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Thursday 29 May 2014

Ansar al-Sharia In Libya

Barbarians At the Gates
A terrorist network linked to Al Qaeda has warned the U.S. not to involve itself in Libyan political affairs. Ansar al-Sharia, the murderous network which no doubt had full advance knowledge about the butchery of Ambassador Christopher Stevens and his Staff, is just one of the many fanatical armed groups let loose in the ensuing chaos following the overthrow of Colonel Gadhafi.
Just to put the record straight, the United States was not 'defeated' in Iraq nor in Afghanistan.
It failed to achieve the objectives set – to bring democracy and stability, for reasons I have outlined in other blogs.  Libya, however, is a very different case, and if there is a country where urgent action is now required by the United States to protect vital interests in the Mediterranean and in North Africa, it is in Libya.

Infinite Justice
I have no doubt that as I write this article Ansar al-Sharia is, already, history.

To now look beyond all of these terror networks there is new hope for the future of Libya.


Pandora's Box
I said at the time that overthrowing Gadhafi was a huge mistake.
Like the Soviet Union, he 'kept the lid' on a boiling cauldron of ethnic and tribal tensions which, when let loose, savaged and tore apart and consumed everything in their path.
There are many countries in the world which have a 'balanced fragility'.  Libya was just one where, when you let loose the dogs of war, it's like opening Pandora's box.

Corporate Hubris
As I have said in other blogs, American (corporate) hubris, has little patience nor time to take stock of 'roadblocks' and 'obstacles' to corporate objectives – hence the encouragement and reliance on the military, as a first option, to pave the way for immediate commercial, technological and industrial full spectrum dominance. Most analysts either deliberately misrepresent this as U.S. government and military initiatives rather than for what they really are – that is to say, corporate-driven, or indeed they fail to understand the relationship between corporate America and the political and military establishments.
When a greater degree of stability is brought to Libya – which may be near at hand – the hope is that corporate America will not, as it usually does, dive in head first and attempt to parachute McDonalds, Pizza Hut and democracy onto intellectual and political pygmies with contrived pseudo-political statements like 'no two countries with McDonalds or Starbucks or Pizza Hut have ever gone to war against each other.' The sole objective in Libya should be extractive – minus the Jesus preachers, the NGOs, enforced Western consumerism and the fast food takeaways.
But, of course, this will not happen and Libyans, like the tribal Afghans, will be dragged kicking and screaming into the 21st century by corporate America, with further disastrous consequences and results.

Topsy-turvy:
The Land of The Lilliputians
(Where Politicians Do Not Answer to Corporations but Vice-Versa)
America could learn quite a lot about how to get business done without getting entangled in local tribal, ethnic and religious politics from studying how China has advanced economically across Africa and the rest of the world.  Unfortunately this will not happen.  While China's government centrally plans for up to thirty and beyond to one hundred years of economic stability for China itself (and enjoys the luxury of dictating compliance to corporate China of what  it's vision of the world is for the next century), shareholders in the United States are constrained by the system to see no further than the short-term balance sheet, with all the negative consequences this has on their unique, limited, and very narrow perception of global governance.


Patrick Emek

 
http://magharebia.com/en_GB/articles/awi/features/2014/05/28/feature-01

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