosis of the liver and an enlarged spleen. According to his family, the liver problems have been causing blackouts, and his immune system is highly fragile.

With terror trials tending to be prolonged—the case against Oklahoma bomber Timothy McVeigh took nearly two years—the cost of al-Liby’s s medical treatment to U.S. taxpayers is likely to be high. If treated early enough, 50 to 80 percent of people who contract Hepatitis C are cured. But it is also known as the” silent killer”—10,000 Americans a year die from complications caused by Hepatitis C. Those with advanced Hepatitis C infections can require liver transplants and chemotherapy to reduce the swelling of their spleens; a high proportion of those with an advanced infection go on to develop liver cancer.

“His chances of making it to the conclusion of a long terror trial are very thin, unless he has a liver transplant,’ says Dr. James Le Fanu, a British physician and medical author. “Of course prognosis isn’t an exact science but judging from the symptoms you are describing he is close to the end-stages of liver failure, and depending how advanced the infection is he may have just weeks or months to live without a transplant.”

Le Fanu adds: “It sounds far advanced and the prognosis is poor. What happens is that the inflammation of the liver triggered by the infection causes it to contract and it becomes a fibrous blob. The liver cells fulfill about 3,000 biochemical functions but they are massively reduced by tough connective tissue. What that does is alter the dynamics of the blood. All the blood from the gut flows into the liver but when you have the problem al-Liby has the vessels shut down and there is a build up and you get an expansion of the veins in the esophagus, stomach and spleen and you can get catastrophic bleeding in the stomach that is difficult to control.”

U.S. officials acknowledged to The Daily Beast that al-Liby’s poor medical condition, which prompted the U.S. to transfer him sooner than planned to New York from the warship where he was being interrogated, could complicate his subsequent trial with health-related delays and holdups.

Jonathan Schanzer of the Washington DC-based think tank Foundation for the Defense of Democracies believes it is unlikely that U.S. intelligence didn’t know about al-Liby’s medical condition before grabbing him. “They would have had him under surveillance and gathered a lot of information about him,” Schanzer says.


And here's a quote for the road:

http://www.nationaljournal.com/defense/ ... i-20131021

Libi last week pleaded not guilty to terrorism charges. "His kidnapping from a friendly country was kinda dubious, to put it mildly," one Insider said, "but better to bring him to a federal court than to a military court, or one of our new secret courts."


Yuk yuk
cptmarginal
 
Posts: 2741
Joined: Tue Apr 10, 2007 8:32 pm
Location: Gordita Beach
Blog: View Blog (0)

Re: The Libya thread

Postby conniption » Thu Nov 28, 2013 9:00 am

Libya 360°

Libya’s Hell, Enabled by Canadian “Humanitarians”
Alexandra Valiente / 3 days ago

By Murray Dobbin
Links added by Libya 360°

Who will protect Libyans now? One of the darkest and most shameful chapters in Western military intervention continues to play out in spades in Libya. The latest news comes from Tripoli (See the links at the end of this article) where one of the (literally hundreds) of murderous militias opened fire on peaceful, white-flag-bearing protesters (protesting militias), killing at least 20 and wounding over 130. And they didn’t use just small arms — it was rocket propelled grenades, machine guns and even an anti-aircraft gun. It was, even for a horribly violent context, a disgusting slaughter of innocents.

But we hear nothing from the international choir, led here by Lloyd Axworthy, which sang the “responsibility to protect” (R2P) hymn at the top of their lungs two years ago. The R2P, established by the UN in 2005, has lofty principles but in practice has been used as an excuse for any brutal assault on sovereign nations that serves the capitalist interests of the first world. Responsibility to protect states that sovereignty is not a right, but rests on the responsibility of governments to protect their populations. It is triggered by evidence of any one of four “mass atrocity” crimes: war crimes, genocide, crimes against humanity and ethnic cleansing.

(See: Canada: Al Qaeda’s Air Force)

None of these, of course, prevailed at the time of the Security Council’s vote in favour of establishing a “no fly” zone to protect civilians from Gadhafi’s fighter jets. But China and Russia abstained because of Western promises of going no further. That, of course, was a Big Lie as the real purpose soon revealed itself and regime change became the end game. When the country could have managed a ceasefire, NATO and Canada declared that could only happen if Gadhafi was gone in complete violation of Resolution 1973. And Canada happened to choose this particular conflict to invest heavily in — both morally and in material support. Stephen Harper made a huge show of our bombing efforts (over 1000 sorties) and boasted that Canada was “punching above its weight.”

