Gaddafi's fall may have caused chaos in the Sahara, but Africa is still better off

cancel2 2022

Canceled
Excellent article from back in February 2013.


In his lifetime, the peculiar blend of despotism and eccentricity that was Colonel Muammar Gaddafi earned him many different titles, not all as respectful as "Dear Brother Leader". In the US, he was dubbed the Mad Dog of the Middle East by President Ronald Reagan. In Britain, thanks to his generosity with Semtex, he was seen as IRA quartermaster in chief. In Libya's neighbouring state of Chad, where Gaddafi meddled endlessly, he was referred to unaffectionately as "that disease". And among his long-suffering fellow Libyans, he was known – when his secret service wasn't listening – as "Abu Shufshufa", which, colloquially translated, means "That idiot with the Frizzy Hair".

Now, though, more than a year after his death, the old tyrant seems to be on the verge of acquiring a new moniker, one that I suspect he would rather have liked. Posthumously, he is being hailed as some sort of Tito of North Africa, holding his fiefdom together with an iron fist just like the former leader of Communist-era Yugoslavia did.

The argument is that ever since Gaddafi's Western-backed overthrow, chaos has begun to unfold in the region, most worryingly in the Tuareg-Islamist takeover of northern Mali and the retaliatory al-Qaeda massacre at the BP refinery in Algeria. This narrative points out how post-war Libya became a massive weapons bazaar, enabling the Tuaregs – freshly demobbed from their well-paid jobs as Gaddafi mercenaries – to steam south and seize their dream of an independent homeland in northern Mali. On their coat tails were AQIM, who likewise helped themselves at the arms bazaar first, and then sidelined the Tuaregs to turn the likes of Timbuktu into a Taliban-style ministate. Cue the usual mutterings about Western naiveties over the Arab Spring and so on.

It's certainly likely that had the Dear Leader had still been in power, none of this would have happened. Gaddafi hated Islamists of all kinds, harbouring a natural disdain for anyone who chose to worship God rather than him. Likewise, while tough Tuareg fighters had served as a kind of Libyan Foreign Legion ever since the 1970s, carrying out all kinds of meddling in Gaddafi's backyard, he latterly reined them in to please new pals like Tony Blair.

But none of this should detract from the fact that Gaddafi was generally an utter disaster for Africa, stirring far more conflicts than he ever resolved. In Britain, we tend to think of him mainly in terms of episodes such as the WPc Yvonne Fletcher murder, the Lockerbie bombing, and the arming of the IRA. But dreadful though those were, we should remember that his fondness for backing thugs and terrorists elsewhere in the world caused far more carnage – especially among his fellow Africans.

Take, for example, the various graduates of his so-called "World Revolutionary Centre", which offered military training to all comers during the peak of Gaddafi's 1980s radical period. Prominent among its alumni were two of the bloodthirstiest men in modern African history, Charles Taylor of Liberia and his partner-in-war crimes Foday Sankoh. Their combined efforts in Sierra Leone's civil war killed an estimated 200,000 people and left countless more bereft of arms and legs – amputation being the signature calling card of Sankoh's drug-crazed Revolutionary United Front militia.

The former chief prosecutor at the Special Court of Sierra Leone, Professor David Crane, actually named Gaddafi in the original war crimes indictment against Taylor, saying that he was instrumental in planning the conflict. This, however, was back around 2003, when the West was busy wooing Gaddafi once again. And so it was, amid pressure from Britain and other nations, that Gaddafi's name was dropped again from the indictment – much to the fury of Crane, who took the view that "Gaddafi was ultimately responsible for the mutilation, maiming and/or murder of 1.2 million people."

Sierra Leone was just one of Gaddafi's African military adventures, which were informed by an imperial vision as racist as anything that the former colonial powers ever imposed. As the self-described Saviour of Africa, Gaddafi believed it was Libya's destiny to create an empire over the black nations's to the south, whose peoples he describes in his Green Book as being too lazy and backward to help themselves.

