Things are really heating up in Libya.
Here's just from one Twitter feed. Sorry for the crappy formatting.
ShababLibya LibyanYouthMovement
and this is what has happened for the past two days (going out evening) but I hear the numbers are increasing #Libya #Feb17
3 minutes agoShababLibya LibyanYouthMovement
and some of the airforce in the skies, we in libya go out late afternoon and sunset, so this is when protesters are coming out..
3 minutes agoShababLibya LibyanYouthMovement
but god help us, it was limited to central benghazi but now its spreading all over, mainly through deprived areas, there is helicopters ...
4 minutes agoShababLibya LibyanYouthMovement
they are doing their best to kill our spirits and the motivation, we know we can not stop, coz if he remains we are first in the black list
5 minutes agoShababLibya LibyanYouthMovement
arrest us one by one when we turn away, they beat you first so you are unconscious, then take them to tripoli and elsewhere #Libya #Feb17
6 minutes agoShababLibya LibyanYouthMovement
they caught a lot of us who appeared on videos from the night before, there are ppl undercover between us hiding in between cars and..
8 minutes agoShababLibya LibyanYouthMovement
contact: I spoke to my friend in central Benghazi, he said so many were arrested, and trapped in the corners of central Benghazi cont
9 minutes agoShababLibya LibyanYouthMovement
shocking account from a resident in #Benghazi we just spoke to #Libya #Feb17 #gaddafi crimes: as follows..
10 minutes agoShababLibya LibyanYouthMovement
contacts in benghazi: 'we need to write accounts urgently' to @AJArabic watch your site, you will receive accounts shortly #Libya #Feb17
17 minutes agoShababLibya LibyanYouthMovement
@
@EEE_Libya Try to protest through the streets chanting for #Tripoli to come out #Libya #Feb17
19 minutes agoShababLibya LibyanYouthMovement
confirmed: 400 in the streets of #Tripoli, come on guys let it snowball #Libya #Feb17
20 minutes agoShababLibya LibyanYouthMovement
@
@almanaralibya I have emails for BBC and Jazeera, they need videos and pictures asap, please tell the ppl uploading #Libya #Feb17
21 minutes ago
»ShababLibya LibyanYouthMovement
the last we have from Ajdabiya is 4 ppl killed by sniper fire, we need info from there asap #Libya #Feb17 #Libya is at war with its regime
24 minutes ago
http://twitter.com/#!/ShababLibya
I seem to have stirred up a
I seem to have stirred up a bit of a hornets nest here. I will try to reply to each point in separate posts as there are a lot:
Mark.
They were state controlled unions. There may have been certain differences, but I would imagine they were pretty fundamentally the same.
MT
I would say that one of the reasons that they tried to disconnect themselves might quite probably be to remain relevant during a period of class struggle when workers were striking and the regime was shaky. Perhaps the fact that seems to be virtually no class struggle during these events in Libya is a reasons why it hasn't happened there.
Devrim
By the way, the organization
By the way, the organization of an independent Egyptian labour federation has been in the works for years; it is not a new development. What is new is that it was finally formed (or could go ahead full speed) during the uprising.
Yorkie Bar wrote: So just to
Yorkie Bar
I am sorry if you feel it has taken the thread of topic. I think it is important though to try to understand what is going on.
Personally I find the whole thing of constant live updates difficult to follow. I am not saying that it has no function, but to me it is like you are getting lost in a sea of information. The newspapers are doing the same thing, and I tried to find out what was happening in Wisconsin the other day, and I had to wade through masses of information including details of where to buy 'solidarity pizzas' just to find out who was actually on strike.
It is not about what 'counts' as class struggle, but about understanding what is going on. In my opinion it is important though maybe I should have started a new thread, and the admins should split it if they feel it needs it.
Devrim
squaler wrote: Devrim
squaler
Many things from the initial protests being over the arrest of the lawyer of an islamicist group to tribal leaders being prominent from day one. The Arabic media has played more on this than the English.
Devrim
rooieravotr wrote: Then, even
rooieravotr
Why not? I imagine a monarchy would be their preferred system
rooieravot
Islamicism is very flexible. One of its manifestations in this country is the 'national Islamic synthesis', another is the Islamicism of the governing party. Not all Islamicists are al-Quida jihadists.
Devrim
I don't think that Devrim has
I don't think that Devrim has provided any evidence whatsoever that events in Libya were tribalist and Islamist from day one and nor was it an inter-bourgeois faction fight from the off. On the contrary, it seemed very clear that the question of repression, unemployment and misery was at the core of the outbursts and the uprising was part of the contagion of revolt spreading throughout. There was a particular responsibility on the working class to reinforce the already existing local health and security committees and coordinate self-defence and go beyond these, but circumstances haven't been favourable to it. Now any self-defence, any coordination is likely to be subservient to the government in waiting. But to write off this struggle as nothing from the beginning seems very blinkered to me and while Gaddafi has been lampooned as a fool, he seems to have played a very clever hand, not least backed up by his western provided hardware and training. I agree with roo and Alf above about the present prognosis.
I think that the updates on this and other threads on the revolts have been very useful and there's no reason that discussion can't take place around them.
Libya is a predominately muslim country - that's the religion that's more or less followed by the majority including workers. Young people, not necessarily devout, often use terms like Alluah Akbar, inshallah and so on. Many working class women wear the hijab. As we saw elsewhere none of this excludes them from joining a revolt against the state of things or the class struggle.
Televised executions have been part of the Libyan state's repressive weapons for decades.
baboon wrote: I don't think
baboon
No, I haven't. I have just said what my general impression is overall from the total of things I have read, watched, and listened to about the events. What I do say is evidence of class struggle seems absent.
baboon
What you seem to be suggesting is that a couple of weeks ago there was a strong class movement, and now it has virtually disappeared into a civil war. If it were that strong how could it have dissipated that quickly?
baboon
No, they don't. It is a specifically religious term. The other one that you mention 'inşallah' isn't, and is used casually to mean 'I hope so'. People don't, however, casually shout 'Alluh Akbar' in conversation.
Of course, it couldn't be Islamicists shouting it as you have already told us they have no influence whatsoever.
Devrim
Quote: No, they don't. It is
It's basically the Muslim equivalent of John 3:16. Pretty much every devout Christian in America has this plastered on his webpage, car or house. It's one of those "Jesus Loves You" lines. Doesn't mean said person is one of those assholes who bombs abortion clinics. Just means he's a devout Christian who probably eats squirrel. Likewise, "Allahu Akbar" doesn't mean he's an Islamist. Just a Muslim who needs a generic sticker to put on his car or protest sign and was too lazy to come up with anything particularly imaginative.
Jazzhands wrote: It's
Jazzhands
Funnily enough I have never seen any car with a sticker saying Alluh Akbar.
Devrim
Jazzhands wrote: It's
Jazzhands
Funnily enough I have never seen any car with a sticker saying Alluh Akbar. Nor have I ever heard it shouted on a worker's or leftist demonstration in Turkey, Syria, or Lebanon, let alone on a placard.
Devrim[/quote]
I think it's a futile
I think it's a futile endeavor to criticize the current events in Libya and other Middle Eastern countries against an ideal "workers' movement." This is not because there are no workers' movements anymore, or because the language of socialist/leftist ideas is dead, or any of that. But it seems to me pretty obvious that in Libya, there is basically no tradition whatsoever of a self-asserting working class culture. This makes it equally obvious that any revolt will appropriate the language and symbols of the traditional pre-Gadafi culture, hence the monarchist flag, the religious slogans and so forth.
Marx
It's also debatable what actual percentage of the opposition groups are working class per se. The revolt includes soldiers, deserting officers, oil refinery workers, nomadic peoples, etc. How can this movement possibly reflect a homogeneous "workers' rights" type rhetoric? It clearly cannot. But does that mean the workers involved in the protests have no consciousness whatsoever of their role in the economy (Gadafi-controlled or not)? Personally I don't see any evidence either for or against right now. There certainly isn't a convincing case to be made for the notion that they are islamist-inspired and tribal-oriented.
Also, Devrim, since you graced some of the other posters with replies, I'm hoping you'll do me the same favor, and answer this question:
I ask because you and other "sceptics" on this thread seem to have a pretty clear mental picture of what a real working class revolution is all about. But where are the actual examples?
I also think it's important to divorce the self-appointed "professional" leaders of the opposition movement from the rank-and-file. It would be silly to imply that all anti-Gadafi forces are "neoliberals in the making" because one opposition leader has a degree in marketing (or something to that effect).
Here, some info on Islamist
Here, some info on Islamist influence in the revolt - from the beginning. Seems to at least partially confirm what Devrim is arguing, 2 b honest: Zero hour in Benghazi
Devrim wrote: Jazzhands
Devrim
Two things:
1. These "Workers' or leftist demonstrations" couldn't possibly exist in reality, at least not in Libya, a country with no history whatsoever of anything other than feudalism before Gaddafi. They're idealized concepts you're trying to compare Libya to. Do you honestly think all revolutions turn out exactly the way you want them to? Reality is not supposed to bend to theory. Theory is supposed to bend to reality.
The reality we face is that Libya has no history of leftist politics whatsoever. Libya has no leftist presence. I don't think there's anyone right now that's claiming the Libya situation is an actual workers' revolution. The most we can say is that there's a seed that's been planted. It might grow if we work at it, but so far we don't have much to work with here.
2. You do realize you're complaining about Muslims...in the middle of the Muslim world? And if there really are a bunch of Islamists gaining influence in the protests, what we need to do is take the protests from them, replace them as a possible source of leadership. Not just disengage and sit on our asses complaining about how it's not "workers" enough.
Jazzhands wrote: These
Jazzhands
I am not sure what you are saying here. Are you saying that the countries that I mentioned don't have workers or leftist demonstrations. They do. At last years, Istanbul Mayday march for example there were over a million people. I'd imagine that is a few more than in the country you live in. In Libya of course they occur less, but I have seen them.
Jazzhands
or are you saying that they couldn't exist in Libya. Yes, I would imagine they have been few and far between. That wasn't my point though. My point was that people do not casually shout 'Alluh Akbar' on workers' demonstrations in Muslim countries, to which I gave the example of the three countries where I have seen them.
Jazzhands
No, I am not complaining about Muslims. I am merely saying that people who shout 'Alluh Akbar' on demonstrations might just be influenced by Islamicists.
Jazzhands
And you have a plan for how to do this from America.
Devrim
Please stop arguing about
Please stop arguing about Arabic colloquialisms its stupid...but for the record I was raised a Muslim, grew up in the States and have never heard Allahu Akbar outside religious discussion.
Some good things happening here though, I like to see theoretical contradictions getting banged out
I'd like to just personally add something as well. You have to remember that society is a network comprised of groups of individuals with common interests. So with all this debate about who's the Islamicist and whether or not there is genuine struggle taking place...forget about that and look at it another way.
If you first understand the daily life of a Libyan worker, and/or even better the condition of the worker as well as the elite, then maybe you can begin to ponder on the question of revolutionary class activity. For now we have to chill out and see what materializes on the ground over the next couple of weeks but I feel some points of agreement have been established between us. I.e. noticing the flags and rhetoric of a pre-Ghaddafi Libya (reminding me personally of the Shah's son coming out every time something happens in Iran), and in talking about the nature of Libyan society class-wise.
Also, hopefully we can agree that whereas in Egypt (where there is a established Bourgeoisie whose interest probably went against Mubarak's and that is probably the main reason combined with US influence we saw him leave as he did)-- in Libya things aren't as clear. Honestly, it was great seeing all those Egyptian people demonstrating so hard for so long, as they were the catalyst for these events (along with Tunisia)...however they should not consider themselves the power behind the removal and should continue the call for equality and freedom that we've seen being cried genuinely from hundreds of thousands, even millions of Egyptian poor people and workers. Even if it's not a socialist cry yet, as long as people are genuine in their search for a non-oppressive form of government they will begin to form critical views about capitalism.
We should all however stand against the government ("regime") bombing/killing people (wtf), although I'm not suprised to see this. Reminds me of the film Children of Men.
Related to the buildup for
Related to the buildup for Western military intervention, Bob Fisk has a good piece (from Monday) about the US attempt to get the Saudis to supply Benghazi with arms.
America's secret plan to arm Libya's rebels
and an interesting point at the end of that (albeit not directly related to Libya)
More on links between the UK
More on links between the UK and Gaddafi - control orders and threats of deportation for Libyan dissidents, presumably Islamists of some kind.
The Gaddafi connection
Cleishbotham wrote: Caiman
Cleishbotham
I agree Devrim is sound.
On that islamist
On that islamist theme
BBC
Most of the oil companies
Most of the oil companies report that production is down by 90%, which is not catastrophic in itself, but potentially very destabilising.
The situation is very grim for many in Libya with the regime already taking its terrible revenge. In Ras Lanuf the BBC consistently reports that there are no officers or representatives of the government in waiting. There is just a collection of armed, disorganised youths and men on the warpath against the regime and they are becoming cannon fodder for an opposition that's not even supporting them.
In Tripoli there is terror: any protesters have been driven into hiding or on the run and informers and death squads are reportedly everywhere. In towns around, the regime is using tanks, mortars, artillery and jet fighters to kill its own people and flatten everything. While there are some similarities with Spain, there are also some elements, in the sense of a capitalist crime against a desperate people (who know they are going to be tortured and killed) of the Warsaw Ghetto.
I can't see into the future and given the wave of protest I thought that there was a potential in the movement of protest but the situation has now gone well beyond any idea that this was tribal or Islamist from the beginning.There is a discussion to be had though (not here I don't think) about the relationship of class struggle to popular revolt.
Events here now are an expression of imperialism and we can only support the victims of this onslaught by the Libyan state and express our solidarity towards them as internationalists.
The regime's actions are the self-defence of the national interests of the state of Libya - just as any emergent opposition is and will be - and it's turning into a growing threat to the national interests of larger sharks in the waters. Not least through the weakness of the working class here, the threat is posed of wider imperialist conflict that will not at all be in the interests of the wider working class. Adding to what Ocelot above says, there was a report in Monday's Telegraph that the US had approached Saudi to provide the opposition with more sophisticated weapons. This proposal carries its own difficulties and contradictions - not from the point of view of the destruction they cause, they are not worried about that - but from the point of view of possible Saudi repression in the future, how the Americans would react to that, and "end-user concerns", ie, where the arms eventually end up.
a London
a London angle
Guardian
While the onslaught against
While the onslaught against Zawayiah continues, Ghaddafi has been sending out emissaries and holding phone calls (well at least one phone call to Greece) as part of opening some diplomatic front.
Guardian
No clue so far what the content of that is. An overly paranoid and conspiratorial mind makes me think that the explosion of oil storage tanks at the oil terminal at Ras Lanuf may well not be entirely a coincidence. We'll see.
Also opposition forces claim to have retaken Bin Jawad, but it's not clear if that's just an attempt to shore up morale.
It is strange to consider the
It is strange to consider the revolt as "islamist and tribal" and not Kaddafi. Actually libyan state is based on integration of tribes into the state under the unifying discourse of Islam. That is I think is the essence of Kaddafi's ideology. When Kaddafi took power it was non-other than the islamists to support him. It was at the time a precious example of proof for the islam's 'potential' against russian style state capitalism.
I think what is happening in Libya is the bankruptcy of Kaddafi style state capitalism. A third element, working class is rejecting the regime w/o beeing able to propose another thing. But I also don't think that Libyan burgeouisie can propose a solution. Because neither workers' will easily accept a burgeoisie alternative easily nor the tribal-capitalists has an alternative for islamist-tribalist state capitalism. That is why it is not surprising that so-called "opposition government" could easily include ex-Kaddafi bureaucrats.
I think the problem can be posed in Libya but it can only be solved internationally. We should accept the fact that in a country like libya, w/o any significant industry except oil, agricultural or any other important natural resource (again except oil) it is very difficult to for Libyan working class do anything other than defeating Kaddafi.
The necessary support both as being an example and providing every necessity of life etc. should come from Europe, American and East Asian working class. I think then the class characther of the movement may be judged based on the side it took regarding the conflicts in the other sides of the world.
My basic point is, what is
My basic point is, what is happening right now in Middle East is not the beggining of a civil war in conventional sense. It is basically the state capitalisms are collapsing w/o any alternatives. These state capitalisms are not only illegitimate, they are not even operating any more. They are collapsing and dissolving under their own weights.
Contemporary ethnic clashes in Egpyt and the situ in libya, the continuing government crisis in Tunisia etc, seems all similar in the way that the dominant classes do not seem to be able to offer any stability and laborers also do not seem to accept any capitalist solution easily. I don't see any internal threat (islamism etc). Islamism just like leninism was a cold war weapon which is also not very convincing for an important part of the working class in middle east anymore. I know this comes up against the media portrayal but I think the real danger is an external one the late coming of western&eastern proles to join in the struggle.
Quote: Actually libyan state
It's more than just Islam that was used to unify. It's one of the pillars, but is combined or rather influenced by Marxism, communism, anarchism (though obviously Gadaffy does not "get" any of that) to make up Gadaffy's personal political philopsphy, but since he is the Libyan state also the official philosophy of the state and the form of governance. This mumbo-jumbo is all laid out in the Green Book.
Gadaffy
In other words, mental. But I think that Gadaffy's use of Marxist and communist inspired philosophy might make people skeptical to anyone that is a "real" libcommer. Kinda like Eastern Europe?
edit: that quote is from Wikipedia on the Green Book, not the words of "brother leader" himself.
I think while evaluating his
I think while evaluating his ideology, the social composition of classes in Libya should be considered first. The thing about "wage" is a clear legitimation of forced labor - an attempt to devalorize labor power in order make available the necessary conditions for state-capitalism to operate while having large numbers of unemployed at the same time.
Popular committees seem as a joke to me. I don't think that anyone on the anarchist camp does support an inter-classist "direct democracy". It seems to me that this is a reflection of the corporatist nature of the regime and not its "anarchism" or "marxism" - I know that you did not say so I just wanted to say it-. In fact, when he first came to power, in order to create a "national unity" (which he defined as the "biggest form of tribe") he tried briefly to undermine the power of different tribes by this "direct democracy" in order to skip over the tribal mechanism. However with the crisis in 70's he quickly fell back to the old fashion tribe-state alliance since the oil revenues dropped.
I agree with your comment about the combination of many ideologies. But when Kaddafi came to power this was kind of a "must to do" among the islamists. Ancestors of current "liberal" AKP government in Turkey, what at that time hold a programme called "Milli Görüş" (National View) had a very similar statist line and anti-semitic demagogy with those of the leftists (leninists). It was necessary for them to defend these statist ideology at the time, in order to compete with the strongest opponent - the left - and also for them these ideas seemed to be succesful in defending national interests of capital. That is why Turkish islamists at the time were amazed by the "libyan example". Till the iranian (counter) revolution, it was their single most important ideological example.
I think the tribal mechanism which enabled Kaddafi to form his statist alliance around, was also the hindrance in front of the Libyan islamism to transform itself -or at least a fraction of it- into a turkish islamist AKP style party. Simply because the state needed that strongest and sole base of support in order to consolidate itself unlike the turkish islamists who had to negotiate with lots of different ruling groups in order form a "democratic" coalition to form a government.
I quess or tend to think that, when the majority of society became either proletarianized or unemployed clearly and when there were practically very limited jobs except petrolium industry (where also a high population of foreigners work) with crisis, the economic crisis became social and political as is now, in the sense that old statist alliance could no more cope with these thanks to its unflexible characther. Its strength turned out to be its weakness. And I don't think there will be any solution except a proletarian solution to the siuation because of this idiot characther of the ruling elite.