Reckless and cynical

What is so infuriating in the history of this hideous “mission” is the complete lack of remorse or shame at what has been “accomplished.” Just like Iraq and Afghanistan, there are no regrets: Imperialism — especially “humanitarian imperialism” — will never admit to its crimes. But it can’t deny the facts, and for citizens attracted to the notion of “responsibility to protect,” the facts are important so that the next time this convenient principle is trotted out there will be more skepticism.

The key facts? There was no “mass rape” ordered by Gadhafi, a claim repeated many times by Hillary Clinton (and eventually refuted by Amnesty International, the UN and even the U.S. Army). There was no bombing of protesters (a fact admitted to by the CIA’s Robert Gates). There was no plan for a “massacre” in Benghazi. Gadhafi offered amnesty to any insurgents who laid down their arms — in contrast the “no mercy” theme played by the Western powers. All of these facts are to be found in Slouching Towards Sirte: NATO’s War on Libya and Africa by Maximilian Forte.

(See: Russian Satellite Images Contradict Mainstream Media Reports On Libya)

Despite the facts, the stark image of Gadhafi “massacring peaceful protesters” was eagerly promoted by the Western media. Forte refutes this, establishing that rebels from the very beginning “torched police stations, broke into the compounds of security services, attacked government offices and torched vehicles.” Even then the government did not respond militarily but only with police. It wasn’t until rebels began to occupy the Benghazi army barracks that the situation escalated to civil war.

Fast forward to the sickening results of the R2P intervention and you will understand where this reckless and cynical military adventure fits in the recent record of NATO countries (Germany abstained in the R2P vote to its everlasting credit) in the Muslim world. The current situation in Libya is so out-of-control that chaos and bloodshed rule virtually everywhere. The Muslim Brotherhood Prime Minister Ali Zeidan was even kidnapped (briefly) by one of the many militias he actually hired to try to maintain a semblance of security (the army and police are in total disarray). The newly elected Congress has ceased to function as the opposition parties have walked out in protest over the Zeidan government’s authoritarian style — leaving it with little moral authority.

Tribal militias are now organizing to take on the Islamist government effectively imposed on the country by the U.S. The central government has virtually no authority outside Tripoli, and even there control over the city is divided up among armed gangs. Services everywhere have all but collapsed and the “government” will run out of money by the end of the year — meaning it will not be able to pay salaries of any kind.

Hastening state failure

Instead of a new model democracy blathered on about by the warmongers after Gadhafi’s murder, we are fast approaching the situation that has prevailed in Somalia for over a decade: a completely failed state. Once that situation is established it will take a generation or more to return to some kind of normalcy.

The big brains in America’s multi-billion dollar intelligence conglomerate apparently didn’t think of what would happen when dozens of militias, al-Qaida cells and criminal armed gangs raided the many arms depots across the country (in addition to getting hundreds of tonnes of arms from NATO). Libya is now described as the biggest open arms bazaar in the world, where the most sophisticated weapons can be purchased by anyone with enough cash. Setting aside the fact that many of these weapons are finding their way to other conflict areas, there is enough weaponry available to keep the conflict in Libya going for years.

It is not only Western governments and their compliant media who don’t want to talk about the chaos and violence unleashed by our humanitarianism. The transnational corporations which were the intended beneficiaries are saying little, but they cannot be happy. The huge infrastructure projects they were building for Gadhafi are all in limbo and so, too, are the contracts enjoyed by the major oil companies. It was mostly about oil that regime change was conceived. (Gadhafi had threatened them: “We do not trust [Western oil] firms, they have conspired against us… Our oil contracts are going to Russian, Chinese and Indian firms.”)

But the euphoria over the fact that oil facilities were not damaged has now turned to despair as almost no oil is flowing to the EU countries that took the lead on the bombing. All those lunatic militias which the West indiscriminately armed to the teeth are now occupying the oil fields, and production has plummeted. For a while it was normal — 1.4 million barrels a day. But then the armed guards hired by the Brotherhood government to protect eastern oilfields decided to seize them. That was followed shortly after by a similar seizure of the southern fields by another tribal group. Production is now down to 150,000 barrels a day, with only 80,000 being exported. Without that 1.4 million a day, the central government is rapidly draining the country’s cash reserves.