But while he did pump money into the region – Mali, for example, is replete with garish, Gaddafi-built mosques and hotels – he also bankrolled violent insurgencies everywhere, from Eritrea to Mozambique, and Guinea Bissau to Angola, not to mention many further afield in Europe and Central America. And everywhere he went, he willingly backed the most violent, lunatic fringes like the RUF, to the point where even Fidel Castro, that well-known voice of restraint and conciliation, branded him a "reckless adventurer".

Make no mistake about it – the last thing that the poverty-stricken nations of sub-Saharan Africa ever needed was a violent, oil-rich, deluded nutjob like Gaddafi interfering in their affairs. For anyone who purports to give a damn about that part of the world – for example Tony Blair, with his Africa Progress Panel – the lament should be not that Gaddafi didn't survive longer, but that he was ever in power at all.

http://blogs.telegraph.co.uk/news/c...a-but-africa-is-still-better-off-without-him/
 
Ghaddafi has the blood of over a million people on his hands but there are still some that will try and defend the bastard.

But none of this should detract from the fact that Gaddafi was generally an utter disaster for Africa, stirring far more conflicts than he ever resolved. In Britain, we tend to think of him mainly in terms of episodes such as the WPc Yvonne Fletcher murder, the Lockerbie bombing, and the arming of the IRA. But dreadful though those were, we should remember that his fondness for backing thugs and terrorists elsewhere in the world caused far more carnage – especially among his fellow Africans.

Take, for example, the various graduates of his so-called "World Revolutionary Centre", which offered military training to all comers during the peak of Gaddafi's 1980s radical period. Prominent among its alumni were two of the bloodthirstiest men in modern African history, Charles Taylor of Liberia and his partner-in-war crimes Foday Sankoh. Their combined efforts in Sierra Leone's civil war killed an estimated 200,000 people and left countless more bereft of arms and legs – amputation being the signature calling card of Sankoh's drug-crazed Revolutionary United Front militia.

The former chief prosecutor at the Special Court of Sierra Leone, Professor David Crane, actually named Gaddafi in the original war crimes indictment against Taylor, saying that he was instrumental in planning the conflict. This, however, was back around 2003, when the West was busy wooing Gaddafi once again. And so it was, amid pressure from Britain and other nations, that Gaddafi's name was dropped again from the indictment – much to the fury of Crane, who took the view that "Gaddafi was ultimately responsible for the mutilation, maiming and/or murder of 1.2 million people."

Sierra Leone was just one of Gaddafi's African military adventures, which were informed by an imperial vision as racist as anything that the former colonial powers ever imposed. As the self-described Saviour of Africa, Gaddafi believed it was Libya's destiny to create an empire over the black nations's to the south, whose peoples he describes in his Green Book as being too lazy and backward to help themselves.

But while he did pump money into the region – Mali, for example, is replete with garish, Gaddafi-built mosques and hotels – he also bankrolled violent insurgencies everywhere, from Eritrea to Mozambique, and Guinea Bissau to Angola, not to mention many further afield in Europe and Central America. And everywhere he went, he willingly backed the most violent, lunatic fringes like the RUF, to the point where even Fidel Castro, that well-known voice of restraint and conciliation, branded him a "reckless adventurer".

Make no mistake about it – the last thing that the poverty-stricken nations of sub-Saharan Africa ever needed was a violent, oil-rich, deluded nutjob like Gaddafi interfering in their affairs. For anyone who purports to give a damn about that part of the world – for example Tony Blair, with his Africa Progress Panel – the lament should be not that Gaddafi didn't survive longer, but that he was ever in power at all.
 
Its nice to agree with you on something

You will probably agree with this as well, this was written in 2007 by an African writer.

