Reverie

Hillary and the brutal murder of Qaddafi

danmand

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October 21, 2016
Hillary Clinton and the Brutal Murder of Qaddafi
by John Wight

On October 20, 2011, Libya’s Muammar al-Gaddafi was brutally murdered by a mob of NATO-backed ‘rebels’, after first being beaten and violated in the most barbaric fashion. History leaves no doubt that not only was the Libyan leader murdered on this day but Libya itself.
The regime-change crew who dominate Western governments have a long indictment sheet against their names. Since 9/11 they have wrought havoc and human misery on a grand scale in their determination to reshape and own a world that has never been theirs to own. Afghanistan, Iraq, Libya – Syria currently embroiled in a pitiless conflict for its survival as a secular, non-sectarian state – this is the miserable legacy of nations which speak the language of democracy while practising the politics of domination.
Of the aforementioned victims of Western imperialism, there is a strong argument to be made that Libya’s destruction constitutes an especially grievous crime. After all, in 2010, the year before it experienced its ‘revolution’, the United Nations Development Programme**considered**Libya a high development country in the Middle East and North Africa. In concrete terms this status translated to a literacy rate of 88.4%, a life expectancy of 74.5 years, gender equality, and various other positive indicators. In addition, Libya enjoyed 4.2% economic growth in 2010 and could boast of foreign assets in excess of $150 billion.
Compare this record to Libya in 2016. According to**testimony**provided by US Army General David Rodriguez to the US Senate Armed Services Committee in March, it is a failed state, with the general estimating it would take ‘“10 years or so” to achieve long-term stability in what is a “fractured society”’.
There is currently no single government or authority in Libya whose writ runs in the entire country. Instead**three competing authorities**control their own fiefdoms. The internationally recognized government is the Government of National Accord (GNC), led by Fayez al-Sarraj, is based in the capital, Tripoli. There is also the Government of National Salvation, led by Khalifa Ghwell, which is also based in Tripoli. The third centre of power, meanwhile, is located in Tobruk in the east of the country. It is headed by an anti-Islamist general, Khalifa Haftar, who leads the Libyan National Army (LNA). Economically, oil revenues, responsible for 90% of revenue under Gaddafi, have halved, violence is widespread, and since 2011 Daesh has managed to gain a foothold, though in recent months the terrorist organization has come under huge pressure in its stronghold of Sirte from forces representing the GNC.
The impact of the chaos that has engulfed the country since Gaddafi was overthrown and murdered can be measured by the flood of Libyans who have attempted the perilous journey across the Mediterranean with the objective of reaching Europe. In the process untold thousands have perished.
UN Security Council Resolution 1973, passed in March 2011, marked the end of the Arab Spring and the beginning of the Arab Winter. The mass and popular demonstrations that succeeded in toppling Tunisian dictator Ben Ali and is Egyptian counterpart Hosni Mubarak were not replicated in Libya. Instead, in Benghazi, where the anti-Gaddafi movement was centred, Islamists**predominated.**There was no nationwide mass movement in Libya, such as those that swept across Tunisia and Egypt, and no popular support for toppling a government and leader who presided over a society that enjoyed the highest standard of living of any in Africa.
Loyalist Gaddafi forces were defeated by NATO not the opposition forces emanating from Benghazi. Indeed it was at the point at which the country’s armed forces were approaching Benghazi, preparatory to crushing the uprising, when NATO intervened – based on the lie of protecting civilians when in truth it was intent on regime change.
Gaddafi’s crime in the eyes of the West was not that he was an authoritarian dictator – how could it be when their closet ally in the region is Saudi Arabia? His crime in their eyes, it was revealed in a tranche of classified**Clinton emails, released by Wikileaks in January of this year, was his intention of establishing a gold-backed currency to compete with the euro and the dollar as an international reserve currency in Africa. In this regard the then French president, Nicolas Sarkozy, and then US secretary of state, Hillary Clinton, were key actors in pushing for NATO intervention. Libyan oil was also a factor.
The classified emails prove beyond any doubt that what took place in Libya was a monstrous crime for which those responsible have yet to be held accountable. On the contrary, Sarkozy is currently in the process of preparing a political return as French president, while Hillary Clinton is favorite to win the race for the White House against Republican nominee Donald Trump.
Of the two, it is Clinton who was**filmed**clapping her hands and laughing at the news of Muammar Gaddafi’s murder in 2011. It is Clinton who pressed for the military intervention that ended in Libya’s destruction. And it is Hillary Clinton who has the gall to present herself as a moral giant in comparison to her rival for the US presidency.
The Libyan people may well disagree.
 

