The evidence of the collaboration between the West  and al-Qaeda-affiliated rebels is abundant. The British intelligence's  relationship with al-Qaeda affiliated Libyan Islamic Fighting Groups is  quite traceable.
British intelligence have a long-standing  relationship with the Wahhabi/Salafi brand of Islam - advocated today by  the Ikwan al Muslemeen (Muslim Brotherhood), and their offshoots, that  include al-Qaeda in the Islamic Maghreb.
The Herald 
By Reason Wafawarova
THE West has turned a deaf ear to claims by Colonel Muammar Gaddafi that  the so-called    protests in Libya are in fact not protests from the people of Libya, but  a complex opportunistic insurrection by an al-Qaeda affiliated group in  Benghazi - an armed insurrection riding on the popularity of the  uprisings that toppled leaders in Tunisia and Egypt.
Gaddafi has  argued that while the people of Tunisia and Egypt were protesting for  power just like those of Bahrain and Saudi Arabia, the people of Libya  cannot possibly protest for power because power resides with the people  in Libya - of course through the Libyan Revolution's 1977-established  Revolutionary Committees.
Gaddafi argues that it was al-Qaeda that  first claimed Libya was in protest, building the positions that were  eagerly adopted by mainstream Western media, which never bothered to  verify the happenings on the ground.
He further argues that the  Western media hype was regarded as fact by the United Nations and by  many Western countries, with the UN Secretary General Ban Ki Moon even  admitting that the world body was relying on media reports on its  opinion on Libya.
Based on these media reports resolution 1970 was  adopted on February 26 and it established a sanctions regime on Libya,  especially because of the government crackdown on the February 15  insurrection in Benghazi. 
Gaddafi criticised resolution 1970 as  invalid and called for its renunciation. He invited the AU, UN, the Arab  League and the West to come and investigate what was happening in  Libya.
Gaddafi claimed that the so-called protests were no more than  ordinary people being held "hostages of the situation" - being held to  ransom by armed rebels in Benghazi; rebels who were affiliated to and  inspired by al-Qaeda and Osama bin Laden.
Gaddafi's call for the  nullification of resolution 1970 was met by a recalling of that  resolution, not for the purposes of investigating the situation in Libya  as he had proposed, but for the crude resolve to reinforce it with a  more ruthless resolution 1973, this time declaring a "no-fly zone" over  Libya and calling for "all measures necessary" in stopping the Libyan  government from killing its own civilians.
Resolution 1973 was voted  for by 10 members of the 15-member UN Security Council, three of which  were African countries, namely South Africa, Nigeria and Gabon, while  five countries abstained including Russia and China. 
South Africa now regrets the vote and blames the West for misinterpreting the resolution. 
This  resolution was implemented in hours by Western powers, with France's  Nicolas Sarkozy showing an extraordinary keenness to bring Gaddafi into  military submission.
Resolution 1973 gave birth to Operation Odyssey  Dawn, a ruthless mass-murdering and hyper-destructive campaign only  comparable to the aerial bombings seen last during the 1992 Gulf War.
Benghazi  is central to resolution 1973, and the rebels from that town are the  ones often referred to as the "protesters", regardless of the fact that  they have sophisticated anti-air missiles and commandeered military jets  in their possession, among a whole lot of other sophisticated weaponry.
Abdel-Hakin  al-Hasidi is the Libyan rebel leader and he has been quoted by the The  Telegraph as saying the Jihadists who fought against allied troops in  Iraq are on the front lines of the battle against Gaddafi's regime. 
According  to The Telegraph's Praveen Swami and Nick Squires, al-Hasidi admitted  that he had earlier fought against Western invasion in Afghanistan.
The  two referred to an interview al-Hasidi had with an Italian newspaper,  II Sole 24 Ore, where al-Hasidi admitted that he recruited "around 25"  men from Darnah, his home town in eastern Libya, to fight against  coalition troops in Iraq.
Some of these men, he said, "today are on  the frontlines in Adjabiya." Al-Hasidi said his troops "are patriots and  good Muslims", not terrorists.  He added, "Members of al-Qaeda are also  good Muslims and are fighting against the invader."
Chad's President  Idriss Derby Itno has said al-Qaeda has managed to pillage military  arsenals in the Libyan rebel zone and acquired arms, "including surface  to air missiles, which were then smuggled into their sanctuaries."
By  his own admission al-Hasidi earlier fought against the Western invaders  in Afghanistan, the same invaders bombing Libya today with reckless  abandon. He was then "captured in 2002 in Peswar, in Pakistan." 
Later, he was handed over to the US, and then held in Libya before being released in 2008.
Today he is an ally of his former captors.
British  and US government sources have said al-Hasidi has always been a member  of the Libya Islamic Fighting Group (LIFG), which killed dozens of  Libyan troops in guerrilla attacks in Darnah and Benghazi in 1995 and  1996.