Our attention was called to an article published here last week asking the question as to who protects the Liberian consumer. The writer was addressing the issue of the many dangerous Chinese made products that had been recalled on the US market after they were linked to deaths of children and dogs. There was no such a recall in Liberia and with Christmas approaching, millions of children on the African continent will be exposed to deadly toys, produced at even lower standards than those shipped to the US. Thousands of children will die, with no one questioning the cause of these deaths. Benefiting from Chinese humanitarian largesse, Liberian and African governments are far from asking questions about the millions of junk toys that litter the sidewalks and markets. African governments, including Liberia, seem not understand that “development” is foremost taking care of the small needs of the people and protecting them rather than being ‘seen and appreciated” by the fictive ‘international community”.

The issue of the protection of Liberian lives and interests from that writer brings us to another issue that we have raised here many a times: the role of Libya Colonel Muammar Gaddafi in the wars in Liberia and Sierra Leone which lead to the death of hundred of thousands of people in the two countries and the destruction of basic infrastructure in both countries. It will take an entire generation to heal the wounds afflicted on the two countries by the psychopathic and terrorist policies of Colonel Gaddafi, who now enjoys flowers from Paris and walks with total impunity.

As a red carpet is laid for him in Paris where he will sign contracts worth billions of dollars, the dictator of Tripoli must be reminded and made to pay for his crimes against humanity for the wars in Liberia and Sierra Leone. His policies killed more people in the two countries than Pinochet - who was temporarily arrested in England - did in Chili in the 1970s.Warlords Charles Taylor of Liberia and Foday Sankoh of Sierra Leone met while they underwent training at the Mataba base in Libya. They had assembled dissidents from their countries and Gaddafi provided them with funding, training and arms to attack their countries.

Charles Taylor and his Libyan-trained and Burkina supported henchmen burned Liberia to the ground, killed hundreds of thousands of people, raped young men and women before turning them into gun totting drugged zombies. In Sierra Leone, Foday Sankoh and his men killed, raped and maimed tens of thousands.

Today, Charles Taylor is awaiting trial for crimes against humanity for his role in the war in Sierra Leone. His lieutenant, Foday Sankoh died years ago in the cells of the UN Special Tribunal in Sierra Leone while awaiting trial. However, their chief patron, the man who provided training, funding and ammunitions is setting up a nomadic tent in a Paris hotel, signing billions of dollars worth of contracts for airplanes, military hardware and other things that will provide jobs for French factory workers and pump more oil out of the desert sand of Libya.

Gaddafi is working his way into the comity of world leaders without ever having to answer for the crimes he committed against the African people. He softened the Bush administration by dismantling his junky nuclear arsenal. However, he will sign a contract with France to buy the same nuclear power he discarded a few years ago to appease the Americans. He paid ten million dollars for each of the victims of the Lockerbie air tragedy where his terrorist agents rained death and destruction on innocent people. He paid billions of dollars for the French UTA flight that was blown up in the African desert. With oil and contracts, he is buying his way into the palaces of the West. In Africa, he continues to intimidate and bribe. He has provided himself with a flying carpet that could soon get him on the doorsteps of the White House.

Gaddafi’s psychopathic and terrorist approach to politics has evolved but the underlying pursuit remains the same as those that propelled an angry and megalomaniac young man to power in 1969. He now speaks slower, moved less but he is still the same man that armed and financed terrorist movements across the world.

After Liberians elected Charles Taylor to the presidency in the first postwar elections in 1997, the first national budget contained about $20 million as payment to Libya for its logistic support to the war. It was the most cynical political move in a country that only had a budget of $80 million. Taylor was ousted in 2003, went into exile in Nigeria through an internationally brokered peace plan before landing in a prison cell in The Hague awaiting trial for crimes against humanity in Sierra Leone.

