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Editorial See other Editorial Articles Title: History repeats itself, with mistakes of Iraq rehearsed afresh History repeats itself, with mistakes of Iraq rehearsed afresh By Robert Fisk on August 25, 2011 Robert Fisk The Independent August 25, 2011 Doomed always to fight the last war, we are recommitting the same old sin in Libya. Muammar Gaddafi vanishes after promising to fight to the death. Isnt that just what Saddam Hussein did? And of course, when Saddam disappeared and US troops suffered the very first losses from the Iraqi insurgency in 2003, we were told by the US proconsul Paul Bremer, the generals, diplomats and the decaying television experts that the gunmen of the resistance were die-hards, dead-enders who didnt realise that the war was over. And if Gaddafi and his egg-headed son remain at large and if the violence does not end how soon will we be introduced once more to the dead-enders who simply will not understand that the lads from Benghazi are in charge and that the war is over? Indeed, within 15 minutes literally of my writing the above words (2pm yesterday), a Sky News reporter had re-invented die-hards as a definition for Gaddafis men. See what I mean? Needless to say, all is for the best in the best of all possible worlds as far as the West is concerned. No one is disbanding the Libyan army and no one is officially debarring the Gaddafi-ites from a future role in their country. No one is going to make the same mistakes we made in Iraq. And no boots are on the ground. No walled-off, sealed-in Green Zone Western zombies are trying to run the future Libya. Its up to the Libyans, has become the joyful refrain of every State Department/ Foreign Office/Quai dOrsay factotum. Nothing to do with us! But, of course, the massive presence of Western diplomats, oil-mogul representatives, highly paid Western mercenaries and shady British and French servicemen all pretending to be advisers rather than participants is the Benghazi Green Zone. There may (yet) be no walls around them but they are, in effect, governing Libya through the various Libyan heroes and scallywags who have set themselves up as local political masters. We can overlook the latters murder of their own commanding officer for some reason, no one mentions the name of Abdul Fatah Younes any more, though he was liquidated in Benghazi only a month ago but they can only survive by clinging to our Western umbilicals. Of course, this war is not the same as our perverted invasion of Iraq. Saddams capture only provoked the resistance to infinitely more attacks on Western troops because those who had declined to take part in the insurgency for fear that the Americans would put Saddam back in charge of Iraq now had no such inhibitions. But Gaddafis arrest along with Saifs would undoubtedly hasten the end of pro-Gaddafi resistance to the rebels. The Wests real fear right now, and this could change overnight should be the possibility that the author of the Green Book has made it safely through to his old stomping ground in Sirte, where tribal loyalty might prove stronger than fear of a Nato-backed Libyan force. Sirte, where Gaddafi, at the very start of his dictatorship, turned the regions oil fields into the first big up-for-grabs international dividend for foreign investors after his 1969 revolution, is no Tikrit. It is the site of his first big African Union conference, scarcely 16 miles from the place of his own birth, a city and region that benefited hugely from his 41-year rule. Strabo, the Greek geographer, described how the dots of desert settlements due south of Sirte made Libya into a leopard skin. Gaddafi must have liked the metaphor. Almost 2,000 years later, Sirte was pretty much the hinge between the two Italian colonies of Tripolitania and Cyrenaica. And in Sirte the rebels were defeated by the loyalists in this years six-month war; we shall soon, no doubt, have to swap these preposterous labels when those who support the pro-Western Transitional National Council will have to be called loyalists, and pro-Gaddafi rebels turn into the terrorists who may attack our new Western-friendly Libyan administration. Either way, Sirte, whose inhabitants are now supposedly negotiating with Gaddafis enemies, may soon be among the most interesting cities in Libya. So what is Gaddafi thinking now? Desperate, we believe him to be. But really? We have chosen many adjectives for him in the past: irascible, demented, deranged, magnetic, tireless, obdurate, bizarre, statesmanlike (Jack Straws description), cryptic, exotic, bizarre, mad, idiosyncratic and most recently tyrannical, murderous and savage. But in his skewed, shrewd view of the Libyan world, Gaddafi would do better to survive and live to continue a civil-tribal conflict and thus consume the Wests new Libyan friends in the swamp of guerrilla warfare and slowly sap the credibility of the new transitional power. But the unpredictable nature of the Libyan war means that words rarely outlive their writing. Maybe Gaddafi hides in a basement tunnel beneath the Rixos Hotel or lounges in one of Robert Mugabes villas. I doubt it. Just so long as no one tries to fight the war before this one. Source
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#1. To: tom007, anyone, 4 (#0)
What does this mean? Thanks.
Break the Conventions - Keep the Commandments - G.K.Chesterson I don't know.
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