Just like in Afganistan capitalism can not form its natural environment for stability, the nation state. It is not able to do it any more. And tribes became the cannibalistic apparatusus of the state -in a contradictory way-. The state can not do without them and also with them... But I don't think that the meaning of this movement is ONLY this self-destruction of tribal state. IThis has become visible and reach to a higher level by the discontent of the Libyan proletariat.
--
PS: I hope I did not repeat myself
Here's video confirmation
Here's video confirmation that rebels have Grads: http://j.mp/gEfB0L (video taken between Ras Lanuf and Bin Jawad). #Libya
it's strange you know, because they're saying allahu akbar but it doesn't look like they're praying.
You should not exagerrate
You should not exagerrate "allahu ekber". It does not necessarily mean that those people are islamist. It is just they are exited and not very clear on politics...
petersbeaumont Hearing from
petersbeaumont
Hearing from various sources that the many closed shops in Tripoli are closed not for safety but because of civil disobedience campaign
And now the liquidation of
And now the liquidation of the "militias" and regularisation of the military forces by the TNC state-in-waiting.
Guardian
Transitional National Council
Transitional National Council website http://ntclibya.org/english/
The BBC crew arrested in
The BBC crew arrested in Tripoli
---
12:57 Peter Beaumont tweets: “Hearing that now Libyan authorities trying to take laptops off journalists leaving Tripoli airport along with SIM cards.” He later adds: “Less and less flights leaving Tripoli. Tunisair stopped as of last night. Soon we’ll be unable to fly out.”
---
Guardian correspondent missing in Libya
http://somalilandpress.com/li
http://somalilandpress.com/libya-rebels-execute-black-immigrants-while-forces-kidnap-others-20586
I agree that this is a crisis
I agree that this is a crisis of state capitalism/militarism as exressed in the Libyan state with similarities elsewhere. There are tribal and Islamicist expressions here but they are completely secondary and incorporated into the capitalist state.
Today's French recognition of the of the "rebel" government is an expression of wider imperialist machinations which have only a tenuous relationship with tribalism and Islamicism which are again completely secondary.
The Telegraph reports today that Gaddifi is holding back on using the regular army forces that he has on "front lines" - these troops are not insubstantial - because of the danger of them going over to the other side.
I think that the difference between events here and the economic and political collapse of the eastern bloc's state capitalism regimes is that, despite the weakness of the working class in Libya, the initial movement here takes place in the context of wider uprisings of populations and exploited classes against regimes of overt terror as well as the untenable conditions of unemployment and misery for the masses from the economic crisis of capitalism.
http://www.allvoices.com/cont
http://www.allvoices.com/contributed-news/8407522-us-troops-already-on-the-ground-in-libya
According to a Pakistan Observer article, (the only English Newspaper in the country) " The United States, Britain and France have sent several hundred defense advisors to train and support the anti-Gadhafi forces in oil-rich Eastern Libya where armed rebel groups have apparently taken over."
Although the troops are classified as "advisers" they have brought not only fighting know-how but several caches of weapons and all the necessary provisions for a prolonged stay in the region, as well.
It has not beed stated specifically what weapons the special forces operatives have brought with them. It has reported that a Libyan official has said "the three Western states have landed their special forces troops in Cyrenaica and are now setting up their bases, and training centers." This is to reinforce the rebel forces that are resisting pro-Gadhafi forces in several adjoining areas.
I checked that last article,
I checked that last article, and its source, that Pakistan Observer article. Story does not look too credible to me. A "Libyan official" - presumably a regime official, but it remains a mystery - says there are these Western troops. It fits a bit too nicely into the Kadhafi story that the whole revolt is an operation from outside forces. Then again, these kinds of troops in such situations are one of the options. But, until I see more info, I remain sceptical that these kinds of things are already in that stage.
Yorkie Bar wrote: So just to
Yorkie Bar
I hope we're not going to stop posting updates, confusing as it all seems, but what gets me is the idea of 'the bizarre otherworld of the ultra-left'. Oh gosh! What is this? I guess 'ultra-left' is a reference to adherents of the ICC. But how can they be said to be 'bizarre' (nice word though it is) or suspected of being other-worldly. After all they are only interested in working class struggle and in it's identification and support. What's other-worldly about that? Isn't class struggle the motor force of history? To have an interest in it classified as bizarre, strikes me as weird. And anyway, is it possible in any meaningful manner, to discuss the trajectory of a struggle in a concrete way, without considering it's class content? We wouldn't want to end up supporting the wrong side, would we. And please stop all this talk of banning the ICC from the forum. Where would we be without Devrim et al even if they do occasionally go round in circles.
Quote: Where would we be
Getting somewhere, maybe. And not just "occasionally".
All circles are vicious, but none so vicious as "revolutionary" circles.
These discussions about something we almost all know very little about are largely a way of saying "I ramble on speculatively therefore I am", as Descartes almost said. Sure, I've done that at times, but, outside the useful information, it seems endemic on this thread. "Revolutionaries" always feel they've got to say "something" even if it"s essentially nothing, merely to show they exist . Plus the narrow definition of "working class struggle" on the part of some that tends to reduce everything to what largely male adult employed workers are doing against the bosses and their economy has been criticised over 30 years ago. Which says a lot about how "avant-garde" the self-styled "avant garde" are.
FT: US official says Libya
FT: US official says Libya ‘regime will prevail’
The EU foreign ministers are meeting today with reports from the NATO meeting yesterday that France and the UK's interventionist stance is being opposed by Germany and Italy at least.
AFP: West heads divided into pivotal Libya crisis talks
P.S. These censorious attacks on Devrim are imo unwarrented, unseemly and unfair. Much as I may be distant from many of his political positions, honest debate between people of differing perspectives is a vital and necessary part of analytical work.
Quote: These censorious
There have been no attacks on Devrim or the ICC. Caiman's response, with which I have to agree (see the Kenya 2008 thread), was against baboon, who does not stop to discover that the American and British state are doing imperialist things. Who'd have guessed.
Could we also stop ignoring
Could we also stop ignoring this:
that is not a cigarette lighter being held against his neck
Noa Rodman wrote: Could we
Noa Rodman
That is disgusting. :(
Also there is thousands of sub saharan workers, mostly Nigerians and Ghanians camped next to tripoli airport. Most unable to go home because they lack the necessary papers.
On the racism story UNHCR:
On the racism story
UNHCR: Sub-Saharan Africans fleeing Libya report serious intimidation, violence
specific case of some Eritreans in Libya
blog: The Tragedy of Eritrean Refugees Caught Up in Libyan Uprising
the "mercenaries" story
Afrol: African mercenaries in Libya: Fact or racism?
a popularly re-posted blog article on the situation and the (patchy) response of the 'home countries' of the various mingrant communities in Libya
blog: A mercenary and an immigrant; a story of black Africans and Libya
One other note, whatever the current whys and wherefores around the "African mercenaries" rumour in the current conflict, there have been serious race riots (pogroms against sub-saharan africans by arab-berber Libyans) in years past, e.g. 2000 and going back to the early 1980s iirc.
Quote: petersbeaumont Hearing
Link? This is rather important, I would think.
ocelot wrote: On the racism
ocelot
Surely the rebel government in Benghazi has to do something about this.
I don't know. Why always
I don't know. Why always assume that civil disobedience is positive, while the 'government' is bad. Maybe the rebel government put the blacks in prisons to protect them from the mob (sorry, collective processes of self-organisation).
afrolnews from Feb. 26th
Quote: Why always assume that
I'm wondering, wanting to know. Hence the question. That the "'goverment' is bad", seems to me beyond any reasonable doubt, but that also is not a matter of 'assuming', whatever we think of the other side.
Noa Rodman wrote: I don't
Noa Rodman
Funnily enough a relative of mine who used to work in the oil industry in Libya told me awhile back. That when Gaddafi took power in his coup awhile after he claims some young gaddafi militia came to his oil refinery that he used to manage and bayoneted a young sudanese cook right infront of him. He said he tried to put his guts back inside him but he bled to death. He protested, struck one of the young men that did it and was thrown in jail and then rescued by the PLO after his oil company paid a ransom(he is known to bullshit and is really old but I believe him.). I think racism has been entrenched in that part of the world for a long time.
rooieravotr, my comment is
rooieravotr, my comment is based on info from the links:
and this
My point is to counter the dominant story on this thread (specifically by ocelot) of initial popular revolt vs. bourgeous recuperation. Maybe the rebel government is right to liquidate these militias.
Noah Rodman, fair enough.
Noah Rodman, fair enough. Still, my question was about civil disobedience in Tripoli, a story I found interesting and wanted to know more about.
Having said that, I think you can have popular revolt, now in the process of being recuperated - and at the same time racist attacks by parts of the revolt. The fact that people revolt does not make them immune from reactionary ideas/ practices that were quite dominant before the revolt as well. That is no excuse for these attacks; but the fact that they are happening is not, in itself, reason to oppose the revolt as a whole, or to deny that the revolt expresses legitimate rage against the regime as well, despite reactionary ideas and acts expressed in its wake.
Yes, these attacks are scandalous, should be mercilessly exposed, condemned and attacked. But I do not believe that the whole point of the revolt, the core of its dynamics, was racist. People did not go to sthe streets saying, hey, let;s overthrow Kadhafi, so that we can attack Somali workers, or something like that...
Anti-black sentiment is
Anti-black sentiment is unfortunately extremely common in North Africa and the Middle East. When bunch of Sudanese refugees that were camped in a square to protests UNHCR's treatment, the army moved in after a few weeks, killed quite a few (I am not sure anyone knows exactly how many) and beat up and arrested all of them, including very young children, a lot of "liberal" Egyptians gleefully cheered for the army. In Libya, the negative connotations to black (iswid in Arabic) is so bad that often Sub-Saharan Africans prefer to be called abeed (slave) instead.
Khawaga wrote: Anti-black
Khawaga
For example see these reports on the problems faced by black Iraqis
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QaUsR-blSw0
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=H8-JiZlfTyA
I hate to be going back to
I hate to be going back to this topic, but in case anyone's still interested in the Allahu Akbar thing, it turns out that's the title of the national anthem. Both for Gaddafi Libya and the Libyan Arab Republic. It's also an Egyptian marching song, and...you know what? Just read the damn link.
It's a war of imperialism Noa
It's a war of imperialism Noa - what do you think it is?
I bet the bourgeoisie of the major countries are happy with the Japanese earthquake taking out not only an economic competitor for the time being but taking away the publicity of this mass slaughter that they are fully implied in.
I don't believe the report above of western countries providing arms directly to the rebels - that's too risky after the SAS debacle and the precipitous French recognition of the National Council as the legitimate government. Not that arms would abate the massacres on the "front line". The National Council has made it clear that its first and foremost responsibility is to protect its oil installations in the east. Any possible arms channelled through Saudi for example would be for that purpose but the Americans may have stopped that.
All the major powers are at each others throats over their national interests in Libya and there is absolutely no element of cooperation. They've all set up the regime and provided it with the arms to do the job and elements of them will do the same for the National Council if it succeeds. At the moment, the US and Germany are blocking any moves by the UK and France to assert their influence and there are differences between the latter two. Russia has just signed a $2 billion deal with Gaddafi with more in the pipeline and Italy is tending to support the regime.
The UN, Nato, the EU, far from cooperating have once again shown themselves to be factions of national interests unable to agree on anything but fine sounding phrases. Britain, as others, has maintained links with the regime (it's still receiving oil money from the major countries to pay its mercenaries) and the UK's point man now that Saif is out of favour is the "moderate" (BBC) Foreign Minister.
Win, lose or draw for the regime or the Nation Council will not alter the fact that the explosion of this war is a blow to the working class across the region.
Rebels are done for,
Rebels are done for, according to The Guardian
It's taken Gaddafi about 10 days to (nearly) win this war after looking like he was finished,
Lord Knows what will happen next, there will be mass executions for the rebels, followed by sanctions from the UN which will hit the working class the hardest.
As Baboon said, a classic example of international powers looking after their own interests. States that can get away with dealing directly with Gaddafi do so, while those who can't um and ah over impossible action, while trying to find ways to sneak in the back door.
A big win all round for the ruling class.
Don't know how much this has
Don't know how much this has been reported in the anglophone media, but Saif Gaddafi has very publicly, and angrily, claimed that Gaddafi gave funds to Sarkozy's 2007 election campaign, and he's going to reveal the evidence (and also wants the money back), which, of course, has been denied by the UMP (Sharko's party). It should be remembered that Sharko warmly received Gaddafi just a few months after the election (not at all proof of his funding the UMP's election campaign, but significant nevertheless).
Samotnaf wrote: Don't know
Samotnaf
The bbc were reporting a few days ago that libyan tv were saying they were going to reveal some secrets about France. This must be it.
http://www.cnbc.com/id/421243
http://www.cnbc.com/id/42124342
US preparing for air strikes
BBC: UN backs action against
BBC: UN backs action against Gaddafi
Like baboon I saw the situation of the imperialist powers in the last weeks as divided. UK and France for intervention and a 4-Tops 'coalition of the unwilling', - US, Germany, Russia and China - against. The fact that they (who?) have managed to orchestrate unity behind a UN resolution which is effectively a blank cheque for all military intervention, short of the hackneyed cliché of "boots on the ground", is big news. Exactly what it means (and by that I don't mean exclusively for the Libyans) is, imo, an open question. At first sight, this appears to be a significant recomposition of the global ruling classes. The exact shape of the deal is unclear at the moment (but I suspect it's bad news for the Bahrainis...) and the question of whether or not an agreement on paper can be turned into facts on the ground (and what exactly those facts will be) is still to be determined. But evenso, it appears to be a shot in the arm for Negri's Empire thesis. I guess things will become clearer in the next days but this is definitely deserving of attention.
BBC: Libya 'to halt military
BBC: Libya 'to halt military action'
Ocelot, I'm not familiar with
Ocelot, I'm not familiar with Negri's position here - perhaps you could give a brief synoposis of it?
This is an extremely important question for the working class, not least in relation to elements of capitalist cooperation in the face of social movements and unrest. On the question of this seeming agreement "to do something about Libya", what is the content of it? That capitalist nations can come to some agreement on mutual interests is shown in the example of Israel where almost every major nation has supported this country as a regional policeman and a body that they can all deal with: China, the US, the EU, Britain and many Arab nations. But these contingent interests are themselves expressions of imperialism. Similar can be said about Egypt: funded not just by the US, the regime has been financially supported by billions of euros from the EU in its role as regional cop, supported by the assistance of diplomacy, arms sales, political credibility, intelligence and so on, with British interests here into the wider Middle East.
Gaddafi has been similarly supported in his role in providing stability with particular emphasis from Britain, France and Italy due to political and historical reasons. Clearly Germany is unhappy about its major rivals taking part in a war in the Mediterranean and thus asserting their own interests of capitalist order under the guise of restoring democracy. British and French diplomacy has scored something of a victory here and this diplomacy has been war by another name.
None of this "cooperation" can be persistent and harmonious because it is based on purely contingent national interests that can only become an increasing factor of instability. The ruling classes are having to perform contortions faced with the wave of social unrest sweeping the region in going from, and continuing to, support their dictators and strongmen, while trying to set up their "popular", democratic factions.
Outside of this other regional powers are being drawn into the maelstrom: the Turkish foreign minister said last week: "The region is ours and we will be the rebuilders of it", which is an expression of the emerging national interests of that country. And then there's Iran, which see its interests threatened by certain moves made by the US around the region.
they're actually doing it. I
they're actually doing it. I have no idea whether those planes in the picture were shot down by Benghazi or by foreign powers.
Or by the Libyan army. BBC
Or by the Libyan army.
BBC was reporting earlier that it was a rebel plane shot down by pro-Gaddafi forces.
On the constellation of forces, I remember a skit on some British comedy programme several years ago (Dead Ringers? Rory Bremner?) about a meeting between Blair and Chirac, which had lots of arguments and rudeness, but ended:
Chirac: Ah well, at least, you are not ze Americains...
Blair: ...and you're not, the Germans.
Britain and France can work together sometimes. Not in West Africa, that would be madness, but in the Balkans and Middle East (and by extension North Africa/the Med) British and French interests do sometimes co-incide. Don't forget, in 2002-3, Chirac was toying with supporting intervention in Iraq, at least via a UN resolution, and only came over to the German-Russian position quite late in the day.
The protests in the Arab
The protests in the Arab world, despite being led by a largely incoherent hodge podge of working class, professional, and miscellaneous others (including deranged religious zealots) is a protest from below against the comprador capitalist lackeys of U.S., French, and British Imperialism.
This presents a grave threat to the three Empires and they have tried to reframe to the issues so as to rehabilitate the "Arab League" and focus in on one of their traditional favorite targets -Mohamar Khadafy of Libya.
Our focus must be on defending the popular protest from below and exposing the machinations of the Empires and their comtador lackeys to resolve this area-wide protest in a manner favorable to the continued subordination of the Arab world to the Empires.
From the Arabist blog: 5
From the Arabist blog: 5 questions few are asking about Libya
Actually good article on the
Actually good article on the BBC website:
Why is the US not intervening in Bahrain, Yemen?
Both of the above sites are
Both of the above sites are well worth reading - but we must draw our own conclusions from our knowledge of what is central to Empires - and it isn't "democracy" or "freedom" for subject people.
What is central to the U.S. Empire is U.S. hegemony over the planet earth. All the rhetoric about "democracy" and "freedom" is just smoke and mirrors to mask their real motives. Obama, like Bush before him, wishes to restore to power little local hitmen who will do the bidding of the Empire. He will support "democracy" if he can fool the people into supporting someone who allows 2 (or 3 or 5 or 8) nearly (but not quite) identical bourgeois or less political "parties" to peddle their meaningless rubbish "freely" but not if someone comes along - "democratic" or otherwise who would propose something contrary to the interests of the Empire. The British and French Empires disagree only with details irrelevant to subject people.
Right now we have a tug-of-war between those who would assert the rights and desires of the local rank-and-file people vs. those who wish to reign in the struggle to "resolve" itself in meaningless cosmetics and get in line for lackey of the month.
The "Arab League" is association of local gangsters. Obama's attack on Libya is his way of restoring legitimacy to them and denying it to the most "uppity" of the tyrants.
[color=#FFFFFF] .[/color]
[color=#FF0000]Bullshit to [/color]
[color=#FFFFFF].[/color]
[color=#FFFFFF].[/color]
[color=#FF0000]the Empire ![/color]
Map of anti-Gaddafi forces
Map of anti-Gaddafi forces poised to continue attacking Libya:
According to twitter
According to twitter Gaddafi's son is dead:
bootsy wrote: According to
bootsy
Daily Planet confirms. Mini-G is dead. http://dailyplanetdispatch.com/gaddafis-son-khamis-killed-by-kamikaze-pilot-claim/856968/
Not sure if this has been
Not sure if this has been said before but RT (Russian news channel) have been reporting that according to Russian intelligence there wasn't any air strikes by Libya at all, what has been reported by BBC et al was all bogus apparently. Of course there's no reason to believe one set of arseholes over another though. Haven't really been keeping up with news on LIbya myself, perhaps someone would like to comment on this conspiracy-esque stuff?
I haven't seen anything from
I haven't seen anything from RT but as far as I know Telesur from Venezuela is more or less following the official Libyan government version of events, and this is being taken seriously by the Spanish speaking left, including anarchists to some extent. So Gaddafi's ceasefires and casualty figures are being taken at face value. Seen from this angle some of the implausible propaganda and media management starts to make more sense, though actually I imagine it's mainly aimed at the regime's support base in Libya.