Since her election in 2005, Liberian President Ellen Johnson Sirleaf made at least three trips to Libya and held long discussions with Gaddafi, seeking help for the reconstruction of her country. During their last meeting, the Libyan dictator all but accused her of betrayal for allowing Taylor to face justice. Gaddafi seems to have forgotten Liberia and its 300, 000 dead as well as Sierra Leone and its dead, raped and maimed thousands of people. Notwithstanding all his rhetoric on African dignity, Gaddafi has yet to show an inclination to take responsibility for the death and destruction he caused around the continent.

Liberians must not expect the West or the UN to put Gaddafi on trial for his political crimes. They must take steps to bring him to face justice. Taylor condemnation and trial by the international community would be meaningless if those who trained him, armed him and supported his terrorist enterprise are left to walk free and parade as world leaders. Beyond Kaddafi, there are others, in Burkina Faso where Blaise Compaoré never made a secret of his support for Taylor, in Côte d’Ivoire and in Liberia who need to answer for these crimes. Hopefully, the trial of Charles Taylor will bring out the truth and embolden both Liberians and the international community to bring to justice those who organized and financed the wars in Liberia and Sierra Leone.

Libya, in terms of reparation for the hundreds of thousands of deaths and infrastructure destruction in Liberia, has offered nothing but a few bags of rice and an electric generator. No one seems to want to ask Libya to pay for its role in the deadly wars in Liberia and Sierra Leone and the massive infrastructure destruction that threw both countries into the 19th century.

As Gaddafi buys his way into the hearts of the Europeans and Americans with the power of his oil contracts, Liberians and other Africans must never forget his destabilizing role throughout the continent. They must not forget nor forgive his terrorist attacks and wars on millions of peaceful people, from Liberia to Chad to Sierra Leone and to the Central African Republic.

Just like Taylor, Gaddafi must answer for his crimes against humanity in Liberia and in Sierra Leone. Is an African life worth fighting for?

http://www.liberiaitech.com/theperspective/2007/1212200701.html
 
he was NOT a nice man.

his people didn't like him very much unless they were the slice of the population he liked and gave jobs to.
 
Excellent article on the megalomania of Ghaddafi.

Gaddafi’s Blood-Soaked Hands



By Massimo Calabresi
Source: Time SwampPland

It was not long after he received a secret warning from the Italian government in April 1986 and narrowly escaped being blown to bits by American bombers that Muammar Gaddafi declared his intention to become Emperor of Africa. What followed as the increasingly erratic Gaddafi pursued his megalomaniacal dream was one of the most obscene and violent episodes in recent African history.

Drawing recruits from his terrorism camps, Gaddafi trained, armed and dispatched thugs like Charles Taylor and Foday Sankoh to take power in West African countries, initiating the brutal slaughter of innocents in Liberia and Sierra Leone, says David M. Crane, the founding prosecutor of the Special Court for Sierra Leone. “This was a long-term criminal conspiracy,” says Crane, who is now a professor at Syracuse University, and “[Gaddafi] was the center point.”

For those who don’t remember, here’s a quick summary of the atrocities that took place in the war in Sierra Leone in the 1990s. In pursuit of diamonds, timber and gold, Sankoh, backed by Taylor, backed by Gaddafi, invaded Sierra Leone and instituted a campaign of terror, cutting off the arms and other body parts of civilians to frighten the country into compliance. Rape was a widespread weapon of war, and according to reporting by one human rights organization, Sankoh’s troops played a game where they would bet on the sex of a baby being carried by a pregnant captive, then cut the fetus out of the woman to determine its gender.

Sankoh died in custody after the war ended; Taylor is currently being tried by the Special Court for Sierra Leone. Gaddafi is named in Taylor’s indictment, and Taylor has testified to Gaddafi’s involvement. Crane says he found evidence that when Sankoh invaded Sierra Leone, “Libyan special forces were there helping train and assist them tactically and there were Libyan arms in that invasion: he had been involved from the get go.”

Tuesday afternoon, the U.N. Security Council issued a statement suggesting Gaddafi might be called to task for the current bloodshed in Libya, which has reportedly included unprovoked and lethal