Following his announcement in December 2003 that Libya would abandon

Similar documents
Issue Overview: Jihad

Playing With Fire: Pitfalls of Egypt s Security Tactics

Institute on Religion and Public Policy. Report on Religious Freedom in Egypt

War in Afghanistan War in Iraq Arab Spring War in Syria North Korea 1950-

US Iranian Relations

replaced by another Crown Prince who is a more serious ally to Washington? To answer this question, there are 3 main scenarios:

EXCLUSIVE: Senior Saudi figures tortured and beaten in purge

the Middle East (18 December 2013, no ).

In recent years, a public debate has been underway in the Western world, both in

IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE EASTERN DISTRICT OF VIRGINIA. Alexandria Division

Saudi-Iranian Confrontation in the Horn of Africa:

Saudi Arabia: Terror threat reduced for time being

Physical Geography This region is extremely arid, and most areas receive less than 18 of precipitation per year. the dry terrain varies from huge

Global History. Objectives

Fighting the Long War-- Military Strategy for the War on Terrorism

Palestine and the Mideast Crisis. Israel was founded as a Jewish state in 1948, but many Palestinian Arabs refused to recognize it.

Who but the Enemy of the American People? Arnie Rosner A sovereign American. A Californian and NOT a U.S. Citizen

Comment - The Damascus December 2009 Bus Explosion December 7, 2009 Alessandro Bacci reports from Damascus, Syria

Blowback. The Bush Doctrine 11/15/2018. What does Bill Kristol believe is the great threat for the future of the world?

REPORT ON A SEMINAR REGARDING ARAB/ISLAMIC PERCEPTIONS OF THE INFORMATION CAMPAIGN

"Military action will bring great costs for the region," Rouhani said, and "it is necessary to apply all efforts to prevent it."

War on Terrorism Notes

How the Relationship between Iran and America. Led to the Iranian Revolution

Grade yourself on the OER. Test Friday on Unit 1

Islamic Militarism and Terrorism in the Modern World. Roots of Hate

A Shake-Up in the Saudi Royal Family

The domino effect: Tunisia, Egypt Who is next?

Syria's Civil War Explained

WESTERN IMPERIALISM AND ISLAMIC FUNDAMENTALISM: what relation? Jamie Gough Department of Town and Regional Planning, Sheffield University

Global Affairs May 13, :00 GMT Print Text Size. Despite a rich body of work on the subject of militant Islam, there is a distinct lack of

Al-Qaeda's Operational Strategies The attempt to revive the debate surrounding the Seven Stages Plan

Syria's Civil War Explained

Iran Hostage Crisis

Policy Workshop of the EU-Middle East Forum (EUMEF) Middle East and North Africa Program. Deconstructing Islamist Terrorism in Tunisia

US Strategies in the Middle East

Deterrence in American Foreign Policy: Theory and Practice

Negative Attitudes toward the United States in the Muslim World: Do They Matter?

Kingmaker: The Rise of Mohammed bin Salman. ACW Research & Analysis Unit

Factsheet about 9/11. Page 1

THE ISIS CHALLENGE IN LIBYA

Weekly Geopolitical Report

Regional Issues. Conflicts in the Middle East. Importance of Oil. Growth of Islamism. Oil as source of conflict in Middle East

Turnover: What Are the Implications of Recent and Upcoming Changes in Hamas? Yousef Munayyer

31/05/2013 Contact :

ISLAMIC FUNDAMENTALISM IN EGYPTIAN POLITICS

To: Date: :15 Subject: Congrats!


Egypt s Fateful Verdict

The Proxy War for and Against ISIS

9/11 BEFORE, DAY OF, AND AFTER WHAT HAPPENED AND WHY?

The handwritten document

ANOTHER VIEWPOINT (AVP_NS84 January 2003) GEORGE BUSH TO SADDAM HUSSEIN: DO AS WE SAY, NOT AS WE DO! Elias H. Tuma

Daily Writing Question. How do you think we still feel the effects of 9/11 today?

