Astroboy en
Multiverso nació hace casi tres años, a fines de Noviembre de 2011. El
disparador de este blog fue la indignación que nos provocó la invasión y
destrucción de Libia por parte de la NATO (Estados Unidos y sus esbirros
europeos), el magnicidio de Muhammad Gaddafi y el genocidio de varias de las
tribus y etnias que componían ese complejo país (véase nuestro primer post,
“Libia”, del 25 de Noviembre de 2011:
http://astroboy-en-multiverso.blogspot.com.ar/search?updated-min=2011-01-01T00:00:00-08:00&updated-max=2012-01-01T00:00:00-08:00&max-results=1)
Tres años ya. Uno
se pregunta cuál fue el resultado práctico de la “invasión humanitaria” de
Libia por parte del Imperio del Caos y sus secuaces europeos. Una nota de
Timothy Alexander Guzman para Global Research nos lo cuenta. Dan ganas de vomitar, chicos.
Título: Libya, A
Nation in Despair
Epígrafe: “The
spirit of democracy cannot be imposed from without. It has to come from within”
-Mahatma Gandhi
Texto: The
US-NATO invasion of Libya in 2011 to remove Muammar Gaddafi for a government
that would be subservient to Western interests has proven to be a disaster for
North Africa and Europe. They have managed to destroy one of Africa’s
wealthiest nations with the highest GDP per capita and less people living below
the poverty line. Libya also had the highest life expectancy than any other
nation in the African continent before the US-NATO invasion which leads to my
next point. There were more than 30,000 deaths, 50,000 injured and 4,000
missing in Libya during the 2011 civil war that lasted several months. The West
conveniently called it a “humanitarian intervention” for public relations, but
the invasion was a “humanitarian disaster”. Manlio Dinucci’s article ‘The
“Humanitarian War” against Libya: How the West Destroys Countries and Creates
“Failed States"’, which can be found at Global Research explains the role played
by Italy (a member state of NATO) in Libya. He wrote:
This state, in
addition to being a factor of stability and development in North Africa, had
used its investments to facilitate the emergence of organizations that one day
might have made the financial autonomy of Africa possible: the African
Investment Bank, based in Tripoli; the African Central Bank, with headquarters
in Abuja, Nigeria; the African Monetary Fund, based in Yaoundé, Cameroon.
After having funded and armed hostile tribal areas in Tripoli, which caused the “Arab Spring” in Libya to assume from the outset the form of armed insurrection, and thus provoking the government’s response, they waged a war that destroyed the Libyan state in 2011: in seven months the U.S./NATO Air Force carried out 10,000 attack missions, unleashing more than 40,000 bombs and missiles.
Since then,
scores of people have been killed due to the ongoing civil war between
government forces, militias and terrorists organizations that is based on
sectarian hatred and for the control of the oil industry. Amnesty International
UK (AI) published a report that explains Libya’s situation titled ‘Rule of the
gun: Abductions, torture and other abuses by militias in western Libya’.
Libya’s situation is now even worst according to Amnesty International’s recent
press release:
Militias and
armed groups in western Libya are carrying out rampant human rights abuses,
including war crimes, according to a new briefing today (30 October) from
Amnesty International. The 30-page briefing – Rule of the gun: Abductions,
torture and other abuses by militias in western Libya – shows that armed groups
have tortured – and probably summarily killed – detainees in their custody, and
have committed a wave of abductions targeting civilians based on their origins
or perceived political allegiance.
Likewise,
satellite images released today by Amnesty show that fighters on all sides in
the conflict have displayed an utter disregard for civilian lives, launching
indiscriminate rocket and artillery fire into crowded civilian neighbourhoods
which has damaged homes, civilian infrastructure and medical facilities. Those
responsible include members of the Libya Dawn coalition (groups from Misratah,
Tripoli and other towns in western Libya), and the Zintan-Warshafana coalition
(groups from Zintan and the Warshafana area). Satellite images obtained by
Amnesty show significant damage to civilian property in the Warshafana region,
including at Al-Zahra Hospital which has come under heavy rocket fire. The
intensive care unit at Zawiya Hospital has also been struck by a rocket which
injured ten people, including doctors, nurses, patients and visitors.
Since July at least 287,000 people have been internally displaced as a result of indiscriminate attacks and a fear of being targeted by militias, and a further 100,000 have been forced to flee the country in fear for their lives.
There are
constant rocket and artillery shells being fired by various militias and
terrorist organizations which have resulted in mass civilian casualties. Libyan
infrastructure and hospitals have been destroyed. Hundreds of thousands of
Libyans have been either displaced from their homes or forced to migrate to
neighboring countries in Northern Africa and Europe to its north. ‘The
Spectator’ a conservative magazine based in London explained Italy’s
immigration crisis concerning what they call “Libya’s boat people” after a
tragic accident that resulted in the deaths of more than 366 people who were
desperate to reach Europe’s shores:
The decision to
open the floodgates came in a moment of national moral panic after 366 people
drowned in a single boat which caught fire and sank a stone’s throw from an
idyllic beach on the island of Lampedusa, an exclusive resort favoured by the
right-on rich. The dead included a mother who had given birth during the voyage
and was still attached to her newborn child when divers found their bodies
trapped inside the sunken vessel.
