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Libya after Qaddaf; a nation is reborn
Aref Assaf
October 21, 2011
“I will reduce Libya to two million; that’s how many
Libyans were living in Libya when I came into power in 1969.”
Moammar Qaddafi, April 2011
He lived, ruled, and died by the
sword. After 42 years of eccentric, tyrannical, and oppressive
rule over Libya, Mohammad Gaddafi’s bloodied face was shown on
television screens around the world. The demise of one man would
not have mattered in a democratic society, but in Libya, where
Gaddafi ruled with an iron fist and had zero tolerance for
dissent, his much-celebrated death is truly a milestone for his
country, for the Arab world, and indeed for the world at large.
The world will record
Libyan Liberation Day, October 20, 2011, as the day fighters
killed former Libyan leader Moammar Gaddafi, outside the town of
Sirte. Gaddafi’s refuge in Sirte emphasizes the tribal nature of
Libyan politics, and suggests the dynamics of new conflict in
the future as anti-Gaddafi tribes seek a fundamental reorder
that could mean a purge not only of Gaddafi loyalists, but also
of members of tribes who supported him.
Gaddafi’s
ignominious death is symbolically important for the rebels, but
the fall of Sirte is even more significant for the effect it
will have on the future stability of Libya. With the final
holdout of the pro-Gaddafi resistance overtaken, the NTC
(National Transitional Council) can now move to form a
transitional government. But multiple armed groups across the
country will demand a significant stake in that government,
which will have serious implications for the future unity of the
people who heretofore were referred to as the Libyan opposition.
Though the world has widely recognized Benghazi-based
NTC as the sole legitimate representative of the Libyan people,
this has long since ceased to be the case in the eyes of many
Libyans. The NTC is one of several political forces in the
country. Since the rebel forces entered Tripoli on Aug. 21,
there has been a steady increase of armed groups hailing from
places such as Misurata, Zentan, Tripoli and even eastern Libya
itself that have questioned the authority of leading NTC
members.
These groups have been occupying different
parts of the capital for two months now, despite calls by the
NTC (and some of the groups themselves) to vacate. They also
have been participating in the sieges of cities, in which
pro-Gaddafi remnants continued to hold out after the fall of
Tripoli. Throughout this period, the NTC has repeatedly delayed
the formation of a transitional government, in recent weeks
citing the ongoing fight against Gaddafi as the reason. NTC
leaders said that once the war was finally over, the official
“liberation” of Libya would be declared and a transitional
government would be formed. The fall of Sirte means that this
moment is at hand. The fear is that hating and killing Gaddafi,
which has united all Libyans, may now disintegrate into an
increasingly rowdy post-Gaddafi political environment. With its
leadership increasingly challenged by many of the fighting
forces -- organized on the basis of regional, tribal or Islamist
political affinities -- who see the NTC as too dominated by
former Gaddafi officials, and deriving its authority from its
relations with the West rather than support among Libyans.
For his part, President Obama may take credit for the fall
of Gaddafi. Uncertain at first, and not desiring a direct US
military engagement, Obama has distinguished himself as a
president who does not hesitate to make tough calls, no matter
how delayed. Obama certainly gets credit for siding with the
Libyan people and cutting Gaddafi loose, but the real victory is
Libyan. Alas, the president diluted the benefit of his choice by
his earlier decision literally to embrace Gaddafi, a picture
which is burned in Libyan minds as much as Rumsfeld’s handshake
with Saddam defined U.S.-Iraqi relations for more than a decade.
The United States must do more
for Libya. It could start by dispatching a military medical ship
from Germany to the shores of Libya to treat the over 30,000
injured. The US can offer logistical aid to the arduous task of
rebuilding Libya, which has been devastated by NATO air strikes
and the destruction brought by Qaddafi’s army and the militia.
Libya is a lot more than a vast pool of the world's sweetest
oil: Libya is a nation of 6 million that has suffered four
decades of oppression and deserves our real help. This time our
relationship must be based on people-to-people rather than on
aiding tyrants who serve our narrow and often immoral national
interests.
I think it is important to reflect even in passing on the
plausibility of employing the NATO-Libyan experiment in other
upheavals in the Arab region. Using air and sea strikes to
attack specific targets belonging to the Qaddafi regime has
proven detrimental in weakening the regime's ability to wage any
effective attacks on the rebels. As events in Syria and Yemen
continue to fester with no peaceful end in sight, some pundits
have been calling on the US or through NATO forces to help seal
the fate of Syria’s Assad and Yemen’s Saleh by attacking
governmental targets and military installations. My short answer
is that such a decision will have to be carefully evaluated, as
Libya is so unlike Syria and Yemen. Three factors have to
converge for such military action to be plausible. First, the
Arab League must pass a resolution calling for international
military intervention. Second, the United Nations Security
Council must pass a resolution ‘blessing’ the Arab League
wishes; and finally, a humanitarian crisis has to materialize
where the regime will be seen on verge of committing mass scale
attack on civilians. Without these three imperative factors
coming into play, I see no chance of a foreign intervention to
aid the people of Syria or Yemen.
Gaddafi's death ends a brutal
regime that turned oil-rich Libya into an international pariah.
The Libyans paid with precious blood to rid the world of
Gaddafi. Gaddafi was seen as an international villain causing
the death of so many people, including 36 from New Jersey. It is
never simple or even acceptable to celebrate the death of
anyone, even a tyrant, but for those who lost loved ones, a
measure of justice has been achieved. The rebuilding of our
lives and that of Libya must begin now. If forgiveness and
prudence overrules vigilantism and tribalism, Libya will have a
chance.
Dr. Aref Assaf
is President of American Arab Forum, a think-tank specializing
in Arab and Muslim American affairs.
www.aafusa.org
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