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As a Libyan who has witnessed at first hand how the Gaddafi regime evolved into its present murderous self, I can only welcome the start of this military action. My only regret is that it did not take place earlier and thereby spare the lives of thousands of innocent civilians murdered by Gaddafi’s hired hands. I say this as an anti-imperialist, anti-colonialist, progressive pan-Arab nationalist.

By Nureddin Sabir
Editor, Redress Information & Analysis

Tomahawk cruise missiles into Libya against Mo'mmar Kadhafi’s air defense sites

A few moments ago France, the United States, Britain and other NATO countries launched air and cruise missile strikes against Libyan dictator Mu’ammar Gaddafi’s military installations, in implementation of United Nations Security Council Resolution 1973.

The resolution, passed on 17 March, called for a ceasefire and all necessary measures to protect Libyan civilians from Gaddafi’s murderous thugs, including the establishment of a no-fly zone over Libya.

As a Libyan who has witnessed at first hand how the Gaddafi regime evolved into its present murderous self, I can only welcome the start of this military action. My only regret is that it did not take place earlier and thereby spare the lives of thousands of innocent civilians murdered by Gaddafi’s hired hands.

I say this as an anti-imperialist, anti-colonialist, progressive pan-Arab nationalist. And it is from this vantage point that I witness with dismay our friends and natural allies, from the anti-war movementGeorge Galloway in the UK to  Hugo Chavez, Evo Morales and Daniel Ortega in Latin America, condemn the military action against Gaddafi as an imperialist plot whose aim is to seize Libyan oil. and

Regrettably, it would seem that our friends have lost the plot on this occasion.

This is not about oil or money

First, oil has nothing to do with what is currently happening in Libya. Under the Gaddafi regime Western oil companies already controlled the country’s oil, and most of this oil was exported to Western countries anyway. So why would the US and its allies want to seize something they already controlled?

Nor is this about the US paving the way for its financial interests to control or buy up Libya. Gaddafi’s son and heir apparent, Saif al-Islam – a close friend of Israel’s far-right settler foreign minister, the fascist Avigdor Lieberman – enjoyed excellent relations with international billionaires such as  Nathaniel Rothschild, crooks such as Bernie Madoff and dodgy Russians such as Oleg Deripaska, and would in time have opened up Libya to them and others like them. Therefore, if the motive behind the present NATO-led attack were financial, then surely NATO would have intervened to prop up the Gaddafi regime, not the reverse?

The wrong record

Friends on the left and in the anti-war movement, the particular record your are currently playing is inappropriate for the occasion. Please change it.

The plain fact is that France, the US, Britain and others are attacking Gaddafi’s thugs because they have no choice but to do so.

Although since his rehabilitation by the West Gaddafi has been a good friend to Washington, London and Paris, to the extent of participating in George W. Bush’s extraordinary rendition programme and turning Libya into one of the US’s torture sub-contractors in Africa, his unrestrained brutality against the protests that began peacefully in mid-February – brutality that has included the use of battlefield weapons against unarmed civilians – has embarrassed Paris, London and Washington beyond the point of tolerance. They had no choice but to act or else face another Rwanda or Cambodia.

Right suspicion, wrong opposition

Some of our friends accuse the United States, France and Britain of hypocrisy and double standards, arguing that these same countries shrugged their shoulders or tacitly supported similar or worse crimes committed by Israel, notably in Gaza, and are only willing to offer weasel word in the case of gross human rights violations committed by the regimes in Bahrain, Yemen and Saudi Arabia, among others.

That is very true. The United States and its allies in Britain, France and elsewhere are hypocrites who decry crimes against humanity in one place while simultaneously ignoring or supporting them in another. But that does not mean that we should denounce them when they actually do the right thing just because they are not doing the right thing across the board.

We have every right to be suspicious of the ulterior motives that may lie behind Barack Obama’s, Nicolas Sarkozy’s and David Cameron’s sudden dash for the moral high ground in Libya.

But it does not follow that our suspicion should automatically translate into opposition even when these leaders do the right thing to fulfill an urgent need, in this case protecting the Libyan people from a brutal, amoral, traitor who only a few days ago, on Thursday 17 March, promised to occupy Benghazi – a city of one million people – within hours and drown its inhabitants in blood.

Look to the future

"Gaddafi Forced Out"

The concern of our friends on the left and in the anti-war movement should be redirected away from opposition to the current NATO military action against Gaddafi’s thugs and towards what comes after Gaddafi.

If we really do care about justice and progress in Libya, then we should make sure that after Gaddafi the Libyan people are left alone to rebuild their state and create their own government, without Washington, Paris or London abusing whatever credit they accrue in the meantime to plant their own stooge.

Libya’s wealth and wellbeing can be safeguarded only by having a democratic, accountable government that is answerable to its own people, and its own people alone. That is something which only the Libyan people can do.

After their dreadful experience with the Gaddafi family, I have no doubt that they are up to the challenge.

ABOUT THE AUTHOR: *Nureddin Sabir is Libyan and the editor of Redress Information & Analysis (www.redress.cc), a website dedicated to exposing injustice, disinformation and bigotry.



3 Comments

  1. suella on the 20. Mar, 2011 remarked #

    why did no body inteferd with him,during 40 years??why there is no fly Zona in Israel?? while the Zionist killing the palestines??The West and Us want to redraw the map in Middle East and Africa..

  2. Debbie on the 20. Mar, 2011 remarked #

    I agree especially in the case of Palestine. But, in Bahrain they are not going into houses and slaughtering innocents, they are dispersing the crowds and I believe the Saudis have moved in only as a show of support due to the Shia-Sunni angle which Iran might try to exploit. Bahrain will be resolved through dialogue.

    In Libya, they have a humanitarian problem. Gaddhafi’s threats cannot be taken lightly. Yesterday the Gaddafi regime threatened to send in terrorist squads into rebel-controlled areas. Today we learnt that some of the 400 thugs who attacked Benghazi last night and were driven out this morning wore civilian clothes under their uniforms. The suspicion is that they were near the city all the time, kind of sleeper cells. In Libya they are going into rebel homes and slaughtering people.

    The hope has to be that the UN’s resolution will quickly lead Gaddafi’s regime to crumble. It could send a powerful message that the use of brutal repression such as what the Gaddafi regime has unleashed on the protesters will make survival less rather than more likely.

    I also advocate that an international delegation be sent in to negotiate a settlement with Gadaffi. Give him a chance to leave rather than continue to slaughter his people.

  3. DAVID SIKUKU on the 19. Apr, 2011 remarked #

    western countries are only concerned with protection of the libyian people who surfering in the hands of Gaddafi who have stayed for 42 years as a president although he had overstayed for long but he has been helping his pple to eraticate poverty by selling oil and giving them money for use.

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