The Secret War in Libya
Eric Draitser
January 23, 2014
uruknet.info
The
battles currently raging in the South of Libya are no mere tribal
clashes. Instead, they represent a possible burgeoning alliance between
black Libyan ethnic groups and pro-Gaddafi forces intent upon
liberating their country of a neocolonial NATO-installed government.
On Saturday January 18th, a
group of heavily armed fighters stormed an air force base outside the
city of Sabha in southern Libya, expelling forces loyal to the
"government" of Prime Minister Ali Zeidan, and occupying the base. At
the same time, reports from inside the country began to trickle in that
the green flag of the Great Socialist People�s Libyan Arab Jamahiriya
was flying over a number of cities throughout the country. Despite the
dearth of verifiable information � the government in Tripoli has
provided only vague details and corroboration � one thing is certain:
the war for Libya continues.
On the Ground
Libya�s Prime Minister Ali Zeidan called
an emergency session of the General National Congress to declare a
state of alert for the country after news of the storming of the air
base broke. The Prime Minister announced that he had ordered troops
south to quell the rebellion, telling reporters
that, "This confrontation is continuing but in a few hours it will be
solved." A spokesman for the Defense Ministry later claimed that the
central government had reclaimed control of the air base, stating that "A
force was readied, then aircraft moved and took off and dealt with the
targets�The situation in the south opened a chance for some
criminals�loyal to the Gaddafi regime to exploit this and to attack the
Tamahind air force base�We will protect the revolution and the Libyan
people."
In addition to the assault on the
airbase, there have been other attacks on individual members of the
government in Tripoli. The highest profile incident was the recent assassination
of the Deputy Industry Minister Hassan al-Droui in the city of Sirte.
Although it is still unclear whether he was killed by Islamist forces or
Green resistance fighters, the unmistakable fact is that the central
government is under assault and is unable to exercise true authority or
provide security in the country. Many have begun speculating that his
killing, rather than being an isolated, targeted assassination, is part
of a growing trend of resistance in which pro-Gaddafi Green fighters
figure prominently.
The rise of the Green resistance forces
in Sabha and elsewhere is merely one part of larger and more complex
political and military calculus in the South where a number of tribes
and various ethnic groups have risen against what they correctly
perceive to be their political, economic, and social marginalization.
Groups such as the Tawergha and Tobou ethnic minorities, both of which
are black African groups, have endured vicious attacks at the hands of
Arab militias with no support from the central government. Not only
have these and other groups been the victims of ethnic cleansing, but they have been systematically shut out of participation in Libyan political and economic life.
The tensions came to a head earlier this
month when a rebel chief from the Arab Awled Sleiman tribe was killed.
Rather than an official investigation or legal process, the Awled
tribesmen attacked their black Toubou neighbors, accusing them of
involvement in the murder. The resulting clashes have since killed
dozens, once again demonstrating that the dominant Arab groups still
view their dark skinned neighbors as something other than countrymen.
Undoubtedly, this has led to a reorganization of the alliances in the
region, with the Toubou, Tuareg and other black minority groups that
inhabit southern Libya, northern Chad and Niger moving closer to the
pro-Gaddafi forces. Whether or not these alliances are formal or not
still remains unclear, however it is apparent that many groups in Libya
have come to the realization that the government installed by NATO has
not lived up to its promises, and that something must be done.
The Politics of Race in Libya
Despite the high-minded rhetoric from
Western interventionists regarding "democracy" and "freedom" in Libya,
the reality is far from it, especially for dark skinned Libyans who have
seen their socioeconomic and political status diminished with the end
of the Jamahiriya government of Muammar Gaddafi. While these peoples
enjoyed a large measure of political equality and protection under the
law in Gaddafi�s Libya, the post-Gaddafi era has seen their rights all
but stripped from them. Rather than being integrated into a new
democratic state, the black Libyan groups have been systematically
excluded.
In fact, even Human Rights Watch
� an organization which in no small measure helped to justify the NATO
war by falsely claiming that Gaddafi forces used rape as a weapon and
were preparing "imminent genocide" � has reported that, "A crime
against humanity of mass forced displacement continues unabated, as
militias mainly from Misrata prevented 40,000 people from the town of
Tawergha from returning to their homes from where they had been expelled
in 2011." This fact, coupled with the horrific stories and images
of lynchings, rapes, and other crimes against humanity, paints a very
bleak picture of life in Libya for these groups.
In its 2011 report, Amnesty International
documented a number of flagrant war crimes carried out by the so called
"freedom fighters" of Libya who, despite being hailed in the Western
media as "liberators", used the opportunity of the war to carry out mass
executions of black Libyans as well as rival clans and ethnic groups.
This is of course in stark contrast to the treatment of black Libyans
under the Jamahiriya government of Gaddafi which was praised up and down
by the Human Rights Council of the United Nations in their 2011 report
which noted that Gaddafi had gone to great lengths to ensure economic
and social development, as well as specifically providing economic
opportunities and political protections to black Libyans and migrant
workers from neighboring African countries. With this in mind, is it
any wonder that Al Jazeera quoted a pro-Gaddafi Tuareg fighter in September 2011
as saying, "fighting for Gaddafi is like a son fighting for his
father�[We will be] ready to fight for him until the last drop of
blood."
As the Toubou and other black ethnic
groups clash with Arab militias, their struggle should be understood in
the context of a continued struggle for peace and equality. Moreover,
the fact that they must engage in this form of armed struggle again
illustrates the point that many international observers made from the
very beginning of the war: NATO�s aggression was never about protecting
civilians or human rights, but rather regime change for economic and
geopolitical interests. That the majority of the population, including
black ethnic minorities, is worse off today than they ever were under
Gaddafi is a fact that is actively suppressed.
Black, Green, and the Struggle for Libya
It would be presumptuous to assume that
the military victories made by the pro-Gaddafi Green resistance in
recent days will be long-lasting, or that they represent an irreversible
shift in the political and military landscape of the country. Though
decidedly unstable, the neocolonial puppet government in Tripoli is
supported economically and militarily by some of the most powerful
interests in the world, making it difficult to simply overthrow it with
minor victories. However, these developments do signal an interesting
shift in the calculus on the ground. Undoubtedly there is a confluence
between the black ethnic minorities and the Green fighters as both
recognize their enemy as being the tribal militias who participated in
the overthrow of Gaddafi as well as the central government in Tripoli.
Whether a formal alliance emerges from this remains to be seen.
Were such an alliance to develop
however, it would be a watershed moment in the continued war for Libya.
As Green resistance fighters have shown in Sabha, they are able to
organize themselves in the south of the country where they enjoy a large
degree of popular support. One could imagine an alliance in the south
that would be able to hold territory and possibly consolidate power
throughout the southern part of Libya, creating a de facto independent
state. Naturally, the cry from NATO and its apologists would be that
this is anti-democratic and counter-revolution. This would be
understandable as their goal of a unified Libya subservient to
international finance capital and oil interests would become
unattainable.
One should be careful not to make too
many assumptions about the situation in Libya today, as reliable details
are hard to come by. More to the point, Western media has attempted to
completely suppress the fact that the Green resistance even exists, let
alone is active and winning victories. All this simply further
illustrates that the war for Libya rages on, whether the world wants to
admit it or not.
Eric Draitser is the founder of StopImperialism.com. He is an
independent geopolitical analyst based in New York City. You can reach
him at ericdraitser@gmail.com.Source |
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