Sometimes I found this blog
Sometimes I found this blog worth reading. It is mainly made by people from Benghasi. The blogs founder apparently was killed yesterday by a gaddafiist sniper. Though I have no idea about the intentions of the bloggers and do not know if one can take everything for true, it gives at least an idea about the extent of militarization that civil war has taken.
Just on the Venezuela thing.
Just on the Venezuela thing. A comrade drew my attention to a statement released on the French NPA site a couple of weeks back, signed by the Marea Socialista sub-group of the PSUV, (including by one of the Chavista TU leaders who rejoices in the glorious name Stalin Perez Borges). Didn't entirely seem to be on message with the Chavez line.
Kadhafi massacre des manifestants désarmés. Le peuple libyen vaincra!
I guess Telesur feel that there's an argument to be won in Venezuela over this. Knowing absolutely nothing about the current situation there, I couldn't make any more sense of it.
Mark. wrote: I haven't seen
Mark.
I don't know what does exactly mean the spanish speaking left...concerning the anarkos from what can be read and listen to in a-las-barricadas (http://www.alasbarricadas.org/forums/viewtopic.php?f=25&t=49732&start=60), they haven't got a clue (just like in here?) However there is a worrying trend of buying the "anti-imperialist" shit. In the interview you can listen to in the link, a woman presents qadafi as a humanitarian that once the west pressure had weakened had decided to share all the oil profits with the people. Therefore a palace revolt took place and a part of the tribes represented in government (the benghazi ones) rejected that to keep all the part for themselves and the upheavel got started...hilarious and childish, yes but no one in the site denounce it.
On the other hand there is a so-called libertarian (in our sense) site from galicia (unionlibertaria) that posts an article saying that the trigger for the west intervention (or funding the upheaval) was the decission taken by qadafi of closing the tap for the western oil companies.
Not much trust to the insugents, sure. Nevertheless what i find likely is that probably there are irreconciliable diferences between apparently two sides in lybia's ruling class (two groupings of tribes?) about which use give to oil revenues from now on. In an article in a spanish site on energy (crisisenergetica.org), it was held that saudy arabia reserves have been hugely overestimated and that would put lybia in a advantage position to negotiate with western powers. If that's basically what happens there, not much chance of any working class advancement there in the short run, i'm afraid.
From Anarkismo Statement by a
From Anarkismo
Statement by a Libyan anarchist
Interview with a Kurdish libertarian
----
Pulse
Pro-intervention article and discussion about and with the 'anti-imperialist' left
.
.
Who is this "pulse.media.org"
Who is this "pulse.media.org" ? They do not know their ass from a hole in the ground.
The ruling classes of the United States, Great Britain, and France do not, and never will, fight on the side of revolutionaries. At best they might fight "for" the revolutionaries in the same way Stalin "fought for" the Spanish Revolution in the 1930s by funneling arms to wholly owned lackeys posing as fifth columnist "good guys" while starving the real revolutionaries and ultimately strangling the revolution. The Three Stooges are doing this to "re-frame" the Arab uprising against their waterboys into its opposite: the United Waterboys as the good guys up against the evil single dictator who just so happens to have once upon a time been the big bad bogeyman dangled before the United States public.
Any leftist who gives any quarter whatsoever to the shenagigans of these Empires is a sellout and should be expunged from our midst.
These “Arab leaders” were created to serve the Empires and that is the only reason they are there in the first place.
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[color=#FF0000]Bullshit to [/color]
[color=#FFFFFF].[/color]
[color=#FFFFFF].[/color]
[color=#FF0000]the Empire ![/color][/quote]
Alexander Roxwell
Alexander Roxwell
What are you referring to when you say "the Empires?" And what is the argument for Gaddafi being "created" to serve them?
Alexander Roxwell wrote: Who
Alexander Roxwell
http://pulsemedia.org/about/
Apart from this I don't know anything about them.
Interview with Gabriele del
Interview with Gabriele del Grande, an Italian journalist in Benghazi (in Spanish)
machine translation
This seems like a realistic analysis of the situation to me.
----
Edited to add:
For anyone with Italian Gabriele del Grande's blog would be worth looking at
http://fortresseurope.blogspot.com/
From before the uprising it has some English translations of articles on emigration from Libya to Europe and there's an interview on this here.
Alexander Roxwell
Alexander Roxwell
[color=#FFFFFF].[/color]
redsdisease
The borders of the "nation-states" in the old territories of the Ottoman and Persian Empires were not carved out by the people that lived there - as was, more or less, the case in Western Europe. They were modifications of the old borders of the European colonies or imperial "protectorates" of the League of Nations. Their original "leaders" were chosen by their imperialist overlords and successive "leaders" were "screened" by them as well.
When successive "leaders" become too uppity in the eyes of the Overlord Empire that is "in charge" he is targeted, as was Mosaddegh, Khadafy, Saddam Hussein, the current leaders of Iran, Hamas, and pre-invasion Afghanistan and so forth and either castrated or eliminated. In the case of the last three the ability of the Empires to control their dominions is diminishing.
The "Empires" I am referring to are the "Three stooges" - the United States, Britain, and France.
Alexander Roxwell wrote: The
Alexander Roxwell
This may be largely true of the post-WW1 carve up of what remained of the Ottoman Empire. I don't think it really holds for North Africa. Egypt and Tunisia were originally semi-autonomous states within the Ottoman Empire, with borders that I think corresponded more or less to the modern ones. Libya was put together by the Italians colonising a couple of states, which I suppose is part of the origin of the current east-west divide there. I'm not sure about the monarchy in Libya between WW2 and Gaddafi's coup, but certainly Gaddafi was never anyone's puppet ruler. Likewise Nasser in Egypt.
Brian Whitaker
[quote=Brian Whitaker]
Finally, a quick word on Libya which I am not attempting to cover in detail here because it is getting so much attention elsewhere.
Suggestions that the situation will turn into a stalemate or result in a Korean-style division of the country don't strike me as very persuasive. I wouldn't rule that possibility out, but it seems to me there is also a reasonable chance of the Gaddafi regime imploding fairly quickly – in a matter of weeks rather than months or years.[/quote]
I suggested on another thread that Libya might be heading towards some kind of partition but actually I suspect Brian Whitaker is right here.
Assuming that the regime does collapse then it leaves the question of whether the outside powers involved in military intervention will have control over what happens next. My guess is that their influence would be limited, as in Tunisia and Egypt. I may be quite wrong about this though.
I think the sooner the regime
I think the sooner the regime falls, the weaker the hold of the bombing intervention coalition will be. The longer it drags on, the more crucial the intervention will be felt to become for the victory over Kadhafi. If he falls now, people will perceive this as still partly a victory of the revolt. If he falls after three months of NATO bombings, with the revolt even more reduced to a sideshow, his fall will be perceived as mainly produced by NATO intervention. That will weaken any remnant of independence of the insurgents even further. That is part of the harm intervention is doing already: undermining that independence.
a comment from bill weinberg
a comment from bill weinberg on ww4 report: http://ww4report.com/node/9700
Looks like the close air
Looks like the close air support is having a pretty decisive effect.
Libya: Rebels take Ras Lanuf, Brega , Uqayla, Bin Jawad
Alexander Roxwell wrote: The
Alexander Roxwell
Am I reading you incorrectly, or do you seriously believe that other powerful nations don't have interests and influence in what's happening in Libya?
redsdisease wrote: Alexander
redsdisease
Gobble Gobble ? What would make you leap over everything I have said and come to such an idiotic conclusion?
redsdisease wrote: Alexander
redsdisease
You're reading it completely incorrectly. The thing is that those three are the ones with permanent seats on the UN Security Council. So they're in the most position to make decisions that benefit them.
Alexander Roxwell
Alexander Roxwell
Sorry, you're right. I got this discussion mixed up with another one I was having elsewhere. My bad.
"The US and NATO can't resist
"The US and NATO can't resist taking advantage of the conflict in Libya to promote military intervention," said Fidel Castro. How much money is the arms industry worth today really? The hiroshima bomb was dropped simply because too much money was invested into it NOT to drop it. I'm trying to pick up the pieces of what is going on.
The bomb was dropped on
The bomb was dropped on Hiroshima primarily to demonstrate to the USSR that America could destroy cities if it wished. And then they dropped the bomb on Nagasaki to prove they could do it again.
America is the world's biggest arms dealer. Britain, France and China are all big players. It's a multi-billion dollar industry. Obviously, the thing about weapons is that if you use them, you have to buy more. If you don't, the arms industry goes out of business. But wars don't happen just to sell weapons.
Global arms sales have risen
Global arms sales have risen 60% since 2002 to total $400 billion in the year 2009. An exploding bomb is a pure waste for capital as is the whole arms industry. This doesn't preclude advantages given to particular national capitals that armements give them nor profitability to particular sectors. But for global capital, it is a waste.
On Libya, amid the latest hypocritical contortions, there are direct testimonies that coalition "advisers" are working in Benghazi with the opposition. Where such "advisers" are, so too goes special forces as a matter of course.
On the "Jihadi" forces in Libya. On Newsnight two nights ago, there was a report from the area in Darnah, eastern Libya from where a suspicious number of Jihadists have left in order to fight in Iraq and Afghanistan. One world-weary old boy from this poorest of regions - deliberately kept poor by the regime - knew all about the export of these Jihadists as did, he said, everyone else around. If he knew all about it, isn't it reasonable to assume not only that the all-pervasive secret police, torturers, networks of spies and informers extremely active in this region, knew all about it too but to ask why they did nothing about it when they could have so easily done so? After all, the regime hasn't baulked at wiping out a thousand odd young men at time here and there. The only conclusion that I can draw is that the regime was complicit in the creation and movement of these Jihadi elements in order to justify its status as reliable partners in the "war on terror" - precisely the reason that Tony Blair brought Gaddafi in from the cold.
After being initially disorientated by events, specifically the social uprising that took place, the ruling class has scrambled to imperialist war around this region. I don't want to derail this thread, but if Syria goes the same way as Libya, ie, centrifugal tendencies dominate, it will make Libya look like nothing.
Chomsky interview on Libya
Chomsky interview on Libya
Mark. wrote: Chomsky
Mark.
if someone could post that up to the library that would be great!
Alexander Roxwell wrote: The
Alexander Roxwell
may i ask for whom these powers are stooges? for i have no idea what you mean.
The Three Stooges.
The Three Stooges.
oh. i wasn't aware of that.
oh. i wasn't aware of that.
Admittedly I'm not scholared
Admittedly I'm not scholared in Libyan affairs, but this article comments on the probable reasons for intervention. Though it does present Qaddafi's regime as being benevolent.
http://truthout.org/libya-all-about-oil-or-all-about-banking/1302678000
It's worth noting that
It's worth noting that selfishly-motivated military interventions occasionally yield positive results. The British intervention in Sierra-Leone is the most recent example. Charles Taylor's mercenaries were terrorizing Sierra-Leone and destabilizing its pro-British government. To protect his client, Blair sent a large British contingent to fortify the ineffective UN forces; they arrested the leading thugs and quickly finished a nine year long civil war which had displaced millions.
Also consider the Vietnamese invasion of Cambodia. The Vietnamese were very open about their disregard for Pol Pot's massacres. They made it as clear as they could that the invasion was entirely defensive. And in the course of this selfish, and partially imperialistic adventure, they ended one of the worst genocides of the 20th century.
So don't lower yourself to the common fallacy of saying, "imperialistic powers are involved, so the outcome will necessarily be malign". History refutes this position. The Libyan civil war will have to get very bloody to be worse than what would have happened in Eastern Libya if Gaddafi had taken Benghazi. He has a reputation for being vindictive and punitive; even close family member's who've vocally differed from him on trifling matters have been found dead. Instead of watching NATO planes destroy Gaddafi's tanks, we could be seeing a North African recreation of Halabja.
Another reason for
Another reason for intervention that hasn't been mention so far, is that the military fucking love these kind of actions.
They get to test out all their new toys, justify their budget and crank up the patriotism and sense of moral duty. All with miniscule risk to their own. Suddenly the military are important again, after all those abuse stories and the Trident black-hole.
I think what we are seeing is a mix of imperial resource grabbing, the genuine belief that they can stop Gaddafi and bring peace and military cock-waving.
Interestingly NATO don't seem to be doing very well, they've stopped a possible massacre in Benghazi but bloodshed has increased elsewhere and Gaddafi shows signs of increasing barbarism.
Obviously while this is still going on they can't control the oil.
There seems to be two likely scenarios; Firstly NATO backs out quietly blaming diplomacy, maybe they finance they back the rebels a little but just enough to make it an even fight hoping that a stalemate will be reached and appropriate the resources from both sides.
Or Secondly they stop intervening halfheartedly and send in the boys (and some girls).
Either way it' shit for the working class of Lybia.
Sir Arthur Streeb-Greebling
Sir Arthur Streeb-Greebling
NATO agreed to finance the rebels today.
It's important to recollect how reluctant the west was to get involved when this all started. They didn't pass a resolution authorizing a no fly zone until the eleventh hour (For perspective: After the invasion of Kuwait, It took mere hours for the US to table a resolution in the Security Council authorizing a war against Iraq) And one of Obama's spokesman said that they only went in because they were worried that the electorate would blame them for a massacre in Benghazi.
I don't think we can talk about the working class of Libya as if they're an innocent monolithic entity in the middle of an unfortunate war. The working class in Sirte are overwhelmingly pro-Gaddafi, and the working class of Benghazi are overwhelmingly pro-rebellion. And they're both violently militant. According to the New York Times, a thousand Benghazians volunteer for the rebellion every week. The pro-Gaddafi proles in Sirte and Tripoli have armed themselves and are eager for a ruckus.
Marxist class analysis isn't helpful here.
Quote: Marxist class analysis
Of course it is; it's the same analysis you use for Israel/Palestine, in Egypt, Tunisia or at home. It's just that the working class was defeated a long time ago in Libya. There's been some working class activity, but not on any scale close to that of Tunisia and Egypt.
Khawaga
Khawaga
I didn't say it doesn't apply, I said it isn't helpful. It doesn't compliment an analysis of the situation.
Ah, ok. Fair enough, I guess
Ah, ok. Fair enough, I guess I just read too much into your statement.
Gerostock: Quote: It's worth
Gerostock:
Is this a case of "the road to heaven is paved with bad intentions"? Don't have time to check out what's been happening in Sierra Leone since Blair's wonderful initiative, but I suspect it's not that much better. Wasn't the whole thing about control of the diamond industry (iirc?). The BBC seemed to have the same take as you, Gerostock:
- Wellclose Square here. Hope you won't be supporting Sharko in the Ivory Coast next.
I think class analysis is
I think class analysis is perfectly helpful to untangling the struggle there in Libya. From conversations that I have had on other sites here on libcom.org I would hazard a guess that the problem isn't your "class analysis" so much as what appears to be a very narrow definition of "Marxism" that is interfering with what you see out the window without blinders on.
One of the people I really admire in this world is Noam Chomsky. Mark posted an interview with Noam Chomsky on Libya that really nails it right on target. Noam Chomsky's "theory" is (in my opinion) mush but he does not subordinate what he sees when he looks out the window to that "theory" which is a big big problem for many dogmatic leftists, including, I believe, many of you here on libcom.org. Chomsky sees what is actually out there and calls a a dog a dog and a grasshopper a grasshopper. As a result he has amended his eclectic anarchist theory to include the right of nations to self determination (or he always supported it).
If you deny the right of nations to self determination you cannot understand what is happening in the Middle East today. In fact I believe that it messes up your ability to understand Imperialism. This is not a struggle between "factory workers" and "capitalists" but it is a struggle between big empires and a number of subordinate classes who are exploited by them.
The world is messy. All of the workers are part of the oppressed but the "class line" is fuzzy in the "Third World" and some of the workers there in Lybia (and elsewhere) side with the Empires and some of them side with subordinate national oppressors. Our first principle is that we must always oppose the Empires because it is a system created by them. In Lybia we do need to support those who are fighting the Khaddafi regime. Are these two things mutually exclusive? I think here in the heart of the Empires we can do this. In Lybia it would be much more problematric - but, I think, revolutionaries must do their best.
Life is messy. All "theory" is reductionist and never infallible. We need to adjust our theory whenever we see that it misleads us in identifying what we see when we look out the window,
Alexander Roxwell wrote: If
Alexander Roxwell
That is patently false. If anything it seems that people who "deny" this right nations to self determination are in a better position to explain why nationalist leaders "betray" their "own" people, which never fails to happen.
Do "nationalist leaders"
Do "nationalist leaders" actually "betray" their people? Did George Washington "betray" the people of the United States? Did Simon Bolivar "betray" the people of Greater Columbia? Did Sandino "betray" the people of Nicaragua?
"Nationalist Leaders" today sometimes do pretend to be "socialists" but they do not generally call themselves "communists" and promise to create a new regime governed by workers councils. Exactly what "nationalist leader" in the Middle East is "betraying" their people?
Because you fail to understand that the struggle for national self determination against foreign overlords is an important and decisive struggle in the world today (and was even more important in the just recent past) you fail to understand what is actually going on in the world today and thus can't tell a "traitor" from an ashtray.
Why did capitalism survive World War II? Was it all due to "traitors"? Or does it have something to do with the ability of some Imperialist capitalists to generate superprofits out of conquered overseas areas of the globe?
People fight what they perceive is oppressing them and if an Iraqi (or an Egyptian or a Iranian or ..........) today sees his enemy as a foreign overlord is he or she wrong?
Shaking your bony finger at "traitors" is only a small part of what a communist must do. The main thing a communist must do is point the way forward for workers - and for other oppressed classes as well - like peasants. Sometimes the road forward is clear - sometimes it is not.
[color=#FF0000]If you deny the right of nations to self determination you cannot understand what is happening in the Middle East today.[/color]
What a weird and rambling
What a weird and rambling comment.
That people are using
That people are using nationalist rhetoric for their political ends is not indicative of a "right of nations to self-determination" as some kind of ahistorical magical entity, any more than the repeated wars over resources are indicative of a "right of people to private property". And repeating this in red is not going to win you any arguments.
Alexander Roxwell wrote: Do
Alexander Roxwell
You are missing the point. The point isn't that they are "betraying their people," in fact those same nationalist leaders are usually working in the interest of an entire section of "their people" (the owning class). The point is that nationalist struggles encourage the working class to ally themselves with the very people who exploit them, fighting to create a new nation where they are still exploited.
Alexander Roxwell
No, of course not. But again you're missing the point. One can fight against an imperial overlord without, at the same time, fighting for a nation state. We would be crazy not to see that the US presence in Iraq is oppressive and exploitative, this does not mean that we must necessarily support the Iraqi government or the Bathe Party or any other nationalist cause. You seem to believe that anti-imperialist struggle intrinsically affirms nationalist struggle, which I think is just not true.
You know, I've been
You know, I've been dismissive but let's target this head-on. Allow me to show you why "the right of national self-determination" is completely useless in analyzing the situation in the Middle East today, while class analysis makes more sense, by using the glaring example of Egypt: the turmoil there started with a US-backed regime. It has lost most of its impetus even though the regime is still US-backed. The majority of remaining unrest is linked to working-class struggle: strikes and occupations. Now let us look at it through the two analyses:
[*] Class analysis: there was a break within the bourgeoisie due to the deteriorating economic situation. After years of class struggle, and the example of Tunisia, they sided with workers already struggling against the regime, as well as recruiting more workers into demonstrations and sit-ins, forcing out a specific manifestation of it, but holding back as soon as it seemed like the coup would result in a revolution, which would be against their interests as bourgeoisie. The class struggle, meanwhile, continues with greater vigor now that the regime's hold has shaken.