This is the state of “democratic” Libya — a hideous “Arab winter” if ever there was one. As I recounted in an earlier column, it is crystal clear why Gadhafi was removed. And it wasn’t just the oil. Gadhafi had been responsible more than any other African leader for creating independent institutions that challenged those of the West — including an African communications satellite with low fees, the African Investment Bank, the African Monetary Fund and the African Central Bank. All of these latter institutions were a direct threat to Western financial capital.

Troubling silence

The collateral damage done by our humanitarian “liberation” includes the regime (however repressive) that boasted Africa’s highest standard of living, a literacy rate above 90 per cent, the lowest infant mortality rate and the highest life expectancy of all of Africa, free medicare and education, and the highest Human Development Index of any country on the continent. All of this is now threatened. Neither Western politicians (including the NDP and Liberals in Canada) nor the Western media ever talked about these war facts and they never will.

While it pales in comparison to the misery inflicted on the people of Libya, the whole sordid tale is also one of the alarming decline of democracy in Canada and elsewhere in the West. Democracy can only work with an informed citizenry. While we were poorly served as citizens by mainstream coverage of the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, some of the truth did manage to get out — enough that Canadians were increasingly opposed to the latter and refused to support the former. That’s what can happen when citizens actually have access to the truth.

But the truth is a threat to the U.S. Empire and its junior partners like Harper. Never again? Somehow, this time, our allegedly democratic governments and their compliant media managed to cover up the ugly truth — and continue to do so. We should all be worried.
_______

Related:
NOVEMBER 23 – 30, 2013

Oil Workers Strike Over Insecurity in Libya’s Benghazi
Persistent Violence: No Unifying Political Ideology to Guide Post-Gaddafi Libya
Libya Seeks Italian Help for Satellite Surveillance System for Borders
Violent Clashes Continue in Benghazi
Protesters Storm Congressional Meeting With Benghazi Security Forces
أنصار الشريعة تنظيم واحد في كل من ليبيا وتونس
بنغازي
Ansar Al-Sharia Convoy “Blocked” from Leaving Derna
ارتفاع حصيلة ضحايا المواجهات في بنغازي إلى 14 قتيلا .. والجيش يعلن النفير
القائمة الثامنة للمعتقلين والمفقودين
Libyan army clashes with militias, 9 killed | Benghazi declares general strike
Benghazi: What is Happening
Fierce Fighting in Benghazi
دعوات للعصيان بمدينة “درنة” الليبية احتجاجا على تردى الأوضاع الأمنية
أكذوبة العدالة في نكبة فبراير.. الإرادة لشعبية.. والنصر القادم
مقتل وإصابة 14 شخصا فى اشتباكات للجيش الليبى مع أنصار جماعة سلفية
“ليبيا الغد بين الطموح وصراعات الداخل”
مقتل شخصين في اشتباكات بين مسلحين بطرابلس
Libya on Brink of Collapse: US, Allies Step Up Emergency Measures

