NATO, war, lies and business
(Taken from CubaDebate)
AS some people know, in September of
1969, Muammar al-Gaddafi, a Bedouin Arab soldier of
unusual character and inspired by the ideas of the
Egyptian leader Gamal Abdel Nasser, promoted within
the heart of the Armed Forces a movement which
overthrew King Idris I of Libya, almost a desert
country in its totality, with a sparse population,
located to the north of Africa between Tunisia and
Egypt.
Libya’s significant and valuable
energy resources were progressively being discovered.
Born into the heart of a Bedouin
community, nomadic desert shepherds in the region of
Tripoli, Gaddafi was profoundly anti-colonialist. It
is known that a paternal grandfather died fighting
against the Italian invaders when Libya was invaded
by the latter in 1911. The colonial regime and
fascism changed everyone’s lives. It is likewise
said that his father was imprisoned before earning
his daily bread as an industrial worker.
Even Gaddafi’s adversaries confirm
that he stood out for his intelligence as a student;
he was expelled from high school for his
anti-monarchical activities. He managed to enroll in
another school and later to graduate in law at the
University of Benghazi, aged 21. He then entered the
Benghazi Military College, where he created the
Union of Free Officers Movement, subsequently
completing his studies in a British military
academy.
These antecedents explain the
notable influence that he later exercised in Libya
and over other political leaders, whether or not
they are now for or against Gaddafi.
He initiated his political life with
unquestionably revolutionary acts.
In March 1970, in the wake of mass
nationalist protests, he achieved the evacuation of
British soldiers from the country and, in June, the
United States vacated the large airbase close to
Tripoli, which was handed over to military
instructors from Egypt, a country allied with Libya.
In 1970, a number of Western oil
companies and banking societies with the
participation of foreign capital were affected by
the Revolution. At the end of 1971, the same fate
befell the famous British Petroleum. In the
agricultural sector all Italian assets were
confiscated, and the colonialists and their
descendants were expelled from Libya.
State intervention was directed
toward the control of the large companies.
Production in that country grew to become one of the
highest in the Arab world. Gambling was prohibited,
as was alcohol consumption. The legal status of
women, traditionally limited, was elevated.
The Libyan leader became immersed in
extremist theories as much opposed to communism as
to capitalism. It was a stage in which Gaddafi
devoted himself to theorizing, which would be
meaningless to include in this analysis, except to
note that the first article of the Constitutional
Proclamation of 1969, established the "Socialist"
nature of the Libyan Arab Jamahiriya.
What I wish to emphasize is that the
United States and its NATO allies were never
interested in human rights.
The pandemonium that occurred in the
Security Council, in the meeting of the Human Rights
Council based in Geneva, and in the UN General
Assembly in New York, was pure theater.
I can perfectly comprehend the
reactions of political leaders embroiled in so many
contradictions and sterile debates, given the
intrigue of interests and problems which they have
to address.
All of us are well aware that status
as a permanent member, veto power, the possession of
nuclear weapons and more than a few institutions,
are sources of privilege and self-interest imposed
on humanity by force. One can be in agreement with
many of them or not, but never accept them as just
or ethical measures.
The empire is now attempting to turn
events around to what Gaddafi has done or not done,
because it needs to militarily intervene in Libya
and deliver a blow to the revolutionary wave
unleashed in the Arab world. Through now not a word
was said, silence was maintained and business was
conducted.
Whether a latent Libyan rebellion
was promoted by yankee intelligence agencies or by
the errors of Gaddafi himself, it is important that
the peoples do not let themselves be deceived, given
that, very soon, world opinion will have enough
elements to know what to believe.
In my opinion, and as I have
expressed since the outset, the plans of the
bellicose NATO had to be condemned.
Libya, like many Third World
countries, is a member of the Non-Aligned Movement,
the Group of 77 and other international
organizations, via which relations are established
independently of economic and social system.
Briefly: the Revolution in Cuba,
inspired by Marxist-Leninist and Martí principles,
had triumphed in 1959 at 90 miles from the United
States, which imposed the Platt Amendment on us and
was the proprietor of our country’s economy.
Almost immediately, the empire
promoted against our people dirty warfare,
counterrevolutionary gangs, the criminal economic
blockade and the mercenary invasion of the Bay of
Pigs, guarded by an aircraft carrier and its marines
ready to disembark if the mercenary force secured
certain objectives.
Barely a year and a half later, it
threatened us with the power of its nuclear arsenal.
A war of that nature was about to break out.
All the Latin American countries,
with the exception of Mexico, took part in the
criminal blockade which is still in place, without
our country ever surrendering. It is important to
recall that for those lacking historical memory.