Congressional Testimony

Rise of the Muslim Brotherhood

CHINA AND THE MUSLIM WORLD: THE CASE OF IRAN, SAUDI ARABIA, AND TURKEY. Bambang Cipto University of Muhammadiyah Yogyakarta, Indonesia

Saudi Succession and Stability

Jihadist women, a threat not to be underestimated

Yemen. The conflict in Yemen is defined by the struggles between the Sunni-led government and

Syria's Civil War Explained

IntelCenter. al-qaeda s Badr al-riyadh Video v1.1 Sunday, 8 February :11:30 EST / 23:11:30 GMT FOR PUBLIC RELEASE

Understanding Jihadism

Introduction: Key Terms/Figures/Groups: OPEC%

Syria's Civil War Explained

Israeli-Palestinian Arab Conflict

Security Threats in the Levant Basin

Chapter 8: Political Geography KEY ISSUES #3 & #4

Overview 1. On June 29, 2014, ISIS leader Abu Bakr al-baghdadi declared the establishment of the

9/11. Before, The Day of, and After. Write a journal entry telling me 5 things that happened on 9/11. Label it Journal #1

COULD KING HUSSEIN HAVE STOPPED SADDAM HUSSEIN? By Nick Gier

African Caucus Topic A: Combatting the Rise of Terrorism in Africa. Chairs: Mariana Araujo, Shalom Rubino

With friends like these... Is Syria seeing a spill over from Iraq?

Recently, the group released videos showing the killing of two American journalists in Syria.

Supporting the Syrian Opposition

Large and Growing Numbers of Muslims Reject Terrorism, Bin Laden

SAUDI ARABIA. and COUNTERTERRORISM FACT SHEET: FIGHTING AND DEFEATING DAESH MAY 2017

4/11/18. PSCI 2500 INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS Jim Butterfield Davis Arthur-Yeboah April 11, 2018

fragility and crisis

Islam and Terrorism. Nov. 28, 2016 Clarity in defining the enemy is essential to waging war.

November Guidelines for the demilitarization of Gaza and a long-term arrangement in the South. MK Omer Barlev

Global Security Briefing February 2017 The UK and the Terror Threat Paul Rogers

The^JAMESTWN THE BATTLE FOR YEMEN. Al-Qaeda and the Struggle for Stability. Edited By Ramzy Mardini. The Jamestown Foundation Washington, DC

Monday, March 07, 2005 [Posted by Professor Juan Cole on his popular blog Informed Comment ] Foreign Occupation has Produced Radical Muslim Terrorism

NEW BOOK REVEALS BRITISH COLLUSION WITH RADICAL ISLAM DURING THE ARAB SPRING

Teachings. Controversies

PERSONAL INTRODUCTION

Worldwide Terrorism, Part I. By William R. Polk. U.S. President George Bush told his newly appointed senior officials at the first

Pakistan - Researched and compiled by the Refugee Documentation Centre of Ireland on 25 April 2012

THE SULTANATE OF OMAN

VIENNA MODEL UNITED NATIONS CLUB

THE ANDREW MARR SHOW INTERVIEW: MICHAEL FALLON, MP DEFENCE SECRETARY NOVEMBER 29 th 2015

A fragile alliance: how the crisis in Egypt caused a rift within the anti-syrian regime block

BIOGRAPHY OF SADDAM HUSSAIN PART - 1. By SIDDHANT AGNIHOTRI B.Sc (Silver Medalist) M.Sc (Applied Physics) Facebook: sid_educationconnect

The Muslim Brotherhood s Global Threat. Dr. Hillel Fradkin. Hudson Institute. Testimony Prepared For

The Roots of Terrorism in Europe. Copenhagen 2-3 May 2005 S U M M A R Y

Morocco. Hundreds of returned jihadists across the Strait of Gibraltar who intelligence officials fear pose a large, residual threat on Europe s

28 th Arab Summit: Beyond the Veneer of Optimism INSTITUTE OF STRATEGIC STUDIES. Issue Brief. April 14, Arhama Siddiqa, Research Fellow, ISSI

ANOTHER DAY IN THE WAR ZONE

Will It. Arab. The. city, in. invasion and of. International Marxist Humanist. Organization

Transcription:

Libya: From Rogue-State to Partner Alison Pargeter Following his announcement in December 2003 that Libya would abandon its weapons of mass destruction (WMD) programmes, Colonel Qadhafi has been working hard to complete his country s rehabilitation into the international community. Despite Qadhafi s ongoing co-operation however a number of issues have served to slow this process down, including allegations of a Libyan assassination attempt against the former Crown Prince of Saudi Arabia. This has resulted in Libya s continued inclusion in the US State Sponsors of Terrorism list. Nevertheless it appears that Libya is increasingly coming to be seen as a partner in the war against terror and is now considered as a trusted ally in this respect. However, like many of the regimes of the region Tripoli has been keen to emphasise the international dimensions of its terrorist problem as a means of better suppressing its own domestic dissent. Whilst this might bring it more friends in Washington and European capitals, it is unlikely to stem the support for an Islamist alternative that persists among large sections of the Libyan population. Abandoning WMD Qadhafi s decision to abandon Libya s WMD programmes and to co-operate with the international community came as a surprise to many in view of the fact that Libya had developed a reputation for supporting terrorist causes and for being antagonistic to the West in general. However, this move should be viewed as part of an ongoing attempt by the Libyan regime following the end of the Cold War to restore its international standing and to mend its relations with the West and with the US in particular. The main reason behind these efforts was the need for Libya to kick-start its economy that had been eroded by a combination of international sanctions, poor oil prices and the cumulative effects of three decades of economic mismanagement that had resulted in the regime being increasingly unable to meet the needs of its growing population. From the end of the 1990s, the Libyans made a series of gestures to the West in an attempt to resolve their situation. In April 1999 Qadhafi handed the Lockerbie suspects over for trial in the Netherlands and following the trial co-operated in resolving the compensation issue. In November 2002, Libya signed up to the International Code of Conduct Against Ballistic Missile Proliferation at a meeting at the Hague, and Qadhafi was also quick to offer its support to the US in the aftermath of 5

Journal of Middle Eastern Geopolitics the attacks of 9/11, providing intelligence information about suspected Libyan Islamist militants. However, it was the Bush administration s willingness to respond positively to these overtures following the invasion of Iraq in 2003 that really changed the international landscape for Libya. There have been suggestions that it was the war in Iraq that prompted Qadhafi to co-operate over WMD as he feared he was would be next on Bush s target list. Whilst the Iraq war may have played a part in Qadhafi s decision, it clearly was not the motivating factor. This remained the need to restore international credibility in order to bring investment and much needed technical expertise back into the country. Break with the Past? Although Qadhafi has welcomed the lifting of sanctions and the new inflows of investment by US energy firms in particular, he remains angered by the fact that Libya has yet to be removed from the US state sponsors of terrorism list. The Libyans have found this process confusing and frustrating and have complained that the Bush administration keeps moving the goalposts. The Americans unwillingness to spell out exactly what the Libyan regime has to do to get off the list may be partly related to differences of opinion within the Bush administration. However, there have also been a number of incidents that have come to light over the past couple of years that have caused the US to stop and think about whether Qadhafi has really changed his ways. In 2004 for example the Mauritanian regime accused Libya, and Colonel Qadhafi personally of supporting rebel factions accused of being behind a foiled plot to overthrow President Maaouiya Ould Taya. The two regimes have tended to have a troubled relationship in view of the fact that the former Mauritanian government has traditionally kept up relations with Israel. However, Libya denied any involvement in the attempted coup and the two countries patched up their relations. These have been strengthened with the new regime that took over in Mauritania in August 2004. On a more serious level, Qadhafi was accused in 2004 of being behind an alleged assassination attempt against Crown Prince Abdullah, now King of Saudi Arabia. The Saudi regime alleged that through a number of Libyans and through Abdelrahman al-amoudi a well known American Islamist who had strong connections with parts of the Libyan regime - Qadhafi had paid money to members of the Saudi opposition in order for them to carry out an assassination attack against the then Crown Prince. The Libyan regime denied these allegations, but did acknowledge that it had supported Saudi opposition elements in their struggle against the ruling family there. However, the death of King Fahd and Abdullah s coming to the throne in August 2005 appears to have opened the

Alison Pargeter opportunity for a new start on this front and Libya and Saudi Arabia are gradually repairing their relations. Saudi Arabia released the Libyans who they had imprisoned in relation to the alleged attempt, including Mohamed Ismail, one of the close aides of Qadhafi s son Saif al-islam. More importantly for Libya however, whilst the US raised their concerns about the issue, overall it appears not to have done any long-term damage to their improving relations. More recently the US has also stepped into the debate over the case of the Bulgarian and Palestinian medics who were sentenced to death after being convicted in 2004 of deliberately infecting over 400 children in a hospital with the HIV virus. After an appeal for help by the Bulgarian government, President Bush recently indicated that Libya would not be allowed off of the terrorism list unless it released the medics. The Libyan regime however is in a dilemma. Whilst it needs to free the medics in order to complete it rehabilitation, Qadhafi is anxious not to look as though he is selling out to the West and more importantly there is very strong public feeling inside Libya that the medics are guilty and should be executed. It look as though this will eventually be resolved on a political rather than a judicial level as the regime is currently scrabbling to find a solution that will prove acceptable to both sides. However the Libyans are frustrated that an issue that is not generally considered to be related to terrorism now appears to be being linked to their being on the terrorism list. Partner Against Terror Ironically despite still being on the terrorism list, Libya is increasingly being considered as an important and trusted partner in the global war against terror. Libya has provided intelligence information including lists of names of suspected Libyan militants to the international community. There also appears to be a significant degree of co-operation with US intelligence agencies in relation to Libyan terror suspects. It has been alleged for example that the CIA has flown terror suspects to Libya, among other countries that practise torture, in order for them to be interrogated. Furthermore, Libyan Guantanamo detainee, Omar Deghayes alleges that he has been visited and abused there by Libyan security agents. In addition it is believed that there was some American involvement in the handing over of Abu Munder al-saidi and Abdullah Sadeq - two leading figures in the designated terrorist organisation, the Libyan Islamic Fighting Group - who were arrested in the Far East and returned to Libya in 2004. More recently in October 2005 Libya signed a memorandum of understanding with the UK making provision for a number of Libyan Islamists who were arrested in Britain to be returned to Tripoli. However, for the Libyans, this stance against Islamist militancy is not new. Indeed, Libya has considered itself to be at the forefront in the fight against 7