NOVEMBER 14 – 22, 2013

مذبحة في ترهونة وسط صمت الحكومة
Renewed Clashes in the Capital and Across Libya Today
القاعدة” في ليبيا تستحوذ على صواريخ سكود
Protests in Derna over Murders and Bombings
Propaganda Alert: “Rival militias quit Tripoli, hand bases to Libyan army”
Elbadri extends Tripoli strike “until all militias leave”
Libya: Torture, Murder, Terror, the Deep State and Gladio
A New NATO Intervention in Libya?
Abayomi Azikiwe: The West Behind Libya’s Violence
Lampedusa in Hamburg Protest: “We Are Here to Stay!”
Faraj Muftah: “Al Qaeda militias open fire on civilians in Tripoli”
Al Qaeda has not left Tripoli
في مصراتة العار .. أعراس لتكريم القتلة
Lawyers for Justice in Libya Strongly Condemn Zeidan’s Response to Massacre
Washington’s puppet regime in Libya teeters on the brink
Fuel Prices Soar in Europe Due to Oil Blockades
جريمة غرغور – الارهاصات والتداعيات واستحقاقات المرحلة
تحيا ثورة البريوش
رسالة من احدي مجاهدات حرائر ورشفانه السبع طبول المجاهدة_كتيبة النهار الاسود
Militias Withdraw from Tripoli
“De-Qaddafization”: Chaos in the Heart of Libya Decrypted
Militias Kill Unarmed Protesters While Security Forces Watch!
Tragic Massacre of Civilians in Tripoli, Libya
Head of Ajiat Military Intelligence Assassinated
Assassination in Benghazi
طرابلس الغربية من التضاهرات وسقوط القتلى الى الاضراب واعلان حالة الطوارئ
غرغور حصرياً من قلب الحدث 17-11-2013
متظاهرون يقتحمون المؤتمر للمطالبة برحيل الميليشيات عن طرابلس
State of Emergency
LPNM at London Workers Revolutionary Party Rally
The Casualties of Friday’s Gharghour Massacre
US Marines in Tripoli with the Misrata Militia?
محلي ” مصراتة ” يعلن سحب ثوار المدينة من طرابلس
US Military Protecting its Assets in Libya
Libya’s deputy intelligence chief kidnapped (Update)
اخر تطورات الاوضاع في ليبيا: حوار مع الناشطة الحقوقية الليبية الاستاذة فاطمة ابو النيران
كيري يدعو كل الأطراف في ليبيا إلى ضبط النفس وإعادة الهدوء
Tribal Spokesman, Faraj Muftah: Libya is in anarchy as US – NATO backed terrorists reign
ارتفاع عدد الضحايا في العاصمة الليبية إلى 43 قتيلا و461 جريحا واندلاع مواجهات في منطقة تاجوراء
بـيــــــان الحـركــــــة الـوطنيــــــة الــشـعبيـة الـلـيبيـة بشـــــــأن قيـام الميليشيات بالهجوم المسلح على المتظاهرين السلميين في غرغور بمدينة طرابلس
Armed Men Set Fire to Militia HQ in Tripoli Following Friday’s Massacre of Protesters
Dozens Dead, Hundreds Wounded as Militias Clash with Civilians in Tripoli
بالفيديو.. ميليشيات الإخوان بليبيا تفتح النيران على المتظاهرين بطرابلس
Abayomi Azikiwe: NATO Should be Held Accountable for Libyan Crisis
ابوزيد دورده البطل في جلسة المحاكمه اليوم 20 11 2013_كتبية النهار الاسود
الجنائية الدولية تحث ليبيا على تسليم سيف الإسلام دون تأخير
De-Facto Libya no Longer Exists as a Nation, Only Fragmented Territories
ICC Prosecutor Statement to the United Nations Security Council on the situation in Libya, pursuant to UNSCR 1970 (2011)
المجاهد يوسف شاكير 15-11-2013 الامر خطير جدا_كتيبة النهار الاسود
Dr. Yusuf Shakir: Libya is No Longer a State. Violence Will Spread to Other Countries.
إن هدفنا الجامع المشترك هو تحرير ليبيا وتطهيرها وعودة الشرعية واسترداد الحقوق والقصاص من المجرمين وإنصاف المظلومين.
أمازيغ ليبيا يقاطعون لجنة إعداد الدستور وسط استمرار الاحتجاجات
صوره أخرى تحكي الواقع الليبي المرير ..
conniption
 
Posts: 2480
Joined: Sun Nov 11, 2012 10:01 pm
Blog: View Blog (0)

Re: The Libya thread

Postby cptmarginal » Sun Dec 01, 2013 3:31 pm

http://www.longwarjournal.org/archives/ ... eda_se.php

FWIW

Analysis: Al Qaeda seeks to spin capture of top operative

Written by Thomas Joscelyn on December 1, 2013

Al Qaeda propagandist Adam Gadahn has released a new video denouncing the capture of a top operative known as Abu Anas al Libi. In the video, titled "The Crime of Kidnapping Abu Anas al Libi and its Repercussions," Gadahn seeks to portray Abu Anas as an innocent who was wrongly detained by US forces in Tripoli on Oct. 5.

Gadahn implies that Abu Anas's capture was a "Wag the Dog" style operation intended to distract the American people from their country's many problems. Yet, he calls on Muslims to strike back as revenge for the "sheikh."

"I say to the people of Libya in particular and the sons of the Ummah in general: Do not leave this criminal coward act to pass without punishment," Gadahn says in the video, which was translated by the SITE Intelligence Group. "Teach the Crusaders a lesson they will not forget. Teach them that the lands of Islam are a red line and that there is no place in them for their soldiers, forces and bases."

Gadahn continues: "Rise and have vengeance against America, the enemy of Islam and the Muslims, and restore to us the glory of Nairobi, Dar es Salam, Aden, New York, Washington, Fort Hood, Benghazi and Boston."