The policy
change, driven by a perverted mix of human decency and political correctness,
was pure folly: it has acted as a green light to wannabe boat people
everywhere, whose numbers soar as the chaos in Africa and the Middle East
escalates. The result is an exodus of biblical proportions out of Africa into
Italy. So far this year, more than 100,000 boat people have arrived in Italy —
two thirds of them brought ashore by the Italian navy. That is more than double
the number who arrived in 2011, the previous record year. It is estimated that
the total by the end of 2014 will surpass 200,000. So far this year Italy has
deported only 10,000.
The Spectator
states that “numbers soar as the chaos in Africa and the Middle East escalates.”
Yes, that is true. It is also true that Libya and other African and Middle
Eastern nations that suffer from the chaos imposed by the same Western nations
that preach Democracy. The US and European style of Democracy by force is not a
Democracy. Democracy has to be a grassroots effort, a natural process that is
not imposed by a foreign government or entity. The American and European notion
of “Bringing Democracy” to the world is an Imperial agenda. Let’s look at a
number of examples since the September 11th attacks when President George W.
Bush was President, starting with Afghanistan and Iraq, now both countries are
in total chaos with numerous militias and terrorists organization battling each
other along sectarian lines and for political power. New and old terrorist
organizations now have expanded throughout Africa and the Middle East such as
Boko-Haram (Nigeria), Al-Shabaab (Somalia and Ethiopia) and the Lord’s
Resistance Army (Uganda) and the Islamic state of Iraq and Syria (ISIS or
ISIL), Al-Nusra, Al-Qaeda and the so-called Khorasan (supposedly made up of
former Al-Qaeda members) in the Middle East plus any new organization that
arises out of the ashes of war. Let’s not forget that the Military-Industrial
Complex has made enormous profits from both wars in Afghanistan and Iraq and on
the “War on Terror.” Africa is the future for the US-NATO war industry starting
with Libya. However, the Amnesty International report paints a very disturbing
picture concerning innocent civilians caught in the crossfire:
Scores of
civilians have been abducted by armed groups in Tripoli, Zawiya, Warshafana and
towns in the Nafusa Mountains, with numerous people held hostage for up to two
months in a spate of tit-for-tat attacks based on their town of origin or perceived
political affiliation. In some cases civilians have been abducted as bargaining
chips in order to secure prisoner exchanges. While several such exchanges have
taken place since the start of the conflict on 13 July, abductions and other
reprisals have continued.
Tripoli residents originally from Zintan told Amnesty that Libya Dawn militias have carried out door-to-door “manhunts” to seize people based on their tribal affiliation or presumed political allegiance. Militias have also carried out extensive raids against civilian homes, looting and destroying property, and setting homes and farms ablaze in the area of Warshafana.
Libya’s invasion
by the West was not for democratic purposes, it was for its oil reserves. They
also wanted to remove Gaddafi from power because he was in the early stages of
creating a gold dinar for trade, not only for Libya but all of Africa. It was a
threat to the petrodollar. King World News interviewed multi-billionaire Hugo
Salinas Price of Mexico in 2011 and said:
The central bank
is definitely afraid of doing anything that is not being done by all of the
other central banks. They feel they are part of a brotherhood and they can’t
betray the rest. They don’t want to present a currency that would be viewed as
out of line, that’s the way they think. It’s a sad thing but this is the
mentality.
Thinking about it
a little bit more, what happened to Mr. Gaddafi, many speculate the real reason
he was ousted was that he was planning an all-African currency for conducting
trade. The same thing happened to him that happened to Saddam because the US
doesn’t want any solid competing currency out there vs the dollar. You know
Gaddafi was talking about a gold dinar.
Libya is a nation
in chaos because of the Western powers and their “humanitarian intervention”
policies which was designed to expand their footprint on African territory. The
US, UK and France were the main powers that instigated Gaddafi’s removal. Libya
was not perfect, but it sure was a lot better than most African nations who are
under a financial dictatorship imposed by the International Monetary Fund (IMF)
and the World Bank. Since then, Libya
has become a haven for terrorists who commit human rights abuses on a grand
scale. When President Barack Obama announced that the US and its NATO Allies
will launch military strikes against Libya to protect its civilians was a lie.
Obama began his speech by acknowledging that he had already authorized U.S. and
NATO forces to invade Libya to protect civilians:
Good afternoon,
everybody. Today I authorized the armed forces of the United States to begin a
limited military action in Libya in support of an international effort to
protect Libyan civilians. That action has now begun.
In this effort,
the United States is acting with a broad coalition that is committed to
enforcing United Nations Security Council Resolution 1973, which calls for the
protection of the Libyan people.
U.S. and NATO’s
intervention in Libya has made life for ordinary citizens a living hell. If
this is Western-style Democracy then who in their right state of mind would
welcome it? I believe that most nations in Africa and the Middle East would
pass on Western-imposed Democracy because it would only lead to a political
crisis with the possibility of war following in its footsteps. The aftermath of
Iraq and Syria is a perfect example of what happened after Washington and its
NATO allies decided to intervene, whether by military force or by simply
financing opposition groups to overthrow their government for the sake of
Democracy, but that resulted in unintended consequences. However, the
unintended consequences of invading Libya have benefited big oil corporations,
the petrodollar and the US-NATO militaries by expanding their bases into Africa
to fight terrorism.
Then again, it is
appropriate to ask ourselves, Cui Bono?
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