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	<title>Cubadebate (English) &#187; Arabia</title>
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		<title>Libya: The real war starts now</title>
<link>http://en.cubadebate.cu/opinions/2011/09/14/libya-real-war-starts-now/</link>
		<comments>http://en.cubadebate.cu/opinions/2011/09/14/libya-real-war-starts-now/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 14 Sep 2011 21:34:27 +0000</pubDate>
<dc:creator>Cubadebate</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Opinions]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Arabia]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Libya]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Muammar al-Gaddafi]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[NATO]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://en.cubadebate.cu/?p=2062</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Enough about The Big G's downfall. Now comes the real nitty-gritty; Afghanistan 2.0, Iraq 2.0, or a mix of both. The "NATO rebels" have always made sure they don't want foreign occupation. But the North Atlantic Treaty Organization - which made the victory possible - can't control Libya without boots on the ground. So multiple scenarios are now being gamed in NATO's headquarters in Mons, Belgium - under a United Nations velvet cushion. ]]></description>
				<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><strong>Pepe Escobar</strong></p>
<p><strong>(Tlaxcala)</strong></p>
<p><img class="alignleft size-full wp-image-2063" src="/files/2011/09/Libia.jpg" alt="" width="300" height="250" />According to already leaked plans, sooner or  later there may be troops from  																	Persian Gulf monarchies  and friendly allies such as Jordan and especially NATO  															 		member Turkey, also very keen to bag large commercial contracts.  Hardly any  																	African nations will be part of it &#8211; Libya  now having being &#8220;relocated&#8221; to Arabia.</p>
<p>The Transitional National Council (TNC) will go for it &#8211; or forced to go  for it  																	- if, or when, Libya spirals into chaos. Still  it will be an extremely hard  																	sell &#8211; as the wildly  disparate factions of &#8220;NATO rebels&#8221; are frantically  																	 consolidating their fiefdoms, and getting ready to turn on each other.</p>
<p>There&#8217;s no evidence so far the TNC &#8211; apart from genuflecting in the  altar of  																	NATO member nations &#8211; has any clue about  managing a complex political landscape  																	inside Libya.</p>
<p>Guns and no roses</p>
<p>Everyone in Libya is now virtually armed to its teeth. The economy is   																	paralyzed. A nasty catfight over who will control  Libya&#8217;s unfrozen billions of  																	dollars is already on.</p>
<p>The Obeidi tribe is furious with the TNC as there&#8217;s been no  investigation over  																	who killed rebel army commander  Abdul Fattah Younis on July 29. The tribals  																	have  already threatened to exact justice with their own hands.</p>
<p>Chief suspect in the killing is the Abu Ubaidah bin Jarrah brigade &#8211; a  hardcore  																	Islamic fundamentalist militia that has  rejected NATO intervention and refused  																	to fight under  the TNC, branding both TNC and NATO as &#8220;infidels&#8221;.</p>
<p>Then there&#8217;s the drenched-in-oil question; When will the Libya Islamic  Fighting  																	Group (LIFG)-al-Qaeda nebula organize their  own putsch to take out the TNC?</p>
<p>All over Tripoli, there are graphic echoes of militia hell in Iraq.  Former US  																	Central Intelligence Agency asset and former  &#8220;war on terror&#8221; detainee, General  																	Abdelhakim Belhaj &#8211;  issued from the Derna circle, the ground zero of Islamic  													 				fundamentalism in Libya &#8211; is the leader of the brand new Tripoli  Military  																	Council.</p>
<p><span>Accusations have already been hurled by other  militias that he did not fight  																	for the &#8220;liberation&#8221; of  Tripoli so he must go &#8211; whether or not the TNC says so.  														 			This essentially means that the LIFG-al-Qaeda nebula sooner or later  may be  																	fighting an arm of the upcoming guerrilla war &#8211;  against the TNC, other  																	militias, or both.</p>