[*] Nationalist analysis: The people of Egypt have had enough of an oppressive US-backed regime. They struggled to overthrow the dictatorship, but betrayed their people once Mubarak was ousted and are now working with the same US-backed infrastructure to create a more malleable US ally. How dare they?!
This is of course a caricature of your nationalism, and I suppose a caricature of class analysis, as well. But our caricature looks better. You are more than welcome to fill in the gaps or explain what you actually mean about the need for this "right of nations to self-determination" in understanding the Middle East.
I find it very difficult to
I find it very difficult to argue with people who do not state their positions clearly.
Tojiah
O.K. Show me.
Tojiah
Who, exactly is "they"? One unidentified section of the bourgeoisie? Altho not written well I don't think I would disagree strongly with it as I understand it.
Tojiah
Here the first "they" appear to be the "people" - which includes workers, petit bourgeois, peasants, bedouins, and ........ do you include some segment of the bourgeoisie? The comrador bourgeoisie is the dictatorship itself is it not - or did the comprador bourgeoisie itself split? The second "they" (inserted by me as it is implied rather than stated) is whom exactly? It certainly does not include the workers. Is it the "other" part of the unidentified split? This statement needs a rewrite. It doesn't make sense.
Your unclear writing style makes it difficult to know where you are coming from here but it appears that you think that when I embrace the right of nations to self-determination I abandon class analysis. Did I say something somewhere to give you that impression? Or are you "shadow boxing" not with me but with some Nasserite that you met somewhere.
I am a communist who believes that the right of nations to self determination is one of the things we must fight for as we fight for the workers liberation. I do not "choose" to fight for the nation against the workers. Pardon me if you don't think that. I am just trying to be clear.
You certainly failed to Tojiah
For some reason I cannot edit
For some reason I cannot edit the original post to make it clearer. Instead, I will rewrite it verbatim with corrections:
"Now let us look at it through the two analyses:
[list]
[*] Class analysis: there was a break within the bourgeoisie due to the deteriorating economic situation. After years of class struggle, and the example of Tunisia, a portion of the bourgeoisie (middle class intellectuals?) sided with workers already struggling against the regime, as well as recruiting more workers into demonstrations and sit-ins, forcing out a specific manifestation of it, but this portion of the bourgeoisie held back as soon as it seemed like the coup would result in a revolution, which would be against their interests as bourgeoisie. The class struggle, meanwhile, continues with greater vigor now that the regime's hold has shaken.
[*] Nationalist analysis: The people of Egypt have had enough of an oppressive US-backed regime. They struggled to overthrow the dictatorship, but the popular leaders betrayed their people once Mubarak was ousted and these leaders are now working with the same US-backed infrastructure to create a more malleable US ally. How dare they?!"
Is this somewhat clearer?
As for the second part, I expect you to fill that in, because it is you who claims that you cannot understand the situation in the Middle East without accepting "the right of nations to self determination", so you should provide an analysis under that article of faith. I see no reason to use "self determination" as an analytical tool or as something communists should work for, and indeed, this doesn't seem to bear out as a very important. To quote myself: " the turmoil there started with a US-backed regime. It has lost most of its impetus even though the regime is still US-backed. The majority of remaining unrest is linked to working-class struggle: strikes and occupations." So it doesn't seem like there is much for "self determination" to add to the class analysis. In fact, it seems to contradict what is going on on the ground, so it would detract from an analysis by adding a wrong premise. But it should be easy for you to prove me wrong. How does "the right of nations to self determination" fit in here at all?
I have very little time today
I have very little time today to spent on the computer but I was glad to get your clarification of what the several theys meant. Thank you.
As to the "second part" I will have to get back to you on that when I have more time but this would an amendment to your "class analysis" rather than having anything to do with your caricature of some Nasserite's point of view.
I would say that to ignore the right of nations to self determination here is to ignore the living context in which this struggle is taking place. To fail to support whatever attempt is made to "de-link" from the Imperial Overlord is to overlook the actual genises of the problem. And to fail to opose any attempt that is made to 'link up" with a "friendly Empire" is equivilant to "treason."
Alexander Roxwell
Alexander Roxwell
I'm sorry, what? Are the Bedouin tribes a separate class now? I would count the leadership of these tribes as petit-bourgeois or bourgeois, depending on the area. After all, Gaddafi is a Bedouin. But we can't really use proper capitalist class analysis here because the system under which the tribes are organized predates modern capitalism by a really long time.
What does "class analysis"
What does "class analysis" mean?
First of all you take classes as they are in a given society no matter whether their origin was in capitalist society or in some previous society. You cannot do anything ridiculous like shoving bedouins into the "bourgeoisie" or even the "petit bourgeoisie" just to "disappear" them. This is classic dogmatism - shoving round mounds into square holes just to make them go away.
Are there active classes in let's say Libya that originate in pre-capitalist societies. Yes indeed. Just like there are still "peasants" in many many countries around the world. Are they "identical" to peasants from Middle Age France? No they are not. They behave differently as they exist embedded in a different society.
Classes exist in relationship to other classes.
In the United States I do not believe we ever really had a "peasantry." Instead we had "yeoman farmers." What is the difference between a "peasant" and a "yeoman farmer"? A peasant has to work part of the time on someone else's land or pay a "rent" to use someone else’s land - usually a landlord - a yeoman farmer does not. Peasants behave differently than do yeoman farmers.
Where is the "border" between one class and another vs. just a "stratum" of a class? What is the difference between a species and a genus? Between a genus and a family? Between a family and an order? People will debate these borders until doomsday. It is clearer in biology than it is in political economy and there are still disagreements in biology.
You make a mockery of “class analysis” when you try to cram fit inconvenient reality into a dogmatic box.
Once you have an idea of what classes really exist in a given society you must see how they react to current issues that come up in that society. For instance the issue of national self determination. It is not at all clear to me that many of you recognize any difference between the kind of rank jingoism that you see, say in the United States, to the fight for national self-determination, say, in Vietnam in the 40s against Japanese Imperialism or the 50s against French Imperialism or the 60s and 70s against U.S. Imperialism.
Mao Tse Tung tried to claim that what he was doing was creating a “socialist” China based upon arbitrarily reclassifying the Chinese peasantry as “proletarians” and calling himself a “proletarian revolutionary.” Some of you people do the same thing – but with a different goal in mind. Peasants are no longer peasants because capitalism has replaced feudalism and therefore a proletarian revolution is possible all over the world because the world as whole is ready for socialism. So let’s just sweep up all the leftover classes and put them under this rug or that so we are only left with two – the proletarian and the capitalist. This is not “class analysis” but just ideological fraud.
The truth is that a part of the world managed to industrialize first and then it tried to enslave the rest of the planet and prevent it from catching up. This was the “first wave” of bourgeois national revolutions. The “second wave” of bourgeois national revolutions went under the banner of “communism” and utterly messed up those who really believed in “communism” as it was “written” by Saint Karl rather than as practiced by Stalin, Mao, Ho, Castro, and so on.
The “Third World” experienced an anti-colonial revolt that was more successful after World War II and was most successful where it adopted either guerilla war or peasant war. I supported those “bourgeois national” revolts for national self determination for what they were – an attempt to get out from under the thumb of a foreign power. In fact they were not "proletarian revolutions" in any sense but that does not mean they were irrelevant or of no interest to real communists.
Where are we today?
I think we have entered a new era since the mask fell off the "second wave" and they all (or mostly all) reverted to ordinary old capitalism. I think we may see a real proletarian revolution one day “soon.” The peasantry is in fact disappearing around the world and the ranks of the proletariat are increasing. I have no access to such statistics and have no real "sense" of percentages but we may indeed finally be reaching the point where there are more workers than peasants in the world today. I think we will see some bizarre hybrids of old wars of national liberation and proletarian revolutions. Those of you who expect something pure and untainted will be sorely disappointed.
I believe the current revolt in the Arab lands must be seen more from this standpoint and less from the standpoint of "pure proletarian revolutionaries"(us) and those who have "sold them out" (everyone else).
In other words I believe in a real class analysis.
Quote: I think we will see
Sorry that wouldn't be a proletarian revolution. The one has to negate the other. This is not to say that the one cannot arise from the other, but in the end they are mutually incompatible. Liberation of a nation will lead to the formation of a local bourgeoisie, it always has it always will. Proletarian revolution, if successful, will destroy the nation-state in the process. In any case, I think it is more likely that we will see expressions of food riots mixed with self-conscious working class outbreaks and some desire for a liberal democratic state (not your bollocks national liberation), which has been uniformly the case across the Middle East and North Africa. Slogans against the US, Israel and Saudi Arabia aside, there hasn't been much liberation of nations, likely because most people in the Middle East are really fucking nationalist (Libya is a case in point).
While I agree with that it's silly to label the bedouin as petit-bourgeois and that most pre-capitalist classes are intention slated to become either proletarian or capitalist, I find your support for national liberation movements to be appalling.
There is a huge chasm between
There is a huge chasm between a lack of nuance in class analysis (to which I will admit - I was, after all, merely providing a very simplistic sketch) and saying that accepting the rights of nations to self-determination helps in understanding the situation in the Middle East. It seems that you are incapable of applying the lessons from the unmasking of the second wave of "revolutions" to current national liberation movements. Nor are you capable of accepting the lessons of previous "wars of national liberation" that have not changed the fact that smaller nations serve the interests of more powerful nations through neo-colonialism rather than colonialism.
Moreover, if reading libcom has gotten you to write the following:
Then you have completely misunderstood what was written here and elsewhere. Please tell me where in this sketch of an analysis I have presented I have said this thing:
I have not seen many other libcommers speak of betrayal either, because there is no point in trusting people with an interest in propping up capitalism to be the first on the barricades to overthrow it. You cannot be betrayed by someone you never trusted to begin with - you, on the other hand, want us to trust in national liberationists, ignoring all of the lessons of the past century.
Honestly, it would be nice if you would explain how supporting national liberation movements in yet another exercise in the cycle of capitalism is of any help.
Why? Why would national liberation play a positive part in this? Your entire ramble has no explanation of this point. Yes, nationalist organizations act and agitate in different ways under different regimes, depending on how well the ruling class they serve is doing, but in what way does this mean that we should be supporting any of them?
Do you recognize a difference
Do you recognize a difference between the kind of rank jingoism that you see in the United States today and the fight for national self-determination by the Vietnamese people from the 1940s thru the 1970s?
Do you really, honestly, believe that the material pre-requisites have been laid in New Guinea for a proletarian socialist revolution?
Do you believe that India has achieved nothing at all from independence from Imperial Britain even tho it is still subject to neo-colonialism?
Do you believe that China achieved nothing at all from its revolution in 1949?
Why is China today an economic powerhouse whereas India is still weak?
Why is Brazil even weaker? Or is it?
Do you believe that Russia achieved nothing at all from its revolution in 1917?
Do you believe that Karl Marx supported the “bourgeois revolution” against the feudal aristocracy? e.g. the “first wave” of bourgeois national revolutions
If you saw the Russian, the Chinese, the Yugoslav, the Vietnamese, the Cuban revolutions as the “second wave” of bourgeois national revolutions would you have not supported those just as Karl Marx supported the “first wave”?
If you do not see them as a "second wave" of bourgeois national revolutions how do you see them?
In 1917 we saw the Russian revolution and the key role played by workers councils there. We saw similar, if less successful attempts in Austria, Germany, Bulgaria, and elsewhere in the early and middle 1920s. We saw some sputterings in the 1930s and then the last gasp in Spain in the 1930s. What have we seen since then? Portugal in the 1970s? Even that was triggered by the revolts in their colonies in Africa. We have seen almost nothing since the 1930s - and virually nothing at all of workers councils. How do you explain this if the “all the world” has been “rotten ripe” for a proletarian socialist revolution ever since 1900? Trotskyists explain it by saying the workers have been “betrayed” over and over and over again. If that is not your explanation what is it?
I already gave you my explanation – which you dismiss as my “entire ramble.”
Quote: Trotskyists explain it
Oh, FFS. The working class was defeated, never betrayed (and I ask the same as Tojiah: by whom?). Spain was the major defeat, WW2 was simply Spain writ large. Come nearly 70 years of "labour peace" (at least in the West) and all proletarian movements in the colonized world turned into projects for membership into the nation-state system and you have your explanation.
Btw, your fucking stages approach to history is so passe. Very orthodox second international bollocks.
Alexander Roxwell wrote: Do
Alexander Roxwell
What does that have to do with whether or not to support national liberation movements in the Middle East?
Alexander Roxwell
What does that have to do with whether or not to support national liberation movements in the Middle East?
Alexander Roxwell
What does that have to do with whether or not to support national liberation movements in the Middle East?
Alexander Roxwell
What does that have to do with whether or not to support national liberation movements in the Middle East?
Alexander Roxwell
What does that have to do with whether or not to support national liberation movements in the Middle East?
Alexander Roxwell
What does that have to do with whether or not to support national liberation movements in the Middle East?
Alexander Roxwell
What does that have to do with whether or not to support national liberation movements in the Middle East?
Alexander Roxwell
What does that have to do with whether or not to support national liberation movements in the Middle East?
Alexander Roxwell
What does that have to do with whether or not to support national liberation movements in the Middle East?
Alexander Roxwell
What does that have to do with whether or not to support national liberation movements in the Middle East?
Alexander Roxwell
What does that have to do with whether or not to support national liberation movements in the Middle East?
Alexander Roxwell
[/quote]
No. You have made no explanation. You have just strung claims together without connecting them logically in any way. That's not an explanation. That's a shopping list.
Khawaga wrote: Btw, your
Khawaga
Yes. Like the Mensheviks and the Second International back in 1905 / 1910 I do in fact recognize that there are in fact stages to history. That used to mark a critical difference between Marxists and Anarchists back then.
Lenin found this view inadequate so he amended it - but he did not abandon it. Even Trotsky did not completely abandon it - but did bend it out of shape. Lenin in fact called for the "dual dictatorship of the proletariat and the peasantry" in Russia - his way of recognizing that the bourgeoisie would oppose the coming Russian revolution despite the fact it would be of the "bourgeois" stage. Lenin in fact said - "O.K. if the bourgeoisie will not make its own revolution we will make it for them."
That is what he did and he was right. Trotsky was wrong. Russia did not have the material prerequisites to build a "dictatorship of the proletariat" which was why Stalin came to power.
This isn't "bullocks" - it is reality.
FYI, we don't live in the
FYI, we don't live in the 1910s anymore and your "analysis" of why Russia failed is overly simplistic. Time folds diachronically, not in stages, which is an abstraction to make sense of history, i.e. after the fact, not some fucking map and compass for the future. In any case, please, then, go ahead and support all kind of bourgeois revolutions. What the fuck you're doing on libcom is beyond me. You've consistently demonstrated that you're just a Trot trying to hide under some anarchist lingo.
First of all, it's "bollocks". It's an "o", not a "u". Second of all, you mistake theory for reality.
Alexander Roxwell wrote: Do
Alexander Roxwell
Tojiah
Ding Dong. Many of the people there are fighting to overthrow the puppet regimes who serve the interests of the Empires far more than they do the native people there.
Alexander Roxwell
Tojiah
I chose New Guinea because I believe that no one in their right mind would pretend that New Guinea had the material prerequisites for a proletarian socialist revolution. I would argue that very few of the Arab countries involved do either. The point is – for a country where the material prerequisites for a proletarian socialist revolution are absent what do the people do when they are suffering profound oppression and exploitation? Do they, as Noa Rodman appears to think “just wait” and send their best fighters West to fight our fight – or do they fight for what they can get? And what can they get? They can get more autonomy for their nation !
Alexander Roxwell
Tojiah
India did achieve quite a bit from becoming independent of Great Britain. Arab people could achieve this as well.
Alexander Roxwell
Tojiah
Gee whiz. Before 1949 China was pulling a continuous train for all the Imperial rapists in the world. Now they are not. Take a look at Iraq. Is that what the future holds for the rest of the Arab world? Does China look better? Duh !
Alexander Roxwell
Tojiah
Perhaps some Arabs could learn something here. Perhaps you could as well. Some methods work better than others.
Alexander Roxwell
Tojiah
Just driving the above point in deeper.
Alexander Roxwell
Tojiah
O.K. Score 1 point for Tojiah (7 for Roxwell)
Alexander Roxwell
Tojiah
Gee whiz Tojiah. Let me see. These struggles, if they are successful and not undermined by the Empires, just could work out to be “national liberation” movements. We should do everything in our power to push for that !
Alexander Roxwell
Tojiah
Admittedly I am trying to get you to admit that my point of view is abstractly superior to yours and only touches the Middle East if I am successful. Give you another half point.
Alexander Roxwell
Tojiah
Ditto above.
Alexander Roxwell
Tojiah
I am pointing out that you are holding up a standard made in another time in another place.
Alexander Roxwell
Tojiah
I think I have explained it rather well. I think your point of view is preposterous and I think mine is much better.
Alexander Roxwell
Alexander Roxwell
Who are these people you are referring to? The Libyan rebels being armed and supported by the US, Britain and France? Gaddafi, who was being supported by the former just a few months ago? The Egyptian "liberationists" who have stopped struggling now that there has been a small superficial change in the government? Who are these liberationists that are at the forefront of all of these struggles, without the faith in which understanding is impossible?
Alexander Roxwell
No-one in their right mind would compare Papua New Guinea to North Africa or the Middle East, where a far more advanced material, cultural and political infrastructure exists. The latter are modern industrial states, or close to it, while the former is not. It is a completely ridiculous comparison. The only similarity seems to be that in both cases the national liberationists you keep yammering about have little to do with what's actually going on on the ground.
Alexander Roxwell
All the nation-states in which there have been upheavals in the Middle East have been independent states, in most cases since around the time India gained its independence. We are talking about the present. Again, utterly irrelevant.
Alexander Roxwell
Does Iraq have the largest population of all nations in the world, as well as having immense natural resources and being home to a significant portion of the world's manufacturing processes? Are Libya or Egypt Iraq? Are we living in the mid 20th century? No to all of these. Again, irrelevant.
Alexander Roxwell
Which methods? Methods of what? You were just extolling the virtues of both India and China as having gained immensely from independence, now you say China is better off than India. Why? What? Where? What are you trying to argue with? What should Arabs learn from you, other than that there is no dearth of condescension on the Left?
Alexander Roxwell
What point? You can't stab people with a hammer.
Alexander Roxwell
I'm glad that in your mind there is a game here that you are winning, but there's a reason people usually let a referee decide on these things.
Alexander Roxwell
So we're supposed to take a time machine and help Marx in the past? That sounds like a terrific premise to a science fiction/alternate history show. In practice there what we see in front of us is struggles that have nothing to do with national liberation or resistance to "Empire" occurring long after Marx's time. So.. again... irrelevant.
Alexander Roxwell
Well, again, your hammer has no point.
Alexander Roxwell
Ditto in what sense? How are struggles which result in coups at worst, sometimes heightened class struggle at best, anywhere near bourgeois national revolutions? Your analysis has no relevance whatsoever to this discussion. Irrelevant.
Alexander Roxwell
Oh, really? As opposed to you, who is claiming that we should support this or that policy because any reasonable person would have supported certain revolutions that you bring up from the past? That is not holding up a standard made in another time and another place to what is going on in the here and now? That is a modern view, keeping up to date with current events?
Alexander Roxwell
Well, I imagine you are either surrounded by yea-sayers or don't bother getting any kind of critique from other people, because your argument, such as it is, does not hold water, repeatedly shows your ignorance of current events, and therefore the only reason you could prefer it is because you are unable to criticize your own thoughts or understand other people's criticisms thereof.