SuperCharge

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"We came, we saw, he died!" Hillary's exact words. Look at Lybia now, it's in shambles.
 

Big Sleazy

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Good riddance
Good riddance ???? Destroying the strongest economy and most stable partner in Africa and turning it into a cesspool is good ? Perhaps we can hope for the same end to Hillary and Fuji.
 

FAST

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Good riddance ???? Destroying the strongest economy and most stable partner in Africa and turning it into a cesspool is good ? Perhaps we can hope for the same end to Hillary and Fuji.
At least both of them are not in Canada.

FAST
 

nottyboi

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May 14, 2008
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Good riddance ???? Destroying the strongest economy and most stable partner in Africa and turning it into a cesspool is good ? Perhaps we can hope for the same end to Hillary and Fuji.
He hates arabs and more so uppity arabs..loves ISIS ...
 

bver_hunter

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Nov 5, 2005
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Good riddance
Agree with you. He instigated terrorism, including the massacares of many of his own people. He was a child sex abuser and killer, as well as paying himself a billion dollars a week.
 

SkyRider

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During his reign I think Libya, despite its small population, was the largest supplier of foreign fighters sent to kill Americans in Iraq.
 

fuji

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Good riddance ???? Destroying the strongest economy and most stable partner in Africa and turning it into a cesspool is good ? Perhaps we can hope for the same end to Hillary and Fuji.
Good riddance to bad rubbish. Gaddafi was an awful dictator and the world is a better place without him.
 

nottyboi

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Good riddance to bad rubbish. Gaddafi was an awful dictator and the world is a better place without him.
Based on all the Libyans fleeing the "better" Libya, you are once again demonstrating your keen powers of observation.
 

MattRoxx

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Nov 13, 2011
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I get around.
The bizarre logic is condoning Gaddafi as a wonderful benevolent leader, merely to create some twisted anti-Hillary propaganda hit job.

From al-Jazeera:

Libya's Colonel Muammar Gaddafi has been Africa's and the Arab world's longest-ruling, most erratic, most grimly fascinating leader - presiding for 42 years over this desert republic with vast oil reserves and just 6 million people.

For years, he was an international pariah blamed for the 1988 bombing of a Pan Am jumbo jet over Lockerbie, Scotland, that killed 270 people. After years of denial, Libya acknowledged responsibility, agreed to pay up to $10 million to relatives of each victim, and Gaddafi declared he would dismantle all weapons of mass destruction.

That eased him back into the international community.
But in February, days after the uprising against him began, Gaddafi gave a televised speech amid violent social unrest against his autocratic rule. In the speech, he vowed to hunt down protesters "inch by inch, room by room, home by home, alleyway by alleyway."

The speech caused a furor that fuelled the armed rebellion against him and it has been since mocked in songs and spoofs across the Arab world.


Gaddafi came to power in 1969 after leading a bloodless coup toppling King Idris at the age of 27. He maintained tight control of his oil-rich country for decades by clamping down on dissidents.

He was born in 1942 in the coastal area of Sirte to parents who were nomads. He went to Benghazi University to study geography but dropped out to join the army.

After seizing power, he laid out a pan-Arab, anti-imperialist philosophy, blended with aspects of Islam. While he permitted private control over small companies, the government controlled the larger ones.

He was an admirer of the Egyptian leader Gamal Abdel Nasser and his Arab socialist and nationalist ideology.

He tried without success to merge Libya, Egypt and Syria into a federation. A similar attempt to join Libya and Tunisia ended in acrimony.

Crushing dissent


In 1977 he changed the country's name to the Great Socialist Popular Libyan Arab Jamahiriyah (State of the Masses) and allowed people to air their views at people's congresses.

However, critics dismissed his leadership as a military dictatorship, accusing him of repressing civil society and ruthlessly crushing dissidents.

The regime has imprisoned hundreds of people for violating the law and sentenced some to death, according to Human Rights Watch.

"Gaddafi, gradually as he took power, he used force and he used brutality,"
Mohammed al-Abdalla, the deputy secretary-general of the National front for Salvation of Libya, told Al Jazeera.

"In the 1970s against students, when he publicly hung students who were marching, demonstrating, demanding rights in Benghazi and in Tripoli and many other squares, and his opposition members abroad in the 1980s, including here in London and other places in Europe and in in Arab Middle East. "He executed, in probably the most brutal massacre that we saw, 1,200 prisoners in the Abu Salim prison who were unarmed, They were already in jail, he executed them in less than three hours."


Gaddafi played a prominent role in organising Arab opposition to the 1978 Camp David peace agreement between Egypt and Israel.