Gadahn's mention of Nairobi and Dar es Salam is curious, given his insistence that Abu Anas was not involved in al Qaeda's twin 1998 bombings in those cities.

The seizure of Abu Anas has been controversial inside Libya, so Gadahn wants to inflame public opinion even further.

"What is required from the good brothers in Libya is not merely symbolic measures, but practical procedures that preserve the sovereignty of the Muslim lands and restores the right to their people and guarantees that such a crime is not repeated in the future," Gadahn says, according to SITE's translation. Al Qaeda's spokesman also dismisses completely suggestions by members of the Libyan government that Abu Anas be tried in his home country.

Role in the 1998 US Embassy bombings established in US court record

Some Western press accounts, based on the testimony of Abu Anas's family, have sowed doubt concerning Abu Anas's role in the 1998 embassy bombings in Kenya and Tanzania. The embassy bombings were al Qaeda's most successful operations prior to the Sept. 11, 2001 attacks.

Gadahn tries to lend additional credence to these reports, citing "the testimony of [Abu Anas's] child," who claims that Abu Anas was willing to stand trial for his alleged crimes inside Libya before he was captured.

Gadahn also cites a former jihadist who argues that Abu Anas was implicated in the bombings solely only on the basis of testimony given by "some of the tortured prisoners ... in the prisons of the disbelievers and apostates." Seeking to play off of the detention controversies in the West, Gadahn says this "piece of information alone is enough to drop all the accusations leveled at Abu Anas" and to acquit "him in any fair trial." But the "Crusader West gives up the principle of fair trials and all the rules of justice and fairness when the matter is related to Muslims and their rights," Gadahn alleges.

Gadahn's description of the evidence against Abu Anas is simply false. Key witnesses in the embassy bombings trial, which took place New York in 2001, testified during court sessions to Abu Anas's role in al Qaeda and the August 1998 attacks. Their testimony was not derived from "torture" or any coercive interrogation methods.

One key government witness during the embassy bombings trial was Jamal al Fadl, a former al Qaeda operative who provided a wealth of intelligence on the secretive organization. Al Fadl was asked about Abu Anas's role within al Qaeda. "He run[s] our computers," al Fadl said. "He's a computer engineer."

Another one of the government's key witnesses during the trial was L'Houssaine Kherchtou. During his testimony, Kherchtou tied Abu Anas directly to the bomb plot.

Kherchtou told prosecutors that Abu Anas was in his al Qaeda surveillance class in Pakistan. Ali Mohamed (a.k.a. Abu Mohamed al Amriki) taught the class, according to Kherchtou. He earned the name "al Amriki," or the American, because of his time as an al Qaeda spy inside the US Army.

Mohamed agreed to a plea deal with the government in October 2000. During the court proceedings, Mohamed admitted that he had conducted surveillance on the US Embassy in Nairobi, Kenya, among other Western and Israeli targets. Mohamed said that he had performed this surveillance at the behest of Osama bin Laden.

It was Abu Anas who taught the class how to enter the results of their surveillance into computers, according to Kherchtou. "At the end [of the class]," Kherchtou explained, "Abu Anas al Libi brought two computers so as to teach us how to put all this information we collected. Instead of reporting you put them in the computer and just put them in a disk so as to be easy to carry."

The ties between Abu Anas and Mohamed did not end in Pakistan, according to Kherchtou. The pair visited Kherchtou's apartment in Nairobi, Kenya. The al Qaeda men used the residence to process their surveillance. They took over the sitting room in the apartment, Kherchtou said, "and they closed it with blankets, closed the windows, and they were using it to develop pictures and all their stuff of surveillance."

Kherchtou did not inspect their photographs, so the prosecutor asked how he knew Abu Anas and Mohamed were conducting surveillance. It "was my instructor and the guy was a student in the same class with me, so it's normal that I understand what they are doing," Kherchtou said. "It's very obvious."

But al Qaeda's propagandist, Gadahn, does not want people to think it is so obvious. He argues that the US must have confused Nazih Abdul Hamed al Ruqai ("Abu Anas al Libi"), who has been designated an al Qaeda terrorist by the United Nations since October 2001, for another al Qaeda operative who was involved in the embassy bombings and who was also known as "Abu Anas."

Gadahn's theory falls short.