Tojiah, Khawaga, and anyone
Tojiah, Khawaga, and anyone else tempted to enter into another futile discussion with Alexander, recently we've had two long threads on the 'national liberation of Ireland' and on the issue of 'national liberation' as a theory, at the end of which Alexander failed to engage with what the entire group of fellow posters wrote, some of whom disagreed between themselves on other issues.
Clearly, it is fundamentally pointless to engage with Alexander on this issue - he's not listening or reasoning, he's just re-iterating what he believes, like a mantra. He has a faith which can't be changed by reasoning.
Alexander - if you want to continue making your argument in favour of 'national liberation', why not return to the other discussions and answer the critical points made by the other posters who engaged with you then in good faith?
Khawaga
In the past, I would have disagreed with Khawaga. I was wrong. It's now beyond me, too.
Meh, Roxwell's right. I
Meh, Roxwell's right. I retract my statement, which was a result of being extremely tired and rather lazy. What I was trying to say (unsuccessfully, of course) was that you can't just lump Bedouins into their own class. Bedouins are, to the best of my knowledge, an ethnic group. You have to examine each of them and their individual relations to the class structure in Libya. Which is why I mentioned Gaddafi. Combination of bad wording, sleep deprivation and laziness. umm...oops?
also, if we can get back on track with the actual updates on the situation, NPR says NATO just made an airstrike on Gaddafi's current hiding place in Bab Al-Aziya. CNN confirms that this was, in fact, an assassination attempt. No word on whether Gaddafi himself was in there.
The city of Misurata has been under heavy siege by Gaddafi for weeks. The US has just deployed its first Predator drones there to harass Gaddafi's troops. The rebels seem to be making very slow progress in retaking the entire city, since Gaddafi's troops are disguising themselves and hiding amongst the populace. They currently have control over just under half the city, on par with the rebels. The center part is still heavily contested, but the rebels are making slow progress. According to NPR, the loyalist morale seems to be very low.
My analysis:
Misurata is a critical location because it is very, very close to Tripoli. Both sides have poured so much effort into taking the city that whoever loses will never survive the morale loss. This is much more of a problem for the rebels, as morale is their only tactical advantage over Gaddafi's troops. Also, NPR has a rebel fighter saying that most of Misurata supports the rebellion. If the rebels gain control of the city, they will have an enormous morale boost and a fresh source of new fighters very close to Tripoli.
LBird wrote: Clearly, it is
LBird
Actually I did go on this site to "hear" what the people who publish the brilliant Bordiga have to say about my ideas. The problem I have is that many of you do not write very well and go on and on on tangents that make little sense, some of you focus on minor minutia, and others think they have made profound points by digging up some quote from their favorite guru that only tangentially focuses on the point in question. I really am quite open minded and do have some holes in my theory - but so far no one has zeroed in on any of them.
LBird
Actually I would if I could find any of the "critical points" you say were made.
Khawaga
If you really believe I am a "Trot" you need to take a bonehead reading comprehension in grammar school. Some other bonehead called me a "Maoist." He or she needs to do the same.
I must admit I do not know too awful much about "anarchism" and am not at all impressed by it. I have found the Workers Opposition, the Workers Truth, and others of similar ilk much more to my liking. I am still trying to figure out the politics that dominate this site and what I see are some very profound contradictions. There certainly is a lot of very good information in your library - in fact some of the best stuff I have seen on the left anywhere can be found there. But the quality of the people who spend time posting seems to be of a much lower caliber. I admit that this confuses me - and this accounts for both my periodic disgust as well as pulling me back in from time to time.
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
The bottom line is that I am very willing to listen to a good argument. But only if you have one. I have been a Marxist since the 1960s and have had alot of arguments with alot of people, both other Marxists and ordinary workers for a long time and I must admit I have a low tolerance for idiotic arguments. Dogmatism and the worship of gurus does not impress me at all.
Alexander Roxwell wrote: The
Alexander Roxwell
As they said about the Royalists, you clearly have learned nothing and forgotten nothing since then. But do go on about how dogmatic your interlocutors are while repeatedly extolling us to react to current events like you reacted to previous events which you find analogous.
Quote: I must admit I have a
So you must have a low tolerance for your own. Sadly, you think too highly of yourself and seem stuck in a 60s paradigm when national liberation was still the craze. At least some of us have learnt from history, you seem to not bother and cling to your beliefs regardless of what argument is levied at you. While the quality of discourse is not always high, you're certainly not doing your part to elevate it the slightest (but at least you're consistent in that).
Maybe you should read some of the propaganda by the British SWP. What you're arguing is exactly the same. So-called critical support of national liberation, empty calls for working class solidarity and liberation, but nevertheless ending up supporting all kinds of anti-working class organizations.
Your nationalism is a gaping hole, but then again you don't see it as such. The same is probably the case with your other theoretical black holes.
Khawaga wrote: Quote: If you
Khawaga
Sheesh Khawaga, I'm surprised at you. Can't you recognise a...
...MAO-BOT when you see one? To this man Trotsky is a dangerous ultraleftist deviationist and running dog imperialist lackey of TEH EMPIREZ!
Ah, soree My only experience
Ah, soree ;) My only experience with Maoist are the Scandies that loved Hoxa...
Khawaga wrote: Ah, soree My
Khawaga
aren't those Hoxaists?
double post
double post
Quote: aren't those
Yeah, they would be. So Scandinavian Maoists were Maoist-Hoxaist (ML) or sumthin like that. Now they seem to love the Nepalese Maoists since their old heroes and long gone and dead.
Jazzhands said: Quote: What I
Jazzhands said:
I'm fairly sure that isn't correct. Bedouins are Arabs but Arabs aren't necessarily Bedouins. What makes a Bedouin a Bedouin is that they're Arabs who live a nomadic lifestyle herding camels and sheep i.e. the material basis of their existence is key to defining who is a Bedouin. So maybe it is correct to discuss Bedouin Arabs as an economic class. I'm not really sure, hopefully someone who knows more about this can correct me as my knowledge here only comes from a bit of a discussion I had with a friend in Israel as well as some pretty brief internet research. A discussion about the class interests of Bedouins would frankly be a lot more interesting than yet another argument with this dogmatist Roxwell.
Let me see. Tojiah's
Let me see. Tojiah's response to my argument was that I am much like the Royalists.
Khawaga said I must have a low tolerance for my own idiotic arguments. (He neglected to say which of my ideas were idiotic, a minor detail.)
Khawaga reiterated his idiotic charge that I am a "Trot" based on the fact he says I say "exactly the same" as the British SWP despite my open disagreement with:
----- the foundation of the Fourth International
----- with Cliff's analysis of the U.S.S.R.
----- Trotsky's theory of the Permanent Revolution as
[color=#FFFFBF]----- [/color]the "solution" to the problems of the Third World
----- the program of forced industrialization as advocated by
[color=#FFFFBF]-----[/color] either Stalin or Trotsky.
Kind of central tenets of the British SWP I believe.
And for whip cream Khawaga levels a new charge. I am now some kind of a "nationalist" because I support the right of nations to self determination. Still this, well, this "comrade" has flunked bonehead Marxism 1A: the difference beween recognizing the right of an oppressed nation to self-determination and the jingoism of a proud empire.
Ocelot provides us with a Maoist cartoon that shows us --------------------------------------- what exactly I do not know
This illustrates the level of discourse that Khawaga seems more comfortable with so he responds with some kind of meaningless insider joke about “scandies” and Enver Hoxha.
And radicalgraffiti tops it off by asking if these “scandies” were more like “Hoxaists”?
Bootsi evidently is not taken in by the irrelevant comic book "debate" about "Hoxaists" and returns to minutia in reopening a debate about “bedouins.”
LBird
Are these good examples of the “critical points” I failed to address on other sites?
There are a lot of you. There evidently is only one of me. Can’t any of you come up with a worthy argument?
I know that back in the
I know that back in the 1960's, when you have set your political views in stone based on the fads current in whatever political group you grew up in, there wasn't any internet, meaning that you do not quite know what is the politically justifiable way to deal with a discussion on an online forum, so I will use a handy link to guide you to my post going over your argument and refuting it point by point. That's Post #431, if that helps.
PS: This thread isn't about you. It's about the situation in Libya. Strangely enough it seems that people want to go back to discussing that rather than wasting their time on a national liberation fetishist.
So Roxwell, do you support
So Roxwell, do you support the interim council in East Libya then? Is what is going on in Libya "national liberation" or two bourgeois gangs fighting each other for control over the nation state. Or will you start supporting secessionist movements that will split Libya up to the three pre-Libya nations? Surely all of them have the "right" to possess the state because they're all "oppressed nations"? And what the fuck has the lingo about "rights" got to do with anything? And for that matter "oppressed nations"? Surely you must be joking.
And yeah, if that is your version of Marxism 101, I would obviously flunk it. That's the old fashioned second international, Leninist way. I am anarcho-communist that take the class struggle seriously. Anyone with a class analysis worth their salt is against any fucking form of nationalism, even if it comes from peoples in poorer parts of the world.
Alexander Roxwell
Alexander Roxwell
Don't your own words give you pause for thought, Alexander?
As you say, there seems to be 'only one of you' who supports your argument.
Do you really think that all your other comrades on this site haven't listened to your stance, reasoned about it to themselves, read the other posters' positions, and tried to persuade you with, what they at least consider, 'worthy arguments'?
Perhaps you are right, and just happen to be in a minority of one. But doesn't it make you at least reflect, just a little bit?
Not least, if you're correct, what does it say about the apparent inability of so many Communists on this site to make reasoned argument?
Whatever merits the revolt
Whatever merits the revolt against Khadafi had to begin with they have been thoroughly undermined by the "support" they have received by the Empires. That was the danger thruout the Middle East. It looks as tho the Empires are winning them all - or most of them. That is a tragedy for the Middle East and for the future of the human race.
The tragedy of various "Communists" here and elsewhere to reason is another whole topic. Don't feel so all alone, it appears to be quite widespread. Have you ever had a chat with a member of the U.S. Spartacist League? How about the RCP?
Roxwell wrote: Whatever
Roxwell
Well, duh! But your next argument is that we then should support some adventurist national liberation stunt rather than focusing on class struggle.
Why can't you dispute the
Why can't you dispute the argument I actually made instead of what your deeply intuitive clairvoyant extrasensory perception tells you will be my next thought?
Woops. You didn't do that either. You are waiting for me to use my own clairvoyance to be able to perceive just exactly what it is that you mean by - Khawaga
Alas. I am getting very familiar with this method of argumentation.
Maybe you are the one that
Maybe you are the one that should take an elementary reading course. I was actually agreeing with your argument for once, though when it comes to the implication of your argument we will go our separate ways. Assuming from your previous "arguments" you will likely support some future national liberation movement consisting of both workers and bosses against NATO/GCC in Libya (and I assume against Saudi Arabia/GCC in Bahrain, Yemen etc.) so that their "right" to national self-determination will be upheld. Which, from the point of view of the working class, is an adventurist national liberation stunt and would set back the working class in the region even further. I've seen and heard, first hand (hmmm, that was an odd turn of phrase), how the national aspirations of even just one group of people has poisoned the well of working class consciousness and solidarity. Likely a national liberation scenario in Libya will blind the Arab working class as to who the real enemy is just has Palestine has done for decades.
Fighting spills over into
Fighting spills over into Tunisia
[youtube]1x17tN7rumk[/youtube]
The fighting has reached
The fighting has reached Tripoli
http://www.libyafeb17.com/
http://news.sky.com/home/article/16053897
http://www.cnn.com/2011/WORLD/africa/08/20/libya.war/index.html?hpt=hp_t1
Updates from
Updates from Tripoli
http://feb17.info/news/live-libyan-unrest-august-21-2011/
An uprising with backing from NATO airstrikes - what do people make of this?
Edit: AJE reporting that Saif Al-Islam Gaddafi has been captured and Presidential Guard has surrendered.
There was a report couple of
There was a report couple of days ago about hundreds of thousands emigrant workers who fled to Tripoli, expressing concern over their fate.
Al Jazeera reports that
Al Jazeera reports that opposition fighters have taken Green Square in Tripoli.
Noa Rodman wrote: There was a
Noa Rodman
Noa I've been trying to do a bit of research on rebel atrocities of migrant workers and so far have only really been able to find variations on this article. If you have more information could you post it to the thread?
The scramble for Libya's oil
The scramble for Libya's oil has already begun.
bootsy wrote: Noa Rodman
bootsy
There's this article by Gabriele Del Grande on the Fortress Europe blog.
Edit: Amnesty International report
Mark. wrote: An uprising
Mark.
Not much response here then. Anarkismo has a long article on Libya that at least tries to deal with the issues.
Lessons from Libya: imperialism, anti-imperialism and democratic revolution
Any thoughts?
Well I certainly agree more
Well I certainly agree more with the Anarkismo article than the Guardian comment piece by Seamus Milne on Wednesday, where he said:
Frankly this is horseshit. Budapest '56? Prague '68? Hello?
When the anarkismo piece says:
I have to agree. An improvised citizen's militia with only AK's, RPGs and a few AA guns cannot stand against heavy armour and air power that is indifferent to mass civilian casualties and urban destruction. Even in a city. Despite the clichéd saw that armour is no use in cities because of the confined space, trotted out by some "military experts" in the media recently, it didn't bother the soviet tanks in Hungary & Czechoslovakia. The limitations of urban space were further overcome by the Israeli army assault on Nablus in 2002 by their "walk through walls" overground tunnel tactics (see The Art of War).
It just seems to me that Milne's line (which has been repeated here in Ireland by the SWP, although the anarkismo piece mentions that the London SWP's Callinicos was more realistic - if still somewhat besides the point) is wishful thinking motivated by a desire to avoid the difficult questions that the episode raises.
Hmm, outside factors mean I'll have to continue this post later...
I briefly read the text
I briefly read the text referred to by Mark above and it contains a lot of good information. It doesn’t seem to take a position though and it’s rather ambiguous. The question what do you do when a tank’s coming towards you is not the best way to pose any question about imperialist war, which is what this now clearly is. There is no real “grey area” here any more; nationalism and democracy are poisonous for the working class.
Each of the major powers is playing their own game here with certain contingent alliances beginning with the relatively common objectives of the US, France and Britain. The Pentagon, despite some misgivings and secondary objections, have fully supported and encouraged the Anglo-French assault on the Gadaffi regime.
Initially part of a world-wide social movement, the uprising of Libyan youth has been swamped and then mobilised into a war of imperialism under a national flag, from its “humanitarian” beginnings, its special forces and “diplomats” to its call for democracy accompanied by a massive bombing campaign.
Oil is of course a factor, but I think that there’s at least important strategic considerations, somewhat thrown up by the social movement itself. These uprisings, the social struggles against the effects of capitalism’s crisis, have in their turn contributed to imperialist instability – just as effective class struggle, clearly led by the working class, can also do. The case of Egypt is very important here for the wider implications throughout the Middle East and beyond: events in the so-called demilitarized zone of the Sinai give us an indication; war planes are released over Gaza and the US stands four-square behind Israel. But deeper regional instability can only mean that imperialist antagonisms are sharpened on top of this powder keg.
In the meantime, Tehran is getting a greater grip over Syria (also Lebanon and Hamas) and the nightmare of Iran looms ever larger in the war ministries of the west. Its proxies are continuing to fight and kill US troops in Iraq and it’s possible that it has a role in stirring up the recent actions of the PKK against Turkey. Iran has resumed diplomatic ties and other connections with Egypt after three decades, with the latter allowing Iranian warships through the Suez Canal - much to the astonishment of NATO. A very compliant Libyan regime, pumping oil and probably with western military bases would be a geo-strategic “asset” against a potentially destabilised Egypt and further Iranian influence.
I think that in the text referred to by Mark there’s too much ambiguity. The examples it sort of gives in relation to “grey areas” are all black and white to me: Vietnam of the 70s (a murderous labour camp), Rwanda, Srebrenica, are all clear examples of imperialist war in which the major powers are totally complicit when they didn’t generate them outright.
The Russian anarchist Kras group has a good, succinct internationalist position on the war in Libya. It’s on the ICC’s website.
ocelot wrote: I have to
ocelot
I see your Nablus and raise you Grozny in 1994-5 where the Chechen militia armed with AKs and RPGs basically wiped out two Russian motorised regiments.
Mark. wrote: Quote: Part of
Mark.
Those facing Gaddafi's tanks are almost certainly not listening to us.
ocelot wrote: Well I
ocelot
I think that there was little evidence that they were about to assault Benghazi. The Libyan troops has paused outside the city. Of course you could argue that this was in preparation for an assault, However, it seemed at the time that Gaddafi's tactic was to attempt to split the rebels using bribes and fostering tribal division.
At the time that the Western Powers intervened, this appeared to be working.
I think the idea that there was an imminent assault using chemical weapons about to happen was propagated by those who were looking to justify their intervention.
Devrim
Mark. wrote: bootsy
Mark.
Channel 4's Alex Thomson saved some Nigerian workers from being killed by anti-Gadaffi fighters.
Elsewhere, both sides have been carrying out atrocities:
'Evidence mounts of atrocities by Libyan “rebels”'
'Libyan rebels carry out reprisal attacks'
Also, some of the rebels are predictably al-Qaeda members, including Abdelhakim Belhaj who is the top Libyan military commander in Tripoli:
'How al-Qaeda got to rule in Tripoli'
'Libyan rebel commander admits his fighters have al-Qaeda links'
Edit: 'Tripoli faces humanitarian crisis'
Peter wrote: ocelot
Peter
...and then the Russians turned the city into rubble. To be fair, the Russians did get their arses handed to them in the initial New Year's eve assault. It certainly goes down as a contender for the top 5 soviet military fuck-ups (a hotly contested category). However there were a couple of particular conditions that do not apply to Benghazi and many other places. Apart from the surrounding mountainous terrain and the staggering incompetence of the initial Russian tactics, an important factor was the fact that the Chechen troops were at least as well trained as the Russian regulars (having done the same military service), and in many cases generally better quality troops. Certainly the TNC irregulars do not seem to be in the same league, or even the same game as the Chechens, if the performances around Brega and Ras Lanuf were anything to go by. But anyway...
Devrim wrote: ocelot
Devrim
Well the inhabitants of Benghazi appear to have believed that the attack was imminent. Also Ghaddaffi's broadcast of threats of "we're coming to get you tonight" doesn't really match up with your proposed theory of a more measured "divide and rule" tactic. But if you have any links or references to material suggesting otherwise, then please share. I'm afraid I find the attitude of western leftists that "they weren't in any real danger" to be less convincing than the locals apparent belief in the opposite. Particularly as in the former case, it appears suspiciously like a case of apriorism, i.e. an assessment based on ideological convenience rather than the available facts.
edit: not sure where the chemical weapons reference came from, as it doesn't appear in either the Anarkismo or Guardian piece, or this thread?
interesting article on splits
interesting article on splits within the rebels from WSWS
ocelot wrote: Well the
ocelot
But bear in mind that you are talking about the people who had most interest in persuading the Western powers to intervene. I am sure that many people did believe it, but that doesn't mean it was coming.
ocelot
Gaddafi said a lot of things. It wasn't what he seemed to be doing.
ocelot
Mostly in Arabic, sorry.
I don't think that "they weren't in any real danger". They were. The Libyan Army was outside the city, and would have used planes and artillery against the city. Many would have died. However, that doesn't mean that there was about to be an assault of the city followed by a general massacre.
ocelot
It featured in a lot of the stuff coming out of Benghazi at the time.
Devrim
Devrim, I don't quite get
Devrim, I don't quite get what your saying. That many would have died in Benghazi, but not enough to call it a massacre? How do you quantify a massacre anyway...