In January 1986, putting forward the
idea that Libya was behind so-called revolutionary
terrorism, Reagan ordered the severing of economic
and commercial relations with that country.
In March, an aircraft carrier force
in the Gulf of Sirte, within what Libya considered
its national waters, unleashed attacks which
destroyed a number of naval units equipped with
rocket launchers and coastal radar systems which
that country had acquired in the USSR.
On April 5, a discotheque in West
Berlin frequented by U.S. soldiers was the target of
a plastic explosives attack, in which three people
died, two of them U.S. soldiers, and many people
were injured.
Reagan accused Gaddafi and ordered
the Air Force to respond. Three squadrons took off
from 6th Fleet aircraft carriers and
bases in the United Kingdom, and attacked with
missiles and bombs seven military targets in Tripoli
and Benghazi. Some 40 people died, 15 of them
civilians. Warned in advance of the bombardments,
Gaddafi gathered together his family and was leaving
his residence located in the Bab Al Aziziya military
complex south of the capital. The evacuation had not
been completed when a missile directly hit the
residence, his daughter Hanna died and another two
of his children were wounded. That act was widely
rejected; the UN General Assembly passed a
resolution of condemnation given what was a
violation of the UN Charter and international law.
The Non-Aligned Movement, the Arab League and the
OAU did likewise in energetic terms.
On December 21, 1988, a Pan Am
Boeing 747 flying from London to New York
disintegrated in full flight when a bomb exploded
aboard, the wreckage fell on the locality of
Lockerbie and the tragedy cost the lives of 270
people of 21 nationalities.
Initially, the United States
suspected Iran, in reprisal for the death of 290
people when an Airbus belonging to its state line
was brought down. According to the yankees,
investigations implicated two Libyan intelligence
agents. Similar accusations against Libya were made
in the case of the French airline on the
Brazzaville-N’Djamena-Paris route, implicating
Libyan officials whom Gaddafi refused to extradite
for acts that he categorically denied.
A sinister legend was fabricated
against him, with the participation of Reagan and
Bush Senior.
From 1975 to the final stage of the
Regan administration, Cuba dedicated itself to its
internationalist duties in Angola and other African
nations. We were aware of the conflicts developing
in Libya or around her via readings and testimonies
from people closely linked to that country and the
Arab world, as well as impressions we retained from
many figures in different countries with whom we had
contact during those years.
Many known African leaders with whom
Gaddafi maintained close relations made efforts to
find a solution to the tense relations between Libya
and the United Kingdom.
The Security Council had imposed
sanctions on Libya which began to be overcome when
Gaddafi agreed to the trial, under specific
conditions, of the two men accused of the plane
sabotage over Scotland.
Libyan delegations began to be
invited to inter-European meetings. In July 1999
London initiated the reestablishment of full
diplomatic relations with Libya after some
additional concessions.
In September of that year, European
Union ministers agreed to revoke the restrictive
trade measures imposed in 1992.
On December 2, Massimo D’Alema, the
Italian prime minister, made the first visit to
Libya by a European head of government.
With the disappearance of the USSR
and the European socialist bloc, Gaddafi decided to
accept the demands of the United States and NATO.
When I visited Libya in May 2001, he
showed me the ruins left by the treacherous attack
during which Reagan murdered his daughter and almost
exterminated his entire family.
In early 2002, the State Department
announced that diplomatic talks between the United
States and Libya were underway.
In May, Libya was once again
included on the list of states sponsoring terrorism
although, in January, President George W. Bush had
not mentioned the African country in his famous
speech on members of the "axis of evil."
At the beginning of 2003, in
accordance with the economic agreement on
compensation reached between Libya and the
plaintiffs, the United Kingdom and France, the UN
Security Council lifted its 1992 sanctions against
Libya.
Before the end of 2003, Bush and
Tony Blair reported an agreement with Libya, which
had submitted documentation to British and U.S.
intelligence experts about conventional weapons
programs and ballistic missiles with a range of more
than 300 kilometers. Officials from both countries
had already visited a number of installations. It
was the result of many months of conversation
between Tripoli and Washington, as Bush himself
revealed.
Gaddafi kept his disarmament
promises. Within five months Libya handed over the
five units of Scud-C missiles with a range of 800 km
and hundreds of Scud-B which have a range exceeding
the 300 kilometers of defensive short-range
missiles.
As of October, 2002, a marathon of
visits to Tripoli began: Berlusconi, in October
2002; José María Aznar, in September 2003;
Berlusconi again in February, August and October of
2004; Blair, in March of 2004; the German Schröeder,
in October of that year; Jacques Chirac, November
2004. Everybody happy. Money talks.
Gaddafi toured Europe triumphantly.