<p>In Tripoli, rebels from Zintan, in the western mountains, control the  airport.  																	The central bank, Tripoli&#8217;s port and the  Prime Minister&#8217;s office are being  																	controlled by rebels  from Misrata. Berbers from the mountain town of Yafran  															 		control Tripoli&#8217;s central square, now spray-painted &#8220;Yafran  Revolutionaries&#8221;.  																	All these territories are clearly  marked as a warning.</p>
<p>As the TNC, as a political unit, already behaves like a lame duck; and  as the  																	militias will simply not vanish &#8211; it&#8217;s not hard  to picture Libya also as a new  																	Lebanon; the war in  Lebanon began when each neighborhood in Beirut was carved  													 				up between Sunnis, Shi&#8217;ites, Christian Maronites, Nasserites and  Druse.</p>
<p>The Lebanonization of Libya, on top of it, includes the deadly Islamic   																	temptation &#8211; which is spreading like a virus all across  the Arab Spring.</p>
<p>At least 600 Salafis who fought in the Sunni Iraqi resistance against  the US  																	were liberated from Abu Salim prison by the  rebels. It&#8217;s easy to picture them  																	profiting from the  widespread looting of kalashnikovs and shoulder-launched  														 			Soviet Sam-7 anti-aircraft missiles to bolster their own hardcore  Islamist  																	militia &#8211; following their own agenda, and  their own guerrilla war.</p>
<p>Welcome to our racist &#8216;democracy&#8217;</p>
<p>The African Union (AU) will not recognize the TNC; in fact, it  charges the NATO  																	rebels of indiscriminate killing of  black Africans, all bundled up as  																	&#8220;mercenaries&#8221;.</p>
<p>According to the AU&#8217;s Jean Ping, &#8221; &#8230; the TNC seems to confuse black  people  																	with mercenaries &#8230; [They seem to think] all  blacks are mercenaries. If you do  																	that it means  one-third of the population of Libya which is black is also  											 						mercenaries.&#8221;</p>
<p>The small port of Sayad, 25 kilometers west of Tripoli, has become a  refugee  																	camp for black Africans terrified of &#8220;free  Libya&#8221;. Doctors Without Borders  																	found out about the  camp on August 27. Refugees say that since February they  														 			started to be expelled by the owners of the businesses they were  working in,  																	accused of being mercenaries &#8211; and they  have been harassed ever since.</p>
<p>According to rebel mythology, the Muammar Gaddafi regime was essentially  																	protected by <em>murtazaka</em> (&#8220;mercenaries&#8221;). The reality is that Gaddafi did  																	 employ a contingent of black African fighters &#8211; from Chad, Sudan and  Tuaregs  																	from Niger and Mali. The majority of black  Sub-Saharan Africans in Libya are  																	migrant workers  holding legal jobs.</p>
<p>To see where this thing is going, one has to look at the desert. The  immense  																	southern Libyan desert was not conquered by  NATO. The TNC has no access to  																	virtually all of  Libya&#8217;s water and a lot of oil.</p>
<p>Gaddafi has a chance of &#8220;working the desert&#8221;, of negotiating with a  number of  																	tribes, to buy or consolidate their  allegiance and organize a sustained  																	guerrilla war.</p>
<p>Algeria is involved in a vicious fight against al-Qaeda in the Maghreb.   																	Algeria&#8217;s vast, porous, 1,000 kilometer-long border  with Libya remains open.  																	Gaddafi can easily base his  guerrillas in the southern desert with a safe haven  																	in  Algeria &#8211; or even in Niger. The TNC is already terrified of this  					 												possibility.</p>
<p>NATO&#8217;s &#8220;humanitarian&#8221; operation has unleashed at least 30,000 bombs over  Libya  																	over these past few months. It&#8217;s safe to say  that many thousands of Libyans  																	have been killed by the  bombing. The bombing never stops; soon NATO may be  																	 targeting some of those &#8211; civilians or not &#8211; it was in theory  &#8220;protecting&#8221;  																	until a few days ago.</p>
<p>A defeated Big G can reveal himself to be even more dangerous than a Big  G in  																	power. The real war starts now. It will be  infinitely more dramatic &#8211; and  																	tragic. Because now it  will be a Darwinian, northern African, war of all  																	 against all.</p>
<p></span></p>
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