Considering what Gaddafi has done to other rebels throughout the country, considering what Assad is currently doing all over Syria, then I would have thought that it would be of paramount importance to prevent thousands dying. And no it's not an emotional exaggeration to say that, because massacres are what happens in this situation. Name countless examples of superior armies approaching a rebel stronghold and they pretty much always end up in a massacre.
This is where the left gets itself into a terrible tangle, it's hatred of liberal democracy clouds the issue; that Gaddafi and other dictators are a thousand times worse.
I'm glad a tyrannical despot who imprisoned and tortured political desenters, kept the countries wealth largely for himself, had a pimpish attitude to women, sponsored terrorism and stockpiled chemical weapons is no longer in power. And by the way their is no third option here, you either have Gaddafi in power, or you remove him by force. It's all very well to maintain an academic, abstracted position, but all arguments against imperialism, liberal democracy and the inevitable theft of the countries resources are irrelevant here. It's a big fat dichotomy, sorry.
Hopefully the Syrian people can get a helping hand because at the moment, they are getting massacred.
Devrim wrote: ocelot
Devrim
OK, my views are based on the paucity of information that filtered through Reuters, AP, AFP and the english and french language media (both of whose governments were highly engaged in painting a particular picture). I accept that access to more information as available in arabic, could change the picture. But Seamus Milne and his SWP buddies are not basing their interpretations on access to that additional reservoir of information - indeed the apriori form of their arguments make that explicit. The logic seems to be based on that peculiar leftist kneejerk reaction to mechanically take the opposite point of view from the powers that be (as Fabbri mentioned in another context in Bourgeois Influences...).
Thus, if the powers that be say that UN 1973 and air intervention is 1) motivated not by imperialist interests, but humanitarian ones; and 2) that the immediate crisis for the passage of 1973 was the imminent attack on Benghazi and the massacre of those involved in the uprising and many civilians besides; Then the knee-jerk leftist reaction is to say 1) the intervention is motivated by imperialist interests and not by humanitarian ones (true) AND 2) Benghazi was never under any serious threat (non sequiteur).
Quite why this false conjuction is held to be essential to the main point (i.e. that this is an imperialist intervention) is beyond me. Certainly, to replace the debate over 1) by a debate over 2) as if it were a proxy for 1) is only, ultimately, in the interest of the powers that be, as it is a much easier argument for them to either win, or at least successfully portray the arguments of the opposition as conspiraloon nonsense. But, anyway...
What is clear, is that there is no possible reading of UN 1973 that does not mandate intervention to prevent the coming assault on Sirte. Clearly, by the wording of the mandate, the French air force should be declaring to the NTC forces currently encircling Sirte, that they will "take all necessary measures [...] to protect civilians and civilian populated areas under threat of attack" (section 4) and that any attack on Sirte will result in air strikes against the (non-civilian) TNC forces. In fact even the R4 Today programme interviewers more or less put that point to William Hague this morning, which he airily waved away.
Now to be fair, the intervention's violations of the resolution (arms supplies, special forces on the ground, etc, etc) have been many and the evidence that the principle aim of the intervention is regime change should be clear to any moderately attentive observer. But most people are not particularly attentive observers of events happening in far-away lands of which they know little (and often, care less). So the attack on Sirte represents, imo, an event-opportunity to (further) deconstruct the "humanitarian intervention" line.
Sir Arthur Streeb-Greebling
Sir Arthur Streeb-Greebling
I don't think I'm with Devrim on his general argument here but I'm assuming there's an implied reference to the Hama massacre in Syria in 1982. Without going back to look at what was written a few months ago I seem to remember suggestions that Benghazi was facing something like a repeat of the Hama massacre, which I think was on a different scale to what we've seen in Libya (and Syria) this time round.
ocelot wrote: What is clear,
ocelot
The Arabist: Will Sirte be the new Benghazi?
Sir Arthur Streeb-Greebling
Sir Arthur Streeb-Greebling
I agree that folk are getting themselves all twisted up on the Libyan question, and it's largely down to the thoroughly leftist impulse to take a 'position' on all sorts of international news events over which we have no real influence. Were the WRP, FRFI et al willing to blockade British military bases sending planes to Libya, etc? If not, they should shut the fuck up IMO. Likewise, although Ocelot's posts are informative and balanced, I'm not quite sure what the purpose of them are beyond hypothetical discussion.
Probably the best thing that we can do right now is unravel the 'humanitarian intervention' logic of NATO leaders, with reference to Syria, whose working class - as a HRW spokesman emphasised on BBC WS yesterday - have a consideraby higher death toll than their Libyan counterparts.
EDIT that and institute a leftist Libya bingo as for ridiculous bent double attempts to maintain a fucking anti-imperialist line. We've seen Roxwell's idiocies on here. Yesterday I picked up a self-styled "African internationalist" newspaper at a demo which banged on about WHITE POWER's intervention in Libya, only to then acknowledge "the attack was ordered by Barack Obama", lol. The highlight was an article allegedly penned by GADAFI HIMSELF in which he calls Obama "my little African son".
Looks like the pressure is on
Looks like the pressure is on around the Sirte situation
Reuters: Libya NTC says extends Sirte surrender deadline
And completely out of line
And completely out of line with the current thread flow, but I've been meaning to link this for ages and keep forgetting.
Reuters: Libyan conflict brings French-Qatari ties to the fore
Caiman del Barrio
Caiman del Barrio
Yeh had the Workers revolutionary Party in the pub hawking News line the other day. Front page was all about the revolutionary counter assault by the anti-imperialist Gaddafi heroes.
I guess the anti-imperial line works on the assumption that post-revolutionary libya with a pro-western liberal democracy will be as bad as, if not worse, than Gaddafi.
An easy assumption to make when your living in a liberal democracy and just can't imagine anything more terrible...
I hate the argument which goes "well why don't you go live in Libya/Iran/Syria, see what it's really like", but I reckon it's on the same intellectual level as these nuts...
Sir Arthur Streeb-Greebling
Sir Arthur Streeb-Greebling
People would have died. That is very clear. The idea of a massacre though was one presented by the interventionists to justify their action.
What has what Assad is doing in Syria got to do in any way with what is going on in Libya. I don't quite see that unless we are going down the line of saying something like "well they are both mad Arab dictators". That the Syrians would put down the protests there whilst wading through pools of blood was very clear. We were saying this back in February.
Thousands have died in Libya, over a thousand of them due to Western air-strikes.
There are lots of options here. Possibly the worst, and by no means improbable is Libya descending into a period of long civil war and chaos.
Devrim
Sir Arthur Streeb-Greebling
Sir Arthur Streeb-Greebling
It's insulting and disingenous of him, cos i bet he doesn't mention his party's financial ties to the Gadafi regime!
Devrim wrote: People would
Devrim
The idea of massacre? As far as I remember Gadaffi had crushed the rebellion using his army in all other areas of Libya. This had involved murder and mass arrests (50,000 from a BBC bulletin but admittedly not sure). I've no doubt that considering his track record most of these arrests would have ended in torture and executions. His army was outside Benghazi and there was no way for the rebels to repulse Gaddafi. I'm not sure how many deaths and arrests you need before you start using the term massacre, 1000?, 10,000? 50k, 100k??
It's very easy for you to claim that an insignificant number would have died now that there was an intervention. and as Ocelot said previously the fact that a massacre was the interventionists argument doesn't make itfalse
Well he's currently murdering the Syrian people all over the country. He is imprisoning and torturing many more. I am going down the line of "they're both mad dictators", because the situation of political opposition/revolt being crushed by overwhelming force is the same in both countries.
A number you have pulled out of thin air. Nevertheless I am sure many have died from western air-strikes. However at least the end result is the removal of Gaddafi, rather than murders committed merely for the sake of revenge and spreading terror.
I was talking about the option of letting Gaddafi stay in power, or removing him. If he was allowed to stay then you would have seen a great number of deaths in Benghazi and the return of a police state. Don't forget that in his early reign Gadaffi had around 13% of the population snitching to his committees. Long civil war is a possibility, but it is just one of many outcomes of intervention, compared to the one certain result of letting Gaddafi stay in power.
The left has a history of being incredibly soft on brutal dictatorships, especially when there isn't a left wing opposition (e.g. Chile), compared with the venom directed towards Western democracies (USA).
Double Post
Double Post
Sir Arthur Streeb-Greebling
Sir Arthur Streeb-Greebling
Yes, the idea of massacre. The Western powers propagated the idea that there was about to be a massacre of unforeseen proportions in Benghazi. It was certainly clear that the Libyan state under Gaddafi had a nasty track record on human rights. The worst case by far would be the Abu Salim prison massacre this didn't stop relations improving with the major powers at the time, particularly the UK.. What caused this sudden interest in preventing massacres?
Sir Arthur Streeb-Greebling
Yes, they are. What does this have to do with Libya though. The natures of the Libyan state and the Syrian state are very different? Really what do they have in common apart from the fact that they are Arabs?
Sir Arthur Streeb-Greebling
No, I didn't pull it out of the air. The Libyan Health Office claims that 1,108 civilians had been killed and 4,500 wounded by July 13. Presumably the number would now be much higher.
Sir Arthur Streeb-Greebling
The end result could well be the opening of a period of chaos and civil war in Libya that lasts for years. It could be precisely the start of a series of unending murders 'committed merely for the sake of revenge and spreading terror'.
It was never an option I had any choice in deciding. For all it would have mattered I could have called for the smurfs to come to power.
What I would say though is looking at the looking term effects of Western Intervention in the region, there is reason to be doubtful about whether the result will be any better for the people who live in Libya.
Looking at the three main countries that have suffered from prolonged US and Western intervention, Iraq, Afghanistan, and Somalia, doesn't really fill me with hope that things will be better now that Gaddafi has fallen. I don't think that the Western powers have a benign influence in the region.
Yes, others include the setting up of a state of the sort the Western powers support in other oil states such as Saudi Arabia, or the emergence of an Islamic republic, neither of which are well known for their defence of human rights.
Things could be better after the fall of Gaddafi, or as evidence from past US interventions shows, they could conceivably get much worse.
I don't think that I am 'soft' on brutal dictatorships. In no way would I offer any support for Gaddafi. Nor am I 'soft' on the intervening powers, including countries like Turkey, where I live, which has a record human rights abuse and murder, imprisonment and torture of its citizens which can compare with any in the world.
I don't think that there should be any support on any level for the Libyan state. That doesn't mean I think that we should be becoming apologists for the interventionists though.
Devrim
I agree with the above. The
I agree with the above. The US, France and Britain, after some haggling and arguments, took the decision to "intervene" in Libya under the guise of humanitarianism in order to prevent a massacre. The same powers used the same ideology for their intervention in the Balkans throughout the 90s and not only did they not prevent massacres, they were complicit in them. The Balkans today are simmering fiefdoms, aborted states, where out and out gangsterism works with nationalism, backed by the major powers. Explosive tensions between various bourgeois factions exist within and throughout the entire region. Some of the bridges and infrastructure destroyed during that war (in Europe!) have still not been repaired. Like the Middle East and the Caucasus, the Balkans remains an imperialist faultline. While Iraq and Afghanistan continue to be devastated.
"Mad dictator", from Hitler onward, is one of the lines of the bourgeoisie. Gadaffi's torturers and elite units were trained by the SAS. The links with the regime were strengthened with Blair's embrace in 97, one year after the Abu Salim atrocity. Nearly every major power supplied arms to Libya but the backing of the regime from the democracies went way beyond that - just like Hitler (in different circumstances) he was their killer, their policeman.
Elements of the same regime are now in "opposition", which also includes CIA and, most likely, MI6 operatives. Even if there's some cosmetic surgery, the new regime will get back to the business of exploitation, possibly even more militarised. I don't think that we know the numbers of civilians killed by Nato bombings (nor the extent of Gadaffi's killings).
One thing for certain is that the Mediterranean is now a more overt theatre of imperialist tensions and war and this will have wider repercussions than Libya.
I agree with the above. The
I agree with the above. The US, France and Britain, after some haggling and arguments, took the decision to "intervene" in Libya under the guise of humanitarianism in order to prevent a massacre. The same powers used the same ideology for their intervention in the Balkans throughout the 90s and not only did they not prevent massacres, they were complicit in them. The Balkans today are simmering fiefdoms, aborted states, where out and out gangsterism works with nationalism, backed by the major powers. Explosive tensions between various bourgeois factions exist within and throughout the entire region. Some of the bridges and infrastructure destroyed during that war (in Europe!) have still not been repaired. Like the Middle East and the Caucasus, the Balkans remains an imperialist faultline. While Iraq and Afghanistan continue to be devastated.
"Mad dictator", from Hitler onward, is one of the lines of the bourgeoisie. Gadaffi's torturers and elite units were trained by the SAS. The links with the regime were strengthened with Blair's embrace in 97, one year after the Abu Salim atrocity. Nearly every major power supplied arms to Libya but the backing of the regime from the democracies went way beyond that - just like Hitler (in different circumstances) he was their killer, their policeman.
Elements of the same regime are now in "opposition", which also includes CIA and, most likely, MI6 operatives. Even if there's some cosmetic surgery, the new regime will get back to the business of exploitation, possibly even more militarised. I don't think that we know the numbers of civilians killed by Nato bombings (nor the extent of Gadaffi's killings).
One thing for certain is that the Mediterranean is now a more overt theatre of imperialist tensions and war and this will have wider repercussions than Libya.
http://ww4report.com/node/102
http://ww4report.com/node/10281
Messages have been found in
Messages have been found in the office of Moussa Koussa, Col Gaddafi's right hand man and regime security chief who defected in February, that show how MI6 gave details of dissident exiles to Gaddafi and how the CIA used regime for rendition.
http://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/africa/moussa-koussas-secret-letters-betray-britains-libyan-connection-2348394.html
The death toll was 50,000 a couple of days ago according to the rebels. I'm not sure of its reliability, but it's the only figure I've seen.
Was logging on to repeat the
Was logging on to repeat the news that Subprole and Wojtek have imparted in the last 2 posts, which makes Roxwell's implied assertion that Gadafi counters 'imperialist' (read: American) interests in Libya perfectly. It seems to me that France has been quickest to react to the situation - calling the meeting in Paris with the NTC a couple of days back - and have successfully instigated a resources grab for Total et al.
Quote: A senior Libyan rebel
http://uk.news.yahoo.com/tortured-libyan-rebel-calls-britain-apology-064914228.html
Libyans Turn Wrath on
Libyans Turn Wrath on Dark-Skinned Migrants (NYT)
Doctor Fears 30,000 Libyans
Doctor Fears 30,000 Libyans Are Missing
The historian Mark Curtis has extensively documented Britain's collusion with radical islam in his books. His most recent blog post provides some history of the Western intelligence agencies' relationship with the Libyan Islamic Fighting Group:
Britain, Qadafi and the Libyan Islamic Fighting Group
John Pilger on Libya in his
John Pilger on Libya in his latest article:
Hail to the true victors of Rupert's revolution
Article from the Moor Next
Article from the Moor Next Door blog on the rebels from the Nafusa mountains:
Revolutionary road – on the Nafusa highway
http://www.leftcom.org/en/art
http://www.leftcom.org/en/articles/2011-09-10/the-truth-behind-nato%E2%80%99s-victory-in-libya
lol I can't this seriously
lol I can't this seriously anymore. Yet more collaboration between the Labour government and Alex Roxwell's bit on the side with the former using control orders to put Libyan dissidents in Britain under house arrest – at the behest of the latter.
How Labour secretly put Libyan dissidents under house arrest at Gaddafi's behest following Blair's 'deal in the desert'
So if I'm not mistaken it roughly goes like this...
MI6 fund and use the LIFG to overthrow Go-Dafty in a coup in the nineties. It fails, so members of the LIFG seek asylum in Britain. Then bam 9/11 happens, Bliar cosies up to Go-Dafty, who in turn makes a phone call and the LIFG members are affectively in the slammer. Gutted!
wojtek wrote: Yet more
wojtek
Gareth Peirce on control orders and the Libyans
Ex-agent David Shayler and
Ex-agent David Shayler and his girlfriend exposed MI6's plot to overthrow Gadaffi and foment a coup in Libya involving the LIFG. The latter was one of a number of fundamentalist organisations sheltered and looked after in London ("Londonistan" as the French secret service referred to it) during the 1990s and the LIFG was only deemed unwelcome after 9.11.
The double-dealing stretches the imagination.
Correction: In fact,
Correction: In fact, according to Mark Curtis above, it was only after 7.7., October 2005, that the LIFG was designated a "terrorist group".
UK promoted sale of sniper
UK promoted sale of sniper rifles to Gaddafi just weeks before uprising began
and
Pepe Escobar - Libya: The real war starts now
Edit: The residents of Bani Walid have been given two days to leave before the NATO assault...
Rebels Issue Familiar Deadline to Libyan Civilians
Does anyone know if the pending massacre in Sitre was avoided?
Pepe Escobar's latest: Libya:
Pepe Escobar's latest:
Libya: to King Sarkozy, the spoils
As Libyan “rebel” offensive
As Libyan “rebel” offensive stalls, NATO bombs kill hundreds
(No subject)
US, European corporations
US, European corporations rush to secure cut from Libyan war
and
Libyans flee dire conditions in Sirte: agencies
and
Mass killing and humanitarian disaster in NATO siege of Sirte
Gaddafi loyalists stranded as
Gaddafi loyalists stranded as battle for Sirte rages
and
Red Cross sends medical aid to Sirte
and Pepe Escobar's latest touching on Libya:
The age of the Reaper
NATO assault on Sirte
NATO assault on Sirte inflicts more Libyan civilian casualties
and
Amnesty: Warring Libyan Forces must allow humanitarian aid to reach Sirte
Strangely, neither Ian Bone nor the liberal interventionists seem to be calling for a no fly zone over Sirte to protect civilians...
Libya's 'revolutionary Jew'
Libya's 'revolutionary Jew' returns to restore Tripoli synagogue (Guardian)
A list of ceasefires that
A list of ceasefires that NATO apparently rejected:
http://www.medialens.org/forum/viewtopic.php?p=11380#11380
Amnesty International
Amnesty International Document: Detention Abuses Staining the New Libya
and
Bloody chaos at hospital gives glimpse of Sirte's agony
and Sirte's now a shit hole!
Last stand in Sirte: Extraordinary pictures show Libyan city shelled to smithereens
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-africa-15285664
early (unreliable) reports
early (unreliable) reports coming in that Gaddafi may have run out of rope.
Guardian live blog
Reuters: Gaddafi killed as
Reuters: Gaddafi killed as Libya's revolt claims hometown
from an email to the BBC live blog:
Or, for the more cynical, the signal for the start of the civil war over who will control a post-Gaddafi Libya...
Pepe Escobar in fine form
Pepe Escobar in fine form again in his latest on Libya (and the rest of Africa):
The US power grab in Africa
I wonder if this is true, it certainly makes for great propaganda.
Shouldn't Ghadaffi have faced trial before being executed? I mean I don't know if it's because I'm not a Libyan under his regime, but I felt queezy after this article, not to mention that it's likely to be a crime under international law.
wojtek wrote: Shouldn't
wojtek
Sure, and by the same token this wasn't the legally proper end for Mussolini and Clara Petacci either. But war is a chaotic mix of organised and disorganised mass violence. But at the same time, just saying "shit happens" is too glib. In the last moments of their lives, even the most evil dictators are stripped of their layers of symbolic power and all that is left is the frail physical bodies of pathetic old men (or occasionally women). To not feel some revulsion at witnessing the brutality and pathos of murder, is to have lost your basic human empathy. But all violence is to some degree like this. It's not the stylised, guilt-free adrenaline buzz they show on the TV or in movies. All violence is ugly, and the suffering of the losers is always evocative of pity. Doesn't make it either unnecessary or wrong though.
