Muammar
Qaddafi has used up twelve of his nine lives, but he still keeps
going strong. He came to power – with some help from CIA it
is whispered – in a 1969 coup against Libya’s doddering, British-run
puppet king, Idris.
Forty years
in power in the Mideast is a remarkable feat. President Ronald
Reagan branded Qaddafi "the mad dog of the Mideast"
and sent warplanes to kill him. Britain, France and some of
Qaddafi’s Arab "brothers" also tried to overthrow
or assassinate him. Libya’s "Leader" has had the piquant
pleasure of outliving or outfoxing most of his enemies.
I was invited
to interview Qaddafi in 1987. We spent an evening together in
his colorful Bedouin tent. He led me by the hand through the
ruins of his personal quarters, bombed a year earlier by the
US in an attempt to assassinate him. Qaddafi showed me where
his 2-year old adopted daughter had been killed by an American
1,000-lb. bomb.
"Why
are the Americans trying to kill me, Mister Eric?" he asked,
genuinely puzzled. I told him because Libya was harboring all
sorts of violent anti-western revolutionary groups, from Palestinian
aircraft hijackers to IRA bombers and Nelson Mandela’s ANC.
While in
Libya I spent time with two men high on the US and Israeli most
wanted list: Palestinian militants George Habash and Nayef Hawatmeh.
To the naïve Libyans, they were all legitimate "freedom
fighters."
Two weeks
ago, a Libyan intelligence agent, Abdel Basset al-Megrahi, who
was serving a life term in Scotland for the destruction of an
American airliner over Lockerbie, Scotland in 1988, was released
on compassionate grounds by Scotland’s justice minister. Megrahi
was dying of cancer. "Devolved" Scotland enjoys considerable
autonomy from London in legal matters.
A huge
international furor erupted that was rich in hypocrisy and double
standards.
The US
and the British governments and assorted politicians roared
with moral indignation and blasted Scotland for releasing the
dying Megrahi. His joyous reception on arriving home in Tripoli,
led by Qaddafi’s son Saif, poured fuel on the fires of western
outrage.
Then came
embarrassing revelations that the British government may have
been applying subtle pressure on Scotland to release Megrahi
in exchange for lucrative oil and arms deals with Libya. The
Brits are well known for bending their own laws when it comes
to big export contracts. Exhibit A: Tony Blair’s quashing a
major criminal investigation of bribery and kickbacks paid to
the Saudis by Britain’s largest arms exporter.
Worse,
the Pan Am 103 crime was part of a bigger, even more sordid
story.
1986: Libya
is accusing of bombing a Berlin disco, killing two US servicemen.
A defector from Mossad, Israel’s intelligence agency, named
Viktor Ostrovsky claimed Israel framed Libya and gulled the
US into believing Qaddafi was the culprit.
Israel
denied the accusation. East German intelligence may also have
been involved.
Then, Qaddafi
committed a supreme offense. He accused the Arab oil monarchs
of being American stooges and demanded they raise the price
of oil. Washington was incensed and moved Qaddafi to the top
of its black list.
1987: The
US tries to kill Qaddafi, fails. Eighty-eight Libyan civilians
die in the US bombing of Tripoli.
1988: France
fights a secret desert war with Libya over Chad’s uranium-rich
Aouzou Strip. French Foreign Legionnaires disguised as Tuareg
tribesmen drove Libya’s ragtag army out of the strip.
France’s
very rough secret service, SDECE, was ordered to kill Qaddafi.
Its late director, Count Alexandre de Marenches, told me his
agents secreted a bomb aboard Qaddafi’s private jet. But after
Franco-Libyan relations abruptly improved, and President Francois
Mitterand ordered SDECE to remove the bomb. Luckily for Qaddafi,
he chose to stay in his tent rather than fly.
1988: The
US intervenes on Iraq’s side in the eight-year war it helped
start against Iran. A US Navy Aegis cruiser, "Vincennes,"
violates Iranian waters and "mistakenly" shoots down
an Iranian civilian Airbus airliner in Iran’s air space. All
288 civilians aboard die. "Vincennes" is known in
the US Navy as "robocruiser" for its extremely aggressive,
provocative actions against Iran.
Then Vice
President George H. Bush vows, "I’ll never apologize…I
don’t care what the facts are." This obdurate trait seems
to run in the Bush family.
To Iran’s
fury, the "Vincennes" trigger-happy captain was subsequently
decorated by President Bush Senior with the Legion of Merit
medal for this crime. Washington quietly paid the families of
the Iranian victims US$131.8 million in damages.
Five months
later, Pan Am 103 with 270 aboard is destroyed by a bomb over
Lockerbie, Scotland. The US and Britain pressure Scotland to
convict Meghrahi, who insists he is innocent. His co-defendant,
another Libyan security agent, was acquitted. Serious questions
about the evidence were raised during and after the trial. Some
critics accused CIA of faking evidence to blame Libya.
A good
number of intelligence experts believe the attack was Tehran’s
revenge for the downing of the Iranian airliner, carried out
by Mideast contract killers paid by Iran. In recent years, Scotland’s
legal authorities raised serious doubts about Meghrahi’s conviction.
An appeal was under way.
Libyans
believed he was a sacrificial lamb handed over to save Libya
from a crushing US-British-led oil export boycott that would
have wrecked their nation’s fragile economy. Libya paid very
large settlements to most of the American families involved
in the crime.
1989: A
French UTA-airliner with 180 aboard is blown up over Chad. A
Congolese and Libyan agents are accused.
In a very
curious twist of events, Qaddafi allows French investigators
to go through the top-secret files of Libya’s intelligence service.
French
investigators indict Qaddafi’s brother-in-law, Abdullah Senoussi,
head of Libyan intelligence, with whom I dined in Tripoli. Libya
blames the attack on Senoussi and rogue mid-level agents but
pays French families $170 million in compensation.
We will
never have all the answers to these mysteries. But my sense
is that Megrahi was probably innocent and indeed framed, as
he claimed. Scotland was right to release him.
But Libya
was guilty as hell of the UTA crime, which was most likely revenge
for France’s attempt to kill Qaddafi. Libya’s "Leader"
threw his underlings to the dogs to escape censure.
The bombing
of Pan Am 103 that was filled with Americans was probably revenge
for America’s destruction of the Iranian Airbus.
Not to
be outdone in the "Get Qaddafi" business, Britain’s
MI6 intelligence agency tried in 1998 to kill Qaddafi with a
car bomb in Benghazi. The plot failed, like so many others.
North Africans would say that Qaddafi has "baraka,"
good fortune that protects him from evil.
In
the end, the western powers concluded they needed Libya’s high-grade
oil and business. So Libya bought its way out of sanctions with
$2.7 billion total in damages paid to the US, Britain and France.
Old sly fox Qaddafi also bought a few containers of useless
nuclear junk from the Dubai black market and turned it over
to Washington as part of his rehabilitation deal. The Bush administration
gleefully trumpeted it had "halted Libya’s program to build
weapons of mass destruction." Qaddafi’s charade worked
brilliantly.
The US,
Britain, France and Italy then invested $8 billion in Libya’s
oil industry and proclaimed Qaddafi an ally and new best friend.
Libya signed contracts for new western arms and nuclear reactors.
Qaddafi also had a face-lift that left him looking a bit like
France’s leading singer, Johnny Hallyday.
Not bad
at all for a former Bedouin army colonel who managed to turn
tiny Libya, a nation of only 5.5 million, into the scourge of
Christendom – and have a jolly good time doing it.