He was received in Brussels in April of 2004 by
Romano Prodi, president of the European Commission;
in August of that year the Libyan leader invited
Bush to visit his country; Exxon Mobil, Chevron,
Texaco and Conoco Philips established renewed oil
extraction operations through joint ventures.
In May of 2006, the United States
announced the removal of Libya from its list of
nations harboring terrorists and established full
diplomatic relations.
In 2006 and 2007, France and the
U.S. signed accords for cooperation in nuclear
development for peaceful ends; in May, 2007, Blair
returned to visit Gaddafi in Sirte. British
Petroleum signed a contract it described as
"enormously important," for the exploration of gas
fields.
In December of 2007, Gaddafi made
two trips to France to sign military and civilian
equipment contracts for 10 billion euros, and to
Spain where he met with President José Luis
Rodríguez Zapatero. Contracts worth millions were
signed with important NATO countries.
What has now brought on the
precipitous withdrawal of U.S. and other NATO
members' embassies?
It all seems extremely strange.
George W. Bush, father of the stupid
anti-terrorist war, said on September 20, 2011 to
west Point cadets, "Our security will require … the
military you will lead, a military that must be
ready to strike at a moment's notice in any dark
corner of the world. … to be ready for preemptive
action when necessary to defend our liberty and to
defend our lives.
"We must root out terrorist cells in
60 countries or more … with our friends and allies,
we have to stop their proliferation and confront
regimes which harbor or support terrorism, as is
required in each case."
What might Obama think of that
speech?
What sanctions will the Security
Council impose on those who have killed more than a
million civilians in Iraq and those who everyday are
murdering men, women and children in Afghanistan,
where just recently the angry population took to the
streets to protest the massacre of innocent
children?
An AFP dispatch from Kabul, dated
today, March 9, reveals, "Last year was the most
lethal for civilians in the nine-year war between
the Taliban and international forces in Afghanistan,
with almost 2,800 deaths, 15% more than in 2009, a
United Nations report indicated on Wednesday,
underlining the human cost of the conflict for the
population.
"… The Taliban insurrection has
intensified and gained ground in these last few
years, with guerrilla actions beyond its traditional
bastions in the South and East.
"At exactly 2,777, the number of
civilian deaths in 2010 increased by 15% as compared
to 2009," the UN Assistance Mission in Afghanistan
annual report indicated.
"On March 3, President Barack Obama
expressed his profound condolences to the Afghan
people for the nine children killed, as did U.S.
General David Petraeus, commander in chief of the
ISAF and Secretary of Defense Robert Gates.
"… The UNAMA report emphasizes that
the number of civilian deaths is four times greater
than the number of international forces soldiers
killed in combat during the same year.
"So far, 2010 has been the most
deadly for foreign soldiers in the nine years of
war, with 711 dead, confirming that the Taliban's
guerilla war has intensified despite the deployment
of 30,000 U.S. reinforcements last year."
Over the course of 10 days, in
Geneva and in the United Nations, more than 150
speeches were delivered about violations of human
rights, which were repeated million of times on
television, radio, Internet and in the written
press.
Cuba's Foreign Minister Bruno
Rodríguez, in his remarks March 1, 2011 before
Foreign Relations ministers in Geneva, said:
"Humanity's conscience is repulsed
by the deaths of innocent people under any
circumstances, anyplace. Cuba fully shares the
worldwide concern for the loss of civilian lives in
Libya and hopes that its people are able to reach a
peaceful and sovereign solution to the civil war
occurring there, with no foreign interference, and
guarantee the integrity of that nation."
Some of the final paragraphs of his
speech were scathing.
"If the essential human right is the
right to life, will the Council be ready to suspend
the membership of states that unleash war?
"Will it suspend states which
finance and supply military aid utilized by
recipient states for mass, flagrant and systematic
violations of human rights and attacks on the
civilian population, like those taking place in
Palestine?
"Will it apply measures to powerful
countries which are perpetuating extra-judicial
executions in the territory of other states with the
use of high technology, such as smart bombs and
drone aircraft?
"What will happen with states which
accept secret illegal prisons in their territories,
facilitate the transit of secret flights with
kidnapped persons aboard, or participate in acts of
torture?
We fully share the valiant position
of the Bolivarian leader Hugo Chávez and the
Bolivarian Alliance for the Peoples of Our America
(ALBA).
We are against the internal war in
Libya, in favor of immediate peace and respect for
the lives and rights of all citizens, without
foreign intervention, which would only serve to
prolong the conflict and NATO interests.

Fidel Castro Ruz
March 9, 2011
9:35 p.m.