During the embassy bombings trial, Kherchtou was asked to photo-identify the "Abu Anas al Libi" he had implicated in the bombings. He was shown a picture, which was entered into the record as Government Exhibit 112, of the man who attended the surveillance class and visited his residence in Nairobi. Kherchtou identified al Ruqai as the Abu Anas in question. Surely some of the many other al Qaeda operatives in US custody have been able to accurately identify Abu Anas as well.

Kherchtou also offered additional details concerning Abu Anas's time in Nairobi. He said that Abu Hafs al Masri, then al Qaeda's military chief, visited during the same time frame as the surveillance team.

And one day, Kherchtou said, he ran into Abu Anas walking along a street not far from the US Embassy in Nairobi. "He was carrying a camera," Kherchtou said.

Evidence of ongoing al Qaeda role

During the mid-1990s, a controversy arose in jihadist circles after the Sudanese government demanded that members of the Libyan Islamic Fighting Group (LIFG) leave their country. Muammar Qaddafi's government had pressured the Sudanese to expel the Libyan jihadists.

Al Qaeda and its leader, Osama bin Laden, were sheltering inside the Sudan at the time and had been protecting the LIFG's men. Bin Laden decided that the LIFG's members should leave Sudan. Some LIFG members objected to bin Laden's decision, leaving al Qaeda behind at least for a time.

During his testimony, Kherchtou claimed that Abu Anas was one of these LIFG members. But there is evidence, including within Kherchtou's own testimony, that this was not the case.

Kherchtou explained that even after Abu Anas left Sudan he kept in touch with Ali Mohamed. Abu Anas lived in Britain at the time and, according to Kherchtou, admitted that he been in touch with Mohamed via email or some other means of communication.

The FBI and Western intelligence agencies tracked Abu Anas to Manchester, England. In The Black Banners: The Inside Story of 9/11 and the War Against al Qaeda, former FBI agent Ali Soufan writes that Abu Anas was one of the dual-hatted LIFG-al Qaeda members who "took positions in al Qaeda cells elsewhere" after their expulsion from Sudan.

Abu Anas's residence in Manchester was raided by authorities in the late 1990s. But, Soufan writes, he had wiped his computer's hard drive clean and destroyed much of the evidence against him. Although Abu Anas had been arrested, British authorities were forced to let him go. The FBI did discover what would become known as the "Manchester Manual," a how-to guide for various nefarious activities used by al Qaeda operatives.

The FBI believed that Abu Anas escaped to Afghanistan, where he was beyond the West's reach. After 9/11, he relocated to Iran, where he was placed in a form of loose house arrest or detention by authorities.

In the wake of the Libyan revolution in 2011, however, some US counterterrorism analysts found that Abu Anas had assumed a senior al Qaeda leadership role inside his home country.

An unclassified report published in August 2012 highlights al Qaeda's strategy for building a fully operational network in Libya. The report ("Al Qaeda in Libya: A Profile") was prepared by the federal research division of the Library of Congress under an agreement with the Defense Department's Combating Terrorism Technical Support Office. [See LWJ report, Al Qaeda's plan for Libya highlighted in congressional report.]

Abu Anas al Libi played a key role in al Qaeda's plan for Libya, the report's authors make clear, describing him as the "builder of al Qaeda's network in Libya." This network answers to al Qaeda's senior leadership in Pakistan, according to the report. [See LWJ report, 'Core' al Qaeda member captured in Libya.]

Gadahn avoids any discussion of this evidence. Instead, he cites a report suggesting that Abu Anas was no longer an active al Qaeda member. That same report mischaracterizes the evidence connecting Abu Anas to the 1998 embassy bombings.

Jihad against the Crusader-Zionist alliance

Gadahn's video is similar to past al Qaeda productions. Al Qaeda has portrayed known terrorists and al Qaeda members as victims of aggression in an attempt to capitalize on anti-Western sentiment. The group regularly agitates for the release of known jihadists such as Aafia Siddiqui (a.k.a. "Lady Al Qaeda") and Sheikh Omar Abdul Rahman.

Thus, Gadahn protests Abu Anas's innocence and America's supposed violation of Libyan sovereignty even as he threatens acts of vengeance.

"The kidnapping of Sheikh Abu Anas al Libi, may Allah release him, will not stop us from continuing our jihad against America and its Crusader-Zionist alliance," Gadahn warns.
cptmarginal
 
Posts: 2741
Joined: Tue Apr 10, 2007 8:32 pm
Location: Gordita Beach
Blog: View Blog (0)

PreviousNext

Return to General Discussion

Who is online

Users browsing this forum: SonicG and 57 guests