The LIFG is listed among terrorist groups in both the UK and  the US, regardless of current reality that the group is the strongest  internal ally of the West in its aerial bombardment campaign over Libya.  
Gerald A Perreira wrote an incisive opinion piece on Libya which was published by Global Research on March 25.
He  observed that the Gulf War-style military might being displayed by  Western powers through Operation Odyssey Dawn is premised on a "real and  illegal goal" of effecting regime change in Libya. 
Clearly,  resolution 1973 does not provide any legal basis for any regime change  moves, much as it allows the West a beginning point for such a sinister  move.
Replay the Gulf War and the plan behind Operation Odyssey Dawn  is very clear: disable Libya's defence ability and simultaneously arm  and strengthen the reactionary conglomerate of rebel forces in Benghazi.
The  hope is that the al-Qaeda rag-tag bunch led by al-Hasidi will rock  back, once and for all, the Libyan Revolution and its gains made over  the 42 years, Gaddafi has presided over this revolution. 
What is happening in Libya is a continuation of historical stalemates. 
The former slave-holding and colonial powers are having another go at Gaddafi.
Obama  and his sidekicks from France, the UK, Spain and other European lackeys  are reviving feuds that Ronald Reagan and Margaret Thatcher failed to  win. In 1986, the US unfoundedly accused Libya of bombing a discotheque  in Berlin.
Based on this accusation, Reagan openly attempted to assassinate Gaddafi by bombing his residence at Bab al-Azizia in Tripoli.
The  next move was the accusation against Libya over the 1988 Pan Am  Lockerbie bombing, what became a good excuse for initiating hard-hitting  economic sanctions against Libya, in order to cripple it economically,  or to make its economy scream, borrowing the language from the US State  Department.
British intelligence employed the services of an al-Qaeda  cell inside Libya in 1996, according to renegade MI5 former operative  David Shayler. They paid the Osama bin Laden-led group $100 000 so they  could assassinate Gaddafi. The group was amateurish and they planted a  bomb under a wrong car, detonating it, only to kill several civilians in  Sirte, Gaddafi's hometown.
Shayler revealed that while he was  working on the MI5 Libya desk in the mid-nineties, British secret  services personnel collaborated with the LIFG, itself an affiliate to  bin Laden's al-Qaeda, and more importantly, itself led by bin Laden's  trusted lieutenant.
Gaddafi and his Libyan Revolution were the first authority ever to issue a warrant of arrest for Osama bin Laden in 1998.
Britain dismissed the warrant and so did the US. For Britain, Libya was interfering with a close ally. 
The two Western imperial powers only woke up after bin Laden's men bombed US Embassies in East Africa. 
For many years the Libyan government warned the world about the very serious threat posed by al-Qaeda miscreants.
According  to Shayler, Western intelligence turned a deaf ear to Libya's warnings  because they were actually working with the al-Qaeda group inside Libya  to bring down Gaddafi and the Libyan Revolution.
The man who led the  US African Embassy bombings is Anas al-Liby and he remains on the US  most wanted list with a $5 million tag on his head for his capture.
Most  surprisingly, my mistake, not surprisingly, al-Liby was granted  political asylum in Britain and lived in Manchester until May 2000,  despite him being a high profile al-Qaeda operative. 
Today the  British and their Western allies once again are ignoring the voice of  Gaddafi and his Libyan Revolution when they say the Benghazi rebels are  inspired by al-Qaeda in the Islamic Maghreb (AQIM).
Gaddafi has  repeatedly warned of the serious threat the al-Hasidi-led group of  rebels poses, not only on Libya but also to the entire Arab region.
The reply Gaddafi has been given for his trouble is hell-fire from the West's mass killing aerial bombing artillery.
The  reason for Operation Odyssey Dawn is the fact that the British  intelligence forces and others are still in collaboration with the  rebels in Benghazi, themselves self-proclaimed members of al-Qaeda. 
According  to Perreira, these rebels are referred to all over Libya as "the  bearded ones", and their ties to al-Qaeda and the Islamic Maghreb is  common knowledge.
The evidence of the collaboration between the West  and al-Qaeda-affiliated rebels is abundant. The British intelligence's  relationship with al-Qaeda affiliated Libyan Islamic Fighting Groups is  quite traceable.
British intelligence have a long-standing  relationship with the Wahhabi/Salafi brand of Islam - advocated today by  the Ikwan al Muslemeen (Muslim Brotherhood), and their offshoots, that  include al-Qaeda in the Islamic Maghreb.
Perreira gives a bit of history on this.
In 1744, Wahhabism founder, Muhammad ibn Abdal Wahhab formed an  alliance with the ruthless tribal leader Muhammad ibn Saud, whose  descendants rule Saudi Arabia to this day.
This reactionary brand of  Islam is the theological foundation for the colonial creation of the  Kingdom of Saudi Arabia, and Wahhabism has ever since remained the  official Islamic tendency of that area.