Journal of Middle Eastern Geopolitics terrorism since the mid 1990s when militant Islamism emerged in North Africa and Qadhafi has repeatedly stressed that he publicly condemned Osama Bin Ladin as early as 1995. He has also taken an uncompromising stance against any form of politicised Islam inside Libya. Like many countries in the region, Libya experienced an Islamic revival in the 1980s and a number of militant Islamist groups emerged inside the country. The most well known and developed of these organisations was the Libyan Islamic Fighting Group that was formed in Afghanistan in 1990 by a group of Libyans veterans who had fought against the Soviets. When the regime discovered the group s presence in the mid 1990s it took a brutal hard line approach, liquidating the LIFG and other militant groups operating inside the country. The regime killed and arrested hundreds of militants and their suspected sympathisers, forcing those who could to flee the country and to seek refuge in Europe. The regime also debilitated the more moderate Libyan Islamic Group - the Libyan branch of the international Muslim Brotherhood arresting over 150 of its members in 1998 and convicting them of belonging to a banned organisation. Since then the regime has remained vigilant against any form of organised opposition, including that of an Islamist nature and as a result, despite rumours of small pockets of insurgents still fighting in the mountainous eastern regions, the regime has succeeded in wiping out any organised Islamist movement inside the country. However, Qadhafi has continued to stress the threat that international terrorism poses to the country. Indeed, Libya must look to be an appealing target to groups such as Al-Qa ida. Not only is the regime considered in such circles to be corrupt and secular, but it has now thrown in its lot very publicly with the West. The regime has repeatedly warned of the threat of terrorists slipping into the country and in September 2004 Public Security Secretary Nasser Al-Mabrouk announced that the Libyan authorities had arrested a number of suspects believed to have cultural links to Al-Qa ida and who were caught trying to enter the country from the south, although these reports were never publicly verified. The regime has also asserted that the members of the LIFG that are currently residing in the UK are linked to Al-Qa ida. However, in reality the LIFG has always been careful to maintain its independence from Bin Ladin and has concentrated primarily on a nationalist agenda aimed at overthrowing Qadhafi. The regime has cited this terrorist threat as the reason behind the efforts it has made to beef up its internal security apparatus since the start of its rehabilitation. In 2004 for example the police were given military powers in order to tackle the terrorist threat and there are currently rumours that despite state sector wages having been frozen since the early 1980s, the security forces have recently been awarded significant pay rises. Whilst Qadhafi may well be concerned about international terrorists targeting Tripoli, these measures are aimed 8

Alison Pargeter more at curbing domestic dissent and potential unrest as contrary to expectations the majority of the population is still not feeling any of the benefits of the new openness. In fact, those who have benefited from the new economic opportunities since the lifting of sanctions appear to be primarily the sons and daughters of Qadhafi and of high-ranking members of the regime who are currently amassing huge personal fortunes. Most Libyans continue to take on two or three jobs in order to survive and despite the increase in oil revenues are not seeing any tangible improvement in living conditions. Indeed, like the rest of the Arab world, Libyan society is experiencing an increased Islamicisation and there appears to be growing support, albeit not in any organised form, for an Islamist alternative. Whilst it might suit the West to enable Qadhafi to use repression against the population at large in order to keep the lid on political Islamist activism, including that of a militant nature, arguably this is only serving to perpetuate the conditions that fuelled militancy in the first place. Alison Pargeter is Research Fellow at the International Policy Institute, King s College London 9

10 Journal of Middle Eastern Geopolitics