Later shunned by a number of Arab states on the basis of his extreme views on how to settle the Israeli-Palestinian conflict among others, Gaddafi's foreign policy shifted from an Arab focus to an African focus.

His vision of a United States of Africa resulted in the foundation of the African Union.

Lockerbie bombing

Among his many eccentricities, Gaddafi is known to sleep in a Bedouin tent guarded by dozens of female bodyguards on trips abroad.

In the West, Gaddafi is strongly associated with "terrorism", accused of supporting armed groups including FARC in Colombia and the IRA in Northern Ireland.

Libya’s alleged involvement in the 1986 bombing of a Berlin nightclub in which two American soldiers were killed prompted US air attacks on Tripoli and Benghazi, killing 35 Libyans, including Gaddafi’s adopted daughter. Ronald Reagan, the then US president, called him a "mad dog".


The 1988 bombing of the Pan Am flight over Lockerbie in Scotland is possibly the most well known and controversial international incident in which Gaddafi has been involved.

For many years, Gaddafi denied involvement, resulting in UN sanctions and Libya’s status as a pariah state. Abdel Basset al-Megrahi, a Libyan intelligence agent, was convicted for planting the bomb. Gaddafi's regime formally accepted responsibility for the attack in 2003 and paid compensation to the families of those who died.

Also in 2003, Gaddafi broke Libya's isolation from the West by relinquishing his entire inventory of weapons of mass destruction.

In September 2004, George Bush, the US president at the time, formally ended a US trade embargo as a result of Gaddafi's scrapping of the arms programme and taking responsibility for Lockerbie.

The normalisation of relations with Western powers has allowed the Libyan economy to grow and the oil industry in particular has benefited.

However, Gaddafi and Lockerbie came back into the spotlight in 2009, when al-Megrahi was released and returned to Libya. The hero’s welcome al-Megrahi received from Gaddafi on his return was condemned by the the US and the UK, among others.

In September 2009, Gaddafi visited the US for the first time for his first appearance at the UN General Assembly.

His speech was supposed to be 15 minutes, but exceeded an hour and a half. He tore up a copy of the UN charter, accused the Security Council of being a terrorist body similar to al-Qaeda, and demanded $ 7.7 trillion in compensation to be paid to Africa by its past colonial rulers.


During a visit to Italy in August 2010, Gaddafi's invitation to hundreds of young women to convert to Islam overshadowed the two-day trip, which was intended to cement the growing ties between Tripoli and Rome.

Libyan uprising

Inspired by revolutions in Tunisia and Egypt, Libyans began to hold peaceful protests against his regime in February of this year.

Demonstrations were met with military force and the uprising escalated into a civil war, with NATO-led forces later siding with the rebels.

On June 27, the brutal actions of the government were referred to the International Criminal Court and an arrest warrant for Gaddafi was issued for crimes against humanity.

Gaddafi repeatedly blamed the unrest on al-Qaeda and a "colonialist plot". He called those opposed to him "rats", and alleged that they had been influenced by "hallucinogenic drugs".

The war raged on for months, with slow gains for the opposition. Eventually, the rebels entered Tripoli on August 21.
 

Frankfooter

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If it made the situation much worse, by what bizarre logic do you support his ouster.
Same logic used for destroying Iraq.
Even Syria under Assad was better for the world and better for Syrians, despite Assad being a despot.
Military intervention is the worst possible solution to despots/dictators.
 

fuji

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If it made the situation much worse, by what bizarre logic do you support his ouster.
His ouster created the possibility of a better future. I know this will be shocking to you as a supporter of dictators but some people would rather have a revolution than be oppressed by tyrants.
 

SkyRider

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His ouster created the possibility of a better future. some people would rather have a revolution than be oppressed by tyrants.
Unfortunately, history has shown that getting rid of one tyrant is simply getting another tyrant (sometimes worse). Russian Revolution, French Revolution, Iranian Revolution, etc. The most successful was the American Revolution.
 

fuji

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Unfortunately, history has shown that getting rid of one tyrant is simply getting another tyrant (sometimes worse). Russian Revolution, French Revolution, Iranian Revolution, etc. The most successful was the American Revolution.
That's what dictators always say. They justify their brutal totalitarian regimes with scary stories about how awful life will be without their iron fist.

The price for freedom has always been paid in blood, and has always been worth paying.
 

SuperCharge

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Same logic used for destroying Iraq.
Even Syria under Assad was better for the world and better for Syrians, despite Assad being a despot.
Military intervention is the worst possible solution to despots/dictators.
We finally agree on something
 
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