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Archive for the ‘Drive to Global War’ Category

Facing total economic meltdown at home US/UK, spear-heading NATO, have chosen the path of confrontation with the rest of the world, a path which will lead us to the brink of war with Russia and China

Routed from key towns, Libyan rebels seek to organize

Posted by seumasach on April 2, 2011

They want to organize better, but it is difficult. I have to do something,” Mehdawi said. “We have weapons. The rebels will form their own forces.”

The scenario below is consistent with a high-jacked revolution. The strategy of the rebel leadership is to draw in the West rather than to base themselves on the revolutionary forces, the revolutionary youth. At the beginning all the talk was of the enthusiasm and revolutionary elan of the volunteers being too much for Gaddafi’s mercenaries: now they are dismissed as totally inept. It looks like the Interim Council simply made a point of denying them military leadership: now they are actively marginalising them. Are they doing this in collaboration with US/UK special forces? Are US boots on the ground their only option? It looks like it. The situation is now polarized around the issue of western intervention rather than the issue of democracy. As a result Gaddafi has far more credibility than before.

Miami Herald

2nd April, 2011

Libyan rebels with military training began on Friday turning away inexperienced volunteers from the front lines here in an effort to salvage their battle against Moammar Gadhafi’s better trained forces.

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Uranium bombs in Libya?

Posted by seumasach on April 1, 2011

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Libya is another case of selective vigilantism by the west

Posted by seumasach on March 31, 2011

Tariq Ali

Guardian

29th March, 2011

The US-Nato intervention in Libya, with United Nations security council cover, is part of an orchestrated response to show support for the movement against one dictator in particular and by so doing to bring the Arab rebellions to an end by asserting western control, confiscating their impetus and spontaneity and trying to restore the status quo ante.

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Queen Hillary of Libya

Posted by seumasach on March 30, 2011

Pepe Escobar

Asia Times

31st March, 2011

The current stalemate in Libya could last weeks, if not months. In that case, balkanization looms. Think of eastern Libya with Benghazi as capital, oil-rich and with a United States-installed puppet regime (a Libyan Hamid Karzai, like the Afghan president). It would be like a kind of northern Africa Saudi Arabia (the House of Saud would love it).

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Middle East: Obama’s counter-revolution

Posted by seumasach on March 29, 2011

Original version in French was published on 16 March, three days before the military strikes against Libya

Thierry Meyssan

Voltairenet

29th March, 2011

After some hesitation over how to respond to the Arab revolutions, the Obama administration has opted for the strong-arm solution to rescue those vassals which can still be salvaged. As in the past, the task of leading the counter-revolution devolved upon Saudi Arabia. Riyad imposed its Libyan pawns on the international community to the detriment of the insurgents and later trampled over Bahrain, drowning the popular uprising in blood.

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There’s no business like war business

Posted by seumasach on March 29, 2011

Pepe Escobar

Asia Times

30th March, 2011

 

Lies, hypocrisy and hidden agendas. This is what United States President Barack Obama did not dwell on when explaining his Libya doctrine to America and the world. The mind boggles with so many black holes engulfing this splendid little war that is not a war (a “time-limited, scope-limited military action”, as per the White House) – compounded with the inability of progressive thinking to condemn, at the same time, the ruthlessness of the Muammar Gaddafi regime and the Anglo-French-American “humanitarian” bombing.

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Lavrov calls on Nato to stop strikes

Posted by seumasach on March 28, 2011

Morning Star

28th March, 2011

 

 

Russia condemned Western air strikes on Libyan government forces today, calling them meddling in a civil war and in breach of the UN’s no-fly-zone resolution.

Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov said that Resolution 1973 – passed by the UN security council on March 17 – had the sole aim of protecting Libyan civilians.

“And yet there are reports – and nobody denies them – of coalition strikes on columns of Gadaffi’s forces, reports about support for actions by the armed insurgents,” Mr Lavrov said. “There are clear contradictions here.

“Intervention by the coalition in what is essentially an internal civil war is not sanctioned by the UN security council resolution.”

Russia could have vetoed the resolution but chose to abstain. The document authorises “all necessary measures to enforce compliance” with the no-fly zones.

But the country’s leaders have expressed concern that the resolution gave Nato forces too much leeway and that it was causing civilian deaths.

Prime Minister Vladimir Putin said it was like “medieval calls for crusades.”

Mr Lavrov today reiterated Russia’s concern about reports of civilian casualties, which he said had not yet been confirmed, and indicated that Russia wanted UN secretary-general Ban Ki Moon’s special envoy Abdelilah al-Khatib to look into them.

Mr Lavrov did not say whether Russia would try to rein in Nato aggression.

But his remarks, made just hours before US President Barack Obama was expected to set out the mission’s purpose and scope in a speech, suggested Russia could step up criticism if Nato takes further steps beyond its mandate.

Turkish Foreign Minister Ahmet Davutoglu said last week that the resolution was clear and that any extra action “is illegal.”

Last Wednesday the Russian State Duma, the lower house of parliament, called for “an immediate ceasefire and (to) stop deaths and suffering among civilians.”

Libyan rebels emboldened by the air strikes have pushed west along the Mediterranean coast in recent days to retake a series of towns from the government.

 

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Italy to propose joint plan with Germany on Libya

Posted by seumasach on March 27, 2011

Today’s Zaman

27th March, 2011

 

Italy will propose that it and Germany back a joint plan on Libya that involves a ceasefire, a humanitarian corridor and exile for Libyan leader Muammar Gaddafi, Foreign Minister Franco Frattini said.