On a slightly different angle, "should" is also a loaded term, in the sense that it tends to suggest an underlying (apologies) deontological ethics. Which is a ridiculously obscure name for a not uncommon way of thinking about right or wrong - i.e. that right or wrong is determined in relation to conformance with rules or principles - for e.g. veganism. I don't want to get too deep into that one, but I would point out that some of the most horrific crimes against humanity have been committed by people who constructed themselves a very rigid deontological structure which perrmitted them to convince themselves that the horrors they were committing were justified by a "higher good'. So as a firm believer in the old Chinese maxim that "it is not principles that make people great, but people that make principles great", (as well as being an anarchist on not only a political, but also an ethical and epistemological level) I have a strong suspicion of deontological ethics. And on a practical level, any appeal to international law is about as effective as Gaddafi's plea of "don't shoot, don't shoot".
dp
dp
wojtek wrote: Shouldn't
wojtek
For me its pretty harrowing to see that stuff no matter who it is.He was an old guy as well which made it even more shocking the manner in which he died. Still he had it coming.
Reminds me of how Saddam
Reminds me of how Saddam Hussein was found...
..which is fitting, considering how NATO has brought the country down to the same level as Iraq - rubble.
wojtek wrote: Shouldn't
wojtek
According to the bourgeoisie's own laws yes, but when was the last time they gave a fuck about them? Besides, the whole reasoning and information about Libya given out by the state and dominant media has been a pile of shit anyway.
http://wrp.org.uk/news/6880 Q
http://wrp.org.uk/news/6880
:(
I don't see anything going on
I don't see anything going on but the US using (once again) Islamic fundamentalists to oust anti US regimes. Not saying Saddam or Gadaffi were great guys it just seems to me the interests of capital are behind this. The middle east in general is the last place in the region not converted to westernized capitalist markets and I think it's happening right before our eyes.
I'm not sure if the new leadership will embrace capitalism though- that's the goal in Iraq and Afghanistan and it isn't quite happening, it's a slow process I guess. The goal (in case some of us aren't aware) is to keep capitalism fluid- to keep the market expanding. I'm not so sure we should celebrate the ousting of Gadaffi but I wouldn't celebrate his track record either.
CRUD wrote: I don't see
CRUD
Not quoting this to show approval of or wholesale agreement with this analysis (which appears to deny any popular impetus, in favour of Machiavellian dealings from above) but it reminds me of another thread in which difficult - but necessary - questions were raised:
http://libcom.org/forums/news/what-exactly-are-you-supporting-02022011?page=4
The changing of the guard?
CRUD wrote: The middle east
CRUD
What exactly does this mean CRUD? All the countries are capitalist already, with all the features you would expect wage-labour, banks, foreign companies etc - We have seen already what gets converted...a people and country into rubble. Do you think the bourgeoisie are capable of turning these countries into over developed capitalist countries?
proletarian. wrote: CRUD
proletarian.
Even though 9/11 conspiracy theorists love to quote this guy I'll go ahead and do it:
I don't see how any of that
I don't see how any of that quote is relevant unless you replaced converted to subordinated in your text, but I'm not sure that makes any sense either.
Unless of course there is something huge I am missing, not unlikely.
so it was very strange
so it was very strange accidentally catching this news on BBC 24Hr News in a local wetherspoons, where the coverage was immediately followed by a some guy in a suit talking about the potential opportunities for British businesses in Libya now that they have to 'rebuild and restore order'.
proletarian. wrote: I don't
proletarian.
OK ya sure whatever. The western large capitalist has no interest in expanding into the middle eastern markets. It's an old story.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1953_Iranian_coup_d%27%C3%A9tat
Harrison wrote: so it was
Harrison
Exactly.
CRUD, I thought you were
CRUD, I thought you were saying these countries weren't capitalist, I am saying they are but can't be enhanced or developed by capitalism any longer. I am aware of that coup. I actually thought Harrison might be sarcastic, funny but I remember ideologues and outright bullshitters saying the same thing about Iraq and Afghanistan. Where are they now - the countries I mean? Fucked.
This is getting off topic now though I think, so sorry for the derail. As you were.
CRUD, you should check out
CRUD, you should check out Pepe Escobar's articles in the Asian Times which have been posted in the last couple of pages. I think you'd appreciate his journalism.
British companies to rush for £200bn in Libya contracts
proletarian. wrote: I don't
proletarian.
Iran is capitalist but not letting western capitalism expand into Iran and take it over. The capitalists are trying to get western capitalism as the only form of capitalism with truly globally intertwined markets. The now semi global western capitalist system is running out of places to spread- like a "flesh" eating disease on an orange once it spreads around the whole orange it will have no choice but to eat itself. This is what the capitalist system is currently doing. It's in decay. It has been since the 1970's and the current crisis is a side effect of the panicked attempts to boost the system. Not just a part of the regular boom bust cycle or a normal crisis of overproduction.
Various western governments have been looking at the Middle East and Africa as ways to save capitalism. Not only spread western markets into the region but to westernize the population. That's more than 75% of earths population in Africa and the Middle East. That's a lot of money to be made from war in the process of westernizing markets/regions and after it's done selling people who survive all manner of widgets and gadgets while extracting as much wealth as possible. I don't think it's ecologically viable so I predict the end of capitalism before 2050. It simply can't perpetually spread but it has to in order to survive- like a great white shark must constantly swim to breath. This doesn't mean we just sit by and wait for capitalism to end though....the goal is to replace it before it destroys the world and eats itself.
This is the exact thing capitalists did with Japan pre WW2- the US sent it's entire NAVY to Japan and told them to open up their markets (basically westernize) or be destroyed. Back then the capitalist state was a tad more honest with it's motivations.
Iran will be next- they already tried it in 2009 with the fake ass "Green Revolution". Chavez and the oil in Venezuela are on the list as well. South America in general has been pretty much opened up to western markets for some time but as we know some pockets of resistance exist. I'd say by 2020 (if capitalism is to survive) Iran will have western troops on the ground.
Look at the timing- Bush OK's a "secret program" to destabilize Iran's government:
http://abcnews.go.com/blogs/headlines/2007/05/bush_authorizes/
From John Bolton:
Then this happens:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Green_Revolution
and it failed
It's the same with Libya but Libya isn't as advanced as Iran so in lieu of tricking people online they used their same old Islamic Fundamentalist trick like in Afghanistan:
[youtube]OJTv2nFjMBk[/youtube]
It's all a sham. What just happened in Libya wasn't a revolution it was a proxy war and the war just started. The goal is to spread western capitalist markets around the globe in order to save the system. It's not just for profit....western markets must spread in order for the system itself to survive.
Obama just sent 100 troops and or 'advisers' to Africa-
Saudi Arabia is mostly Sunni and they've already opened up a trade relationship with the west (although they've fended of the westernization of their culture). Seeing Iran is mostly Shia and the Sauds are in a money making relationship with the west Iran is pretty much on its own (besides Russia/China which is why the US has to play the cloak and dagger game).
The wars in the middle east are more than just for profit- the capitalist state is trying to westernize (economically and culturally) the entire region and once Iran goes Saudi Arabia is next. It's a sort of new version of "white mans Burden" but with the entire capitalist system at stake. Some Marxian economists go as far as to say this is a good thing- that bringing western capitalism and "enlightenment values" to the world will set the stage for a global communist revolution. Lenin thought that was happening in his time with the spread of imperialism. This is a different sort of neo imperialism though seeing the entire system is at stake not just profits. Keynes and Lenin both read Marx and both understood this would happen. They also both read this:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Imperialism_%28Hobson%29
The difference is Keynes set up the financial institutions that would save capitalism (help spread western markets around the globe- IMF/World Bank) whilst Lenin (or later Stalin) tried to stop the spread of capitalism. It wasn't until the cold war ended that western capitalism could once more spread around the globe unchallenged. Anyone who now challenges the spread of western global capitalism will end up like Gaddafi. The only "revolution" in Libya was one for western capitalism. Now they have the job of installing a western friendly government as they are trying to do in Iraq and Afghanistan. It will be interesting to watch this play out- bloody and tragic but interesting as well.
Fucking capitalism. This is one reason I find the "No War" liberals who support capitalism so absurd. Same with "free market" capitalists who are supposedly anti war. The market system can't survive without forcibly spreading (war).
EDIT- It looks like Syria is next up not Iran- Saudi Arabia and NATO are now backing Turkey to invade largely because (from wiki)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Syria#Foreign_trade
[quote]Foreign trade
Given the policies adopted from the 1960s through the late 1980s, which included nationalization of companies and private assets, Syria failed to join an increasingly interconnected global economy
Destabilize and invade countries that don't open up their markets to western capitalism. That's the MO.
wojtek wrote: CRUD, you
wojtek
Pablo Escobar? :) I'll check them out.....*sniff sniff*
To cut a long story
To cut a long story short...so you don't think there was and still is anything genuine in movements and struggles in Iran. You think it's all CIA plots and bourgeois Machiavellianism? It also seemingly puts you in a position where you end up 'supporting' the 'oppressed nations' - you haven't said this but I think it's the logical outcome, either that and/or reformism.
proletarian. wrote: To cut a
proletarian.
No, many Iranians want to live a more western lifestyle and that can't be done so long as it remains a Theocracy but that doesn't mean the western intelligence agencies didn't chime in on that fact and push it to it's extreme conclusion with the goal of putting in a western friendly regime. Of course there are plenty of people in various countries with real true grievances....the west will use whoever it thinks can destabilize whichever government it's targeting.
John McCain announces ( at
John McCain announces ( at the world economic forum) SYRIA is next on the list.
http://latimesblogs.latimes.com/world_now/2011/10/us-syria-john-mccain-military-action.html
Does this sound familiar? Evil Syrian overloads about to massacre their own population? In comes America or NATO on a humanitarian mission (that will no doubt end up killing scores of thousands). Pfft.
dude, there's a seperate
dude, there's a seperate thread for all things Syria.
Human Rights Watch - Libya:
Human Rights Watch - Libya: Apparent Execution of 53 Gaddafi Supporters
Peter Bouckaert concludes:
Just like their suited masters then!
I don't think that there's
I don't think that there's been a revolution in Libya but an imperialist war that has strategic/economic interests for the major powers involved. There's by no means a totality of "westernised capitalist" involved but rather diverging imperialist interests; the USA, France and Britain on one side (with tensions between those); and Germany, Poland, Russia and, to some extent, Italy on the other.
In fact, I don't understand this point of Crud that "The Middle East in general is the last place in the region not converted to westernised capitalist markets" and further, "The western large capitalist has no interest in expanding into the Middle Eastern markets".
Crud goes further in including Eurasia and Africa into this equasion/position.
For me every major country in the Middle East is a market for "western" capitalism. The same for Eurasia and Africa. Many of these countries were actually created by western capitalism, or more accurately, imperialism; Iraq, Israel, Jordan, Sudan, Syria, all the others and manipulated and fought over by them ever since. Of course many of these entities trade between themselves and have a certain cultural stamp. But that's insignificant compared to the role that the major imperialist powers have played in this region. We have only to look at arm sales and oil.
If we go to Africa and Eurasia then things are even clearer about the global nature of imperialism, which most definitely includes "western capitalism" as it developed over the last 150 years to the First World War and ever since.
I agree with Crud that these are not strictly economic developments, ie, they are no "solution" to the problems of capitalism but expressions of its problems. But I see nothing useful in divorcing the role of the major imperialisms from events both historical and present in the Middle East and elsewhere.
baboon wrote: I don't think
baboon
To play devil's advocate somewhat, I disagree. Certainly there has been no social revolution (i.e. dispossession of the capitalist class by the seizure of the land and means of production by the direct producers), but there has been a military revolution. That is, the armed forces of the ancien regime have been completely overthrown or organisationally liquidated. (As distinct from what has happened in Tunisia or Egypt, where initial political revolutions have failed to make any headway on the military question).
The question then is whether the forces that overthrew the previous regime's military apparatus are unified and disciplined under the centralised command of a new regime - in which case the military revolution is simply the transition from one state regime to the next - or is actual military force in the terrain held by a plurality of bands and groups, answering to different leaderships? If the latter, some form of civil conflict may be the outcome.
Our grasp of the actual situation in Libya is limited by what little information and misinformation filters through the media and other occasional sources. Certainly there have been stories of the military commanders in Tripoli and Misrata making comments along the lines that Benghazi cannot command them by decree. Certainly outside forces, both from the "West" (France, UK, USA) and more local (Qatar, who according to reports, armed the rebels in the Western mountains who caught the West by surprise with their blitz attack on Tripoli) have been involved in arming and training units in the various different factions (as well as the air support, presumably with forward recon by special forces). But that was also the case in most other war theatres in the last half century. It doesn't mean that those powers have direct military control over Libya, any more than over Afghanistan.
And no, I can't make head nor tail out of what CRUD's on about either. I'm not sure whether "westernised" is supposed to be a materialist category or some kind of sub-Maoist anti-western nationalism or what quite. Not to mention the failure to distinguish between the development of capitalism as a world system (growing) and the struggles for the retention of global hegemony by western political and capitalist classes (declining).
CRUD wrote: Iran will be
CRUD
I think you're falling back on tired leftist cliches here - I mean, what exactly is the west? I live about a mile from Greenwich Meridian and I think you'll find that the entire of Venezuela is west of it, while Germany and China are to its east. ;) Whenever I hear people talking about "the West", it sounds like they're trying not to say First/Third World, which are horrifically loaded and outdated terms.
And onto the point of Venezuela, I'm too tired to engage in this debate again (which I have to repeat periodically every few weeks on Libcom), but you'd struggle to find a market that's more open to international investors in the region than Venezuela. A book's just come out on this very subject:
If there's to be war with
If there's to be war with Iran undertaken by the US - and I think that this is a likely perspective - it won't be for economic reasons but in order to shore up the declining authority of American imperialism. It will be totally irrational and totally counter-productive just like the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan.
I don't understand Crud's point about South America either. The latter has been the USA's back-yard and under its sphere of influence - again - for over a hundred years. Only very recently has Chinese imperialism made some inroads in this region. In the meantime, Venezuela, for example, is one of the largest trading partners of the USA. Exports increased nearly 28% the first quarter of this year over last and represents 49% of the total exports of this particular brand of state capitalism.
Pepe Escobar: How the West
Pepe Escobar: How the West won Libya
and
New York Times: Revolution Won, Top Libyan Official Vows a New and More Pious State
This follows the passing of a Constitutional Declaration by the NTC on 3 August. The complete declaration is here.
What exactly are 'islamic banks'? Are they ones that issue interest free money?
Quote: What exactly are
Yeah there's some in the UK. afaik they have a fixed charge for loans or similar so you don't pay interest. And they don't pay interest on current accounts (although nor do normal banks at the moment either so there may not even be an alternative system that way).
Mike Harman
Mike Harman
In theory, according to Sharia, all transactions should be C-M-C - i.e. money should merely be the intermediary for the exchange of real goods and services. M-C-M' is explicitly banned as Riba (usury), as used to also be the case in Judaism and Christianity. In practice, Islamic banking is just the organised system of hypocrisy needed to carry on normal capitalist credit, investment and accumulation functions, while providing tortuous justifications for why the particular form of the transactions defy the ban on Riba.
The concept of islamic banking is fairly recent, from the 1950s & 60s. It really only got going in the 1970s as a way of fighting for market share in rich Gulf State potentate investments. Most islamic banking services are still provided by non-Islamic western financial services companies, although each of the Gulf States also have their own pet banks. In the Libyan context, it'll be interesting to see who exactly provides the new islamic banking - a New York based finance corp, or a Qatari one.
There is a passing link between Islamic banking and western financial practices, found in the repurchase agreement. In the middle ages, pawn shops (or Lombards) got around the Christian prohibition on usury on loans by the practice of buying, at a discounted price, a saleable asset from the borrower and then selling the same asset back to them later at full price. The difference between the buy and sell price being the "I can't believe it's not interest" profit of the pawnshop owner, who also had the security of the asset itself as collateral. Such a successful model that it still exists today in poor communities around the globe.
In the 1970s as the western governments struggled to maintain control of interest rates during the death throes of the Bretton Woods system, the US put a legal limit on the rates of interest that banks were allowed to charge each other (and anybody else) for loans. This lead to the evolution of the repo market where banks would sell non-liquid but highly monetiseable assets like treasury bills to a repo lender for cash, with an agreement to repurchase at a later date (sometimes just overnight, sometimes weeks or months) at a higher price. The repo market is now such an integral part of the global money market, that most central banks carry out their short-term interest rate setting operations through "open market" operations in the repo market.
The moral of the story is that capital flows around laws meant to bind its interest rates like the tide flowed around Canute's feet.
Just on Islamic banking,
Just on Islamic banking, Qatar and Libya.
Bloomberg: (May 26) Qatar Decision to Limit Islamic Banking May Cut Bank Profits by 22 Percent
Daily Herald: (Aug 28) Gadhafi’s exit to spur Libya’s Shariah banking
I guess we'll see if Qatar Islamic Bank (QIBK:QD) gets to keep it's licence and whether conventional banks are allowed to continue providing Islamic banking services or get shut out of the market in Libya as well.
After Qaddafi, Tripoli is a
After Qaddafi, Tripoli is a violent city of armed fiefdoms
plus
Libya interim ruler urges NATO to stay till year-end
equals
Pepe Escobar: Libya: The real war starts now (re-post, written 7 September)
Pepe, if you're reading this...
[youtube]iZtbASCE7ZY[/youtube]
Edit: Abdul Jalil: Harbinger of an Islamic State
From that same AFP story
From that same AFP story (Libya interim ruler urges NATO to stay till year-end) linked above
from the BBC, quoting same AFP source:
Human Rights Watch: The
Human Rights Watch: The Murder Brigades of Misrata
Ian Bone's gone very quiet on Libya...
New York Times: In Libya,
New York Times: In Libya, Fighting May Outlast the Revolution
and
On the new Libyan acting prime minister...
Medialens: Compare The Independent on new Libyan acting prime minister...
Daily Mail: Peace? You're
Daily Mail: Peace? You're joking. Much blood will yet be shed in Libya
Just to clarify something
Just to clarify something which may not be obvious from the posts in this thread... the main reason the Misrata brigades are giving for not acceding to NTC control is that the NTC is being too soft on incorporating ex-Gaddafi henchmen. Sometimes they also criticise Islamists and people who they perceive to be US puppets. I'm pointing this out because the HRW text posted above calls for the Misrata brigades to be brought under NTC control.
wojtek wrote: Ian Bone's
wojtek
Someone brought it up again recently and I chimed in along with some others but no response from Bony. If I can find the post I'll add a link.
NYTimes eXaminer - New York
NYTimes eXaminer - New York Times claims Libya’s “goal” is “development”?
and
UN Secretary-General and Qatari President off to Tripoli to congratulate Libyans on their 'liberation'
and
A really good article by Peter Symonds of the WSWS below. Say what you like about the organisation's Trotskyism, but their coverage and commentary thus far has been excellent:
WSWS - New Libyan prime minister installed by NATO-backed regime
I left the following comment on the blog post where Ian apologises for dismissing Occupy London:
I then politely replied to Keith's comment, but my message was censored for whatever reason. Anywho...
Small world wojtek, as you
Small world wojtek, as you might have guessed by now my comment was under the alias 'proletarian'. This is what really winds me up about his blog, that he moves from one thing to another seemingly without reflection, discussion or debate. How worthwhile are our comments? I still find Keith's attitude bizarre.