In 1915, the British entered a  treaty with the house of Saud, protecting their land and supplying them  with weapons to help create the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia. It is the  British who massively helped the flourishing of Wahhabism because they  viewed it as a perfect ideological tool for the pursuit of their  imperialistic goals.
Today, Obama, Sarkozy and David Cameron are  calling on the descendants of Muhammad ibn Saud, the current Saudi  regime, and their army of Wahhabists in the form of al-Qaeda, and the  fundamentalists of Benghazi, to join them in a medieval crusade meant to  crush a bastion of revolutionary Islam, as is practised in Libya under  Gaddafi. These claims can easily be verified.
It is quite revealing  and rich that a Saudi government official says on BBC, "To allow the  people to choose their own government is a very bad thing." 
If Gaddafi had said this, there would have been a huge outcry from Western media.
Instead,  Obama and his Western colleagues, particularly the French and the  British, are calling on the anti-women Saudis to join their Operation  Odyssey Dawn - a wanton destruction of Libya, a country that has  liberated women and did an impressive effort in establishing real  democracy for its people, at least in comparison to the Saudi monarchy.
Libyan  women go to school, are allowed to join the police force, the army and  are allowed to drive like everywhere else in any liberal society. 
According  to Richard Spencer of The Telegraph in the UK, al-Qaeda leader, Abu  Yahya al-Libi has released a statement backing the Benghazi rebels. 
This  is said to have happened two weeks ago, and the statement is a  confirmation that the Benghazi rebels are part of al-Qaeda and not  simply "civilian protesters".
Spencer also said Yusuf Qaradawi, the  Qatar based Muslim Brotherhood-linked theologian issued a fatwa  authorising Gaddafi's military entourage to assassinate the Libyan  leader.
Spencer also wrote, "WikiLeaks cables, independent analysts  and reporters have all identified supporters of Islamist causes among  the opposition to Col Gaddafi's regime, particularly in the towns of  Benghazi and Darnah."
Paul Joseph Watson in Info Wars wrote that  while the US "is hyping the threat of Libyan-backed reprisal attacks  inside the US", it is launching air strikes "in support of the so-called  ‘protestors', who have commandeered fighter jets and tanks, and are in  fact Islamic fundamentalist al-Qaeda cells who want to impose sharia law  in Libya."
Obama's counter-terrorism expert, John O Brennan has  expressed fear over the possibility that Gaddafi might cause terror  attacks within the US and that he might "flout the will of the  international community".
International community is the diplomatic  working phrase for Western politicians, and sometimes the phrase is used  to describe the United States by itself. 
The irony of Obama and Osama being allies against Gaddafi extends to the media fraternity as well.
Paul  Joseph Watson wrote: "It is also galling to witness the likes of Fox  News and mainstream conservatives, who screamed until they were blue in  the face about a mosque being built at ground zero in New York, now  ignorantly applauding a United Nations-ordered war with no congressional  approval which is solely designed to bring al-Qaeda-affiliated Islamic  fundamentalists to power."
In March 2004, an Australian newspaper,  The Age, reported that MI6 and Libya had struck a deal to fight  terrorism and were to share intelligence on the Libya Islamic Fighting  Group; the very group today being vehemently backed by Britain, France  and the US in Benghazi. 
On November 3 2007, the BBC reported that Ayman al-Zawahri had issued a statement saying the LIFG had joined al-Qaeda.
The  statement said, "Oh nation of jihad, supporting your sons so that we  defeat our enemies and rid our homeland of their slaves."
The message  was directed at Libya, Tunisia, Algeria and Morocco. Gaddafi was  described as "an enemy of Islam" in this message and he was heavily  criticised for giving up weapons of mass destruction in 2003, when he  reportedly did so in exchange for an end to Libya's international  isolation.
The statement continued, "We proclaim our alliance with  the al-Qaeda network . . . to become the faithful soldiers of Osama  bin-Laden."
In the tape, a leader of the Islamic Fighting Group in Libya was introduced as Abu Laith al-Libi. 
The  group was formed in the early nineties by Libyans who had fought  against the Soviets in Afghanistan, fighters then described as "freedom  fighters" by Reagan. 
The March 21 attack on the UN Secretary General by pro-Gaddafi protesters in Cairo was not without cause.
The  people in this Arab region are well aware of what is happening in Libya  and they wanted to make it clear that they are opposed to this  Obama-Osama alliance that has resulted in the UN Resolution 1973 -itself  the legal tool being used to bombard Libya to smithereens, all for the  desire to remove Gaddafi so the imperialist powers can plunder its oil.
Africa we are one and together we will overcome. It is homeland or death!
Reason Wafawarova is a political writer and can be contacted on   wafawarova@yahoo.co.uk or reason@rwafa warova. com or visit www.rwafawarova.com
 
 
No comments:
Post a Comment