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Libya: Turkey – Old Colonial Rivalries Revive Over Nation

Posted by seumasach on March 26, 2011

All Africa

25th March, 2011

Ankara — Turkish volte-face Thursday evening to make a sizeable military contribution to NATO’s intervention in the Libyan crisis, after two weeks of fierce opposition to the Alliance’s mingling with Arab affairs, has further blurred Ankara’s position in the Northern African conflict.

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New row over who controls Libyan offensive

Posted by seumasach on March 26, 2011

Herald

26th March, 2011

It came as British forces revealed they had bombed four tanks threatening civilians in the north African state on Thursday.

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French plans to topple Gaddafi on track since last November

Posted by seumasach on March 25, 2011

Voltairenet

25th March, 2011

According to right-wing Italian journalist Franco Bechis, plans to spark the Benghazi rebellion were initiated by French intelligence services in November 2010. As Miguel Martinez from the progressive ComeDonChisciotte website observes, these revelations which have the blessing of the Italian secret services should be interpreted as the sign of internal rivalries within the European capitalist camp.
Voltaire Network wishes to point out that Paris promptly paired up with London in its scheme to overthrow Colonel Khadafi (Franco-British expeditionary force). This plan was recalibrated in the context of the Arab revolutions and taken over by Washington, which imposed its own objectives (counter-revolution in the Arab world and landing AfriCom on the Black continent). Therefore, the current coalition arises from a diversity of ambitions, which accounts for its internal contradictions. The timeline of events which set the stage for the military intervention against Libya is presented below.

 

Timeline of events

October 6, 2011

Nouri Mesmari turned himself to the French secret service and according to the Italians; he masterminded the revolution against Gaddafi. The document was leaked to Italian newspaper Libero.

Mesmari is referred in the documents by the French secret service as ‘The Libyan Wikileak’ because he gave them all the details within the regime and gave them an account of who’s who within Libya and who they should contact and what not.

With all the inside information, by mid January, the Italians say that the French had paved the way for the beginning of the revolution against Gaddafi.

October 20, 2010

Nouri Masmari boarded a Libyan Arab plane directed for Tunis accompanied by all his family. The day after, they were en route to France, claiming that he travelled to Paris due to health reasons. He stayed at the Concorde Lafayette Hotel.

In Paris he never met any doctors. In subsequent days he had several top secret meetings with high secret service French agents and other top government functionaries close to Nicolas Sarkozy.

November 16, 2010

A long car cade of official cars is parked in front of the hotel Concorde Lafayette whilst in the Mesmari suite; an important meeting is taking place. It is a long meeting.

November 18, 2010

A French ‘commercial’ delegation leaves for Benghazi. In the delegation there are officials from the Ministry of Agriculture and representitives from Cam Cereals, France Export Cereals, Cargill, Glencore, France Agrimer, Soufflet, Louis Dreyfous, and Comagra. Among the delegation, posing as government officials, there are French secret service agents and military staff. Their ‘business’ was meeting army officers indicated by Mesmari who will be ready to defect from the Libyan army.

While in Benghazi, contact is made with Libyan air defence colonel, Abdallah Gehani, who was indicated by Nouri Mesmari as an army officer who is ready to collaborate to topple Muammar Gaddafi. Gehani had good contacts in Tunisia too.

It is a secret operation but the Libyan regime suspects that a double game was being played and that something was about to happen.

November 28, 2010

An international warrant of arrest is issued by the Libyan government for Nouri Mesrami. Foreign Minister Musa Koussa is held responsible for the defection of Mesrami and his passport is withdrawn by the authorities.

December 2, 2010

French authorities announce that they have arrested a collaborator of Gaddafi. Word reaches Gaddafi that Mesrami is on house arrest at the Concorde Lafayette Hotel and is furious that his former friend and colleague asked for political asylum in France, where he still resides to this date. In fact during the first week of the uprising in Libya Mesrami gave interviews to Al Jazeera from a Paris studio.

Muammar Gaddafi sends messages to Nouri Mesrami to win him back saying that he forgives him for what he did and invites him back to Libya.

December 16, 2010

An emissary of Gaddafi, Abdallah Mansour head of state media, is arrested at the Hotel Concorde Lafayette trying to contact Mesrami.

December 23, 2010

A delegation of Libyans arrives in Paris for meetings with Mesrami and other French officials. The Libyans are Ali Ounes Mansouri, Farj Charrant and Fathi Boukhris. These three men will be known later together with Ali Hajj as leaders of the revolution, that started from Benghazi.

The Libyan delegation together with Mesrami and French military and secret service personnel dined at an elegant French restaurant at the Champs Elisée.

Decmber 25 – 31, 2010

Between Christmas and the start of the New Year, the French have every details and inside information available and in the compilation of the Maghreb Confidential document, it is stated that “the situation in Benghazi is boiling”.

Januray 22, 2011

Colonel Abdallah Gehani is arrested by the chief of the secret service in Cerenaica Aoudh Saaiti. Two days later the Colonel is transferred to a prison in Tripoli and accused with treason with the aim of holding back any dissent. But it was too late, the ball was already rolling and as the first signs of the revolution were seen a few days later after a prominent lawyer, Fathi Tarbel was arrested. The protest soon turned into clashes and as army officials deserted, the rebels advanced a took over important cities but so far they failed to take Tripoli.

The French government lead the airstrikes over Libya, was the first European state to recognise the new Libyan National Council and establish diplomatic relations. Since the Italian government was made aware of the documents, it started to take the back seat on the Libya crisis, and Prime Minister Berlusconi said that Italian military planes will not be engaged in airstrikes and that he hopes that it does not end into a war.

 

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