Quote: proletarian
Yeah, it seems that way to me. I'll have to get a feel of his blog though and perhaps comment there more often. If Keith reads/watches the alternative media, which I would think he does, then his attitude is very surprising.
"Can you believe this? We have hundreds of little Gaddafis now."
and
War Crimes in Libya – The Smoking Guns
I'm almost certainly derailing the thread, but what are people's views on the UN and international law? I'm not one to fetishise the former as an institution and a means of resisting imperialism, but I certainly think we must adhere to the latter even if the ruling class don't.*
*Since with the absence of privilege, anarchism is at least theoretically the best environment for the law and justice to flourish.
I think that it's relevant
I think that it's relevant Wojtek.
As long as capitalism exists, then international law, in my opinion, will be the law of the jungle.
The United Nations is a den of murderous thieves and again will remain so as long as capitalism exists. From its involvement in the Korean War in 1953, from its very beginning even, the UN has been a cesspit of imperialist rivalries and the representative of imperialist interests. It was a weapon of both the United States and Russia during the Cold War and, since the "new world order" of peace and prosperity it has continued to be the arena where the imperialist powers stage part of their conflicts.
It has been involved in the Iraq wars, the war in Kosovo and the wars in the rest of ex-Yugoslavia and the continuing war in the Congo where over five million have been killed in the last years according to official figures.
Reflecting its masters, it's a completely corrupt organisation whose make up is based on nepotism, placemen and women, political appointees, diplomats and spies.
There's no doubt that on the ground it has many people that have the will to help and do some good work. But this is undermined by the warlike activities of the UN itself that reflect the national interests or the cliques of national interests of its imperialist membership (all of them). And "on the ground", aid is increasingly a weapon of imperialism and the ground staff are more and more infiltrated with mercenaries, special forces and spies.
There is nothing to be hoped for from the UN and its ideological "humanitarian" front is completely bogus.
CRUD wrote: proletarian.
CRUD
(random news reports not posted because I endorse the sites)
http://www.miamiherald.com/2011/11/07/2491427/israelis-anxious-over-expected.html
http://www.wsws.org/articles/2011/nov2011/pers-n04.shtml
http://www.news.com.au/world/report-may-see-hit-on-iran/story-e6frfkyi-1226187201291
Guardian 'Investigation'
Guardian 'Investigation' Claims Vindication for Libya War
Travellers rob €200k that
Travellers rob €200k that spook gave Libyan freedom fighter living in Ireland
LOLZ!11!1
Hague facing questions over Libya deal
There's a transcript of the
[youtube]c93Er2CRLww[/youtube]
There's a transcript of the news piece here:
Make money, make war: UK profits from Libya mess
and
Putin attacks Britain and US for 'violating Libya resolution'
Thanks for the reply baboon
Thanks for the reply baboon and I agree with what you said, I was just unaware of its history.
Here's one for the 'stupid things the SWP have done' thread:
Alex Callinicos asks us to celebrate NATO’s war on Libya
It's a decent critique until about halfway through where it describes Libya as being an 'oppressed nation' (which was in no way imperialist you understand!) and starts to go all cuckoo and Leninist on your ass (it's by someone from the Revolutionary Communist Group whoever they are). I'm right to disagree with with this bit aren't I?
Besides the fact that Leninists don't want to eradicate national boundaries, by this logic the international brigades would have been illegitimate.
And if you thought Alex Callinicos' article was bad, just read this other one from the Socialist Worker:
After the death of Gaddafi: Where next for Libya?
Methinks they'd rather NATO 'hijack' demos rather than anarchists, sorry 'autonomists' lol
If even anarchists in Spain
If even anarchists in Spain accepted help from imperialist countries like the USSR (admitted in 1934 to league of nations), it seems only normal for Libyan fractions of the ruling class to do the same.
Probably what Callinicos keeps in mind is that a seemingly orthodox anti-imperialist stance doesn't imply internationalism (Le Pen opposing Sarkozy) and even if anti-intervention stance was motivated by genuine internationalist solidarity or whatever, it raises the question, what to do? Call for a general strike like the socialist Mussolini did against the Italian 1911 invasion?
Quote: Noa Rodman wrote: If
Did they really? Wow. Were they naive or really desperate?
And he's entitled to do so, but he shouldn't (I can only assume dishonestly) whitewash NATO's and the 'rebels'' record as well as the situation on the ground to fit his politics.
I'm afraid I don't know anything about this event. What happened?
Quote: Did they really? Wow.
I don't know, also they weren't placed before the dilemma of accepting capitalist help (from Britain, France, US). Suppose they were offered help, would they have had to reject it on principle? That's not something Libyan rebels have to worry about, but anarchists I think do.
Many volunteers in the international brigades came from Stalinist and social-democrat parties (you know, real communists are always in short supply ;) ).
[quote=wikipedia]By now, he was considered to be one of Italy's most prominent Socialists. In September 1911, Mussolini participated in a riot, led by Socialists, against the Italian war in Libya. He bitterly denounced Italy's "imperialist war" to capture the Libyan capital city of Tripoli, an action that earned him a five-month jail term.[18] After his release he helped expel from the ranks of the Socialist party two "revisionists" who had supported the war, Ivanoe Bonomi, and Leonida Bissolati. As a result, he was rewarded the editorship of the Socialist Party newspaper Avanti! Under his leadership, its circulation soon rose from 20,000 to 100,000[/quote]
There is nothing
There is nothing "unprincipled" in accepting money or arms from one enemy to fight another enemy - altho it is a very dangerous game. What one has to do is know when the line is crossed such that they are no longer giving you aid and comfort but you are giving them aid and comfort.
In the case of Libya it is the "rebels" who are giving aid and comfort to their imperialist puppeteers rather than the imperialists who are giving aid and comfort to the "rebels."
Alexander, has there been any
Alexander, has there been any historical precedence that you know of? Cos the Libyan case would suggest it's impossible.
Maybe Mexico? wikipedia
Maybe Mexico? [quote=wikipedia]Unlike the United States and major Latin American governments such as the ABC Powers and Peru, the Mexican government supported the Republicans.[131][132] Mexico refused to follow the French-British non-intervention proposals,[131] furnishing $2,000,000 in aid and material assistance, which included 20,000 rifles and 20 million cartridges.[131][/quote].
[quote=wiki]
Cárdenas sought to actively help the Republican government in the Spanish Civil War, but those efforts were largely thwarted by the Roosevelt administration. After the war ended with the defeat of the loyalist Republicans, Cárdenas gave specific instructions to his ambassador and envoys in Europe to give safe haven and protection to all exiles, including President Manuel Azaña, actively sought for deportation by the Spanish fascist government and by French collaborationist authorities. [/quote]
So as the Mexican Left at the time analyzed:
[quote=Grupo de Trabajadores Marxistas]Why is Cardenas giving support to Azana?
Is it to give the workers confidence in their own class instincts? The Cardenas government has a vital interest in preventing the workers of Mexico from understanding why the anti-fascist government in Spain allowed the fascists to prepare their coup. Because they understand that what happened in Spain is also about to happen in Mexico.
This is why Cardenas has given his support to the legally constituted Azana government and sent arms to it. He claims demagogically that these arms are for the defence of the workers against fascism.
The most recent news from Spain has destroyed this lie once and for all: the legally constituted Azana government has used these arms to crush the heroic workers of Barcelona when on 4 May this year they dared to defend themselves against the government which was trying to disarm them.
Today, as yesterday, the Cardenas government is aiding the legally constituted Azana government not against the fascists but against the workers.
The bloody repression which has come in the wake of the Barcelona workers’ uprising has shown up the real situation in Spain like a flash of lightning lights up the night. The illusions of nine months have been shattered. In its ferocious struggle against the workers of Barcelona, the ‘anti-fascist’ government has cast off its disguise. Not only did it send its special police, its assault guards, its machine-guns and tanks against the workers -- it even released fascist prisoners and brought back ‘loyal’ regiments from the front, thus exposing this front to Franco’s attack!
These facts have proved that the real enemies of the Popular Front are not the fascists, but the workers! [/quote]
wojtek wrote: Alexander, has
wojtek
Is there a historical precedence for a popular uprising accepting "aid" from an imperialist without becoming subordinate to that imperialist power? There was the brouhaha about Lenin and Martov (?) accepting a train ride from the German Imperialists after the March revolution. I do not believe that this subordinated the Bolsheviks (or the Mensheviks) to German Imperialism. The example cited above isn't really "aid" but is sanctuary. I do not believe that it corrupted anyone. There was some talk on the part of the Left Communists in Russia of some kind of an arrangement with British Imperialism if Russia failed to sign the Brest-Litovsk Treaty. I believe that Trotsky also put out some feelers for this. Of course the latter did not happen but it would seem much more dangerous to me. There is also the de-facto alliance of Polish Solidarity with the Papacy in the revolt against Stalinist tyranny in Poland. There were accusations of such deals between Hungarian revolutionaries and reactionaries in 1956.
I've taken this from someone
I've taken this from someone on my Football Fans' site:
LESSER KNOWN FACTS ABOUT LIBYA & GADDAFI :
1. There is no electricity bill in Libya; electricity is free for all its citizens.
2. There is no interest on loans, banks in Libya are state-owned and loans given
to all its citizens at 0% interest by law.
3. Home considered a human right in Libya – Gaddafi vowed that his parents
would not get a house until everyone in Libya had a home. Gaddafi’s father has
died while him, his wife and his mother are still living in a tent.
4. All newlyweds in Libya receive $60,000 Dinar (US$ 50,000 ) by the government to buy their first apartment so to help start up the family.
5. Education and medical treatments are free in Libya. Before Gaddafi only 25%
of Libyans are literate. Today the figure is 83%.
6. Should Libyans want to take up farming career, they would receive farming
land, a farming house, equipments, seeds and Livestock to kick- start their farms – all for free.
7. If Libyans cannot find the education or medical facilities they need in Libya,
the government funds them to go abroad for it – onnot only free but they get US
$2, 300/month accommodation and car allo$$$$e.
8. In Libyan, if a Libyan buys a car, the government subsidized 50% of the price.
9. The price of petrol in Libya is $0. 14 per liter.
10. Libya has no external debt and its reserves amount to $150 billion – now
frozen globally.
11. If a Libyan is unable to get employment after graduation the state would
pay the average salary of the profession as if he or she is employed until
employment is found.
12. A portion of Libyan oil sale is, credited directly to the bank accounts of all
Libyan citizens.
13. A mother who gave birth to a child receive US $5 ,000
14. 40 loaves of bread in Libya costs $ 0.15
15. 25% of Libyans have a university degree
16. Gaddafi carried out the world’s largest irrigation project, known as the Great
Man-Made River project, to make water readily available throughout the desert
country.
17. Under Gaddafi, people
17. Under Gaddafi, people didn't have to bother with sources/ evidence to back up claims about how the working-class should be so lucky!
Graun: Saif al-Islam Gaddafi
Graun: Saif al-Islam Gaddafi captured
Alexander Roxwell wrote: The
Alexander Roxwell
You mean Mexico's "$2,000,000 in aid and material assistance, which included 20,000 rifles and 20 million cartridges" or the Stalinists' "806 planes, 362 tanks, and 1,555 artillery pieces"? That "aid" pretty much came to the benefit of those crushing the Spanish workers' revolt, not to speak of the anti-fascist diversion of the workers' struggles in all other countries on to the path of defending democracy, that is, ideological preparation for the approaching world war.
Left Communists opposed the peace treaty with Germany, true, but to conclude from this that they were willing to accept assistance from Britain is quite fanciful. The Soviets did accept humanitarian aid for the starvation, but even such aid came with strings attached.
Another case is the '21 Kronstadt revolt. Even if they stood on "leftist" principle and refused foreign military aid, the logical sequence of events would have given rise to voices within the rebels to accept foreign military aid and so turn in to imperialist tools (Martov's analysis).
wojtek
"25% of Libyans have a university degree" sounds credible. I don't agree with Pengwern' political conclusion, but the living standards were probably among the highest in the region. Among the young rebels you read stories of young college graduates, scientists or entrepreneurs.
We seem to be missing
We seem to be missing this:
Lybian Oil Workers C0ntinue Strike
Marxist.com, a Trotskyist site, has more interesting info on workers' action in post-Kadhaffi Lybia here .
Yes, this was already in October. But I did not see reference to these events here yet.
thanks for that rooieravotr,
thanks for that rooieravotr, do you have any recent updates?
I'm not saying that Libyans didn't have a reasonable standard of living, I was asking for supporting evidence. This is especially important since it's often used to argue that Libyans had no reason/ought not to have actively opposed Gaddafi.
Alexander Roxwell wrote: The
Alexander Roxwell
Noa Rodman
Score another point for Noa Rodman. She was right and I was wrong on this one ! Somehow all I picked up was the offer of sanctuary which was not the whole of it.
Protesters storm Libyan
Protesters storm Libyan government HQ in Benghazi
Libyans lob grenades, storm NTC office in uprising cradle
Video
Edit: Deputy head of NTC resigns following student protests in Benghazi.
After hour by hour reporting
After hour by hour reporting in the British media there's been very little about Libya in the last weeks - except something about a football match in the Observer today.
I've spoken to my relatives there and they report that their savings have been wiped out during the war and many other families are the same.
There's been reports of at least one strike by workers in an oil depot and there have been many protests and demonstrations since the end of the war.
RT reported last night that a US senator from Georgia, had stated that 20,000 US troops were on standby to intervene in the country with 6,000 stationed on Malta. The news programme also reported that a recent occupation of an oil facility by "rebels" was fired on by a Nato helicopter
In Libya, the Captors Have
In Libya, the Captors Have Become the Captive
Once allied to Gaddifi, the
Once allied to Gaddifi, the Tuareg fighters are now causing devastation across the Sahel. The consequences and chaos of the "liberation" of Libya by the west are now being felt wider afield - and it's only the beginning. The area is now flooded witn weaponry from Gaddafi's arsenals including some ten thousand ground-to-air missiles that have gone missing. Who needs Al-Qaida in the Islamic Mahgreb?
They are doing things like
They are doing things like locking up black people in cages, tribes are warring with each other, the whole place is a total mess. http://www.rt.com/news/libya-rebels-torture-africans-679/
And now America is going to intervene..fantastic, things can't get any better….
Could be worse. They could
Could be worse. They could send Tony Blair as a "Peace Envoy".
Ya'll should read the new AK
Ya'll should read the new AK Press book about the situation in Libya, it's called "Arab Spring, Libyan Winter"
Oooh, hopefully it's be
Oooh, hopefully it's be available at the Toronto anarchist bookfair this weekend.
How new is new? AK Press have
How new is new? AK Press have a stall at tomorrow's Sheffield Anarchist Bookfair, or is that too soon to hope for?
Edit: available in the UK apparently.
A Libyan-American writing for
A Libyan-American writing for AJE on the current situation in Libya:
http://www.aljazeera.com/indepth/opinion/2012/07/2012731132420473906.html
One can give Juan Cole all
One can give Juan Cole all the fancy pants titles in the world, but I still wouldn't trust him. He did and continues to defend the NATO invasion and the rebels despite who they were, their atrocities and their motives. In October 2011, he wrote this piece declaring that 'the Libyan Revolution is a moment of celebration' when it was anything but (see comment #466 onwards on this very thread).
In the comments section of Cole's article which Najla Abdurrahman quotes, Cole writes:
This would be after NATO, whom he supported, indiscriminately bombed and more Sirte and its population:
Daily Mail: Last stand in Sirte: Extraordinary pictures show Libyan city shelled to smithereens
Independent: Bloody chaos at hospital gives glimpse of Sirte's agony
WSWS: Mass killing and humanitarian disaster in NATO siege of Sirte
When Cole paraphrases the African guy in his article, he leaves out the massacres of African migrants or their torture carried out just two months prior to his trip by his beloved rebels.
Peter Obourne and Richard Cookson were also in Libya at the same time as Cole and they describe a somewhat different picture:
Libya still ruled by the gun
As did Amnesty:
Libyan Elections – Burying The Amnesty Report
Similarly, the Libyan Observatory for Human Rights:
Human Rights Worse After Gaddafi
Moreover:
AFP: Libyan PM predicts 'bright future' for foreign investors, especially in the oil sector
Meanwhile, Juan Cole celebrates the 'freedom' of this new 'republic', which is inseparable from the intervention of NATO, Saudi Arabia and Qatar.
Soapy wrote: Ya'll should
Soapy
Review here
[youtube]AmDFE-9YV74[/youtube]
Part two of the interview here
So has anyone read the book yet?
RTÉ: Libyan-Irish fighter
RTÉ: Libyan-Irish fighter Hussam Najjar training Syrian rebels
A long article (and
A long article (and discussion) concentrating on Libya and criticising the critics of western intervention. Read and make your own mind up.
Clay Claiborne: The American left and the Arab Spring
Quote: The US ambassador to
http://www.aljazeera.com/news/middleeast/2012/09/20129112108737726.html
Edit:
[quote=Arabist]
It appears very likely that the Benghazi attack that killed US diplomats was a pre-planned attack by a group probably trying to avenge the death of Sheikh al-Libi, an al-Qaeda leader. And it seems that the initial Egyptian protests were in good part due to a call by a small Salafi group led by Mohammed Zawahri (Ayman's brother) and a few fellow travellers, and timed for the anniversary of the 9/11 attacks. That these protests expanded and got out of hand speaks volumes of the complicated, chaotic situation in Egypt. (I'll pass on the government's reaction, or lack thereof, for now.) I think it is important to see who involved in getting the ball rolling — and particularly the international network of Islamist activists who amplify and spread this manufactured outrage (I say manufactured because why now and not, say, at the time of the scandal over the desecration of Quran by US soldiers in Afghanistan or other incidents?)[/quote]
AJE: Libyans storm militia
[youtube]AjrOUgbKkek[/youtube]
AJE: Libyans storm militia compounds in Benghazi
Something rather fishy about
Something rather fishy about this. The World Service got an "IT worker" on who'd been at last night's demo/'action'. He spoke for a while about how it'd gone & what'd happened, saying that their ultimate aim was to disarm/drive out all of the militias in Benghazi. The presenter twice asked him how the militias had worsened their lives in the city and he was suddenly stuck.
(Obvs not a direct quote heh.)
So I'm unsure what to make of this, not that I wanna defend Islamist militias or anythign...
I'm not sure exactly what was
I'm not sure exactly what was going on really. The above report is from AJE which, obviously, is ultimately controlled by Qatar, one of the backers of Islamist groups in Libya and elsewhere.This report paints a different picture of the Rafallah Sehati militia, for example.
Edit: More reports at http://www.libyaherald.com/
Does anyone know of any other worthwhile blogs/sites on Libya?
A harbinger for
A harbinger for Ukraine?
It's a good thing that Obama
It's a good thing that Obama courageously stood up for democracy in Libya by ordering robots to murder thousands of people amirite?
I don't know much about the Ukraine, but it was pretty obvious to anybody familiar with Libyan history that at the very least after the revolution the militias would come to loggerheads over regional or tribal disputes. Gaddafi was a man of Tripolitania, and the king before him was a man of Cyrenaica. It's all really boring to talk about, but basically the militias didn't decide before they won how the long standing feud between Tripolitania and Cyrenaica would be resolved after Gaddafi was removed. Add that problem to the problem of having to decide what to do with the violent religious zealots of the LIFG which were called back into action and armed by NATO during the uprising, well basically it's a shit storm.
Mainly what the west is concerned about I think is making sure the very wealthy Libyan Investment Company, which under Gaddafi had managed to make some serious moves in the Bahraini financial sector, is kept intact and at some point in the future its funds can be used to be invested back into the stock market to avoid any sort of petrodollar glut. Also the oil and natural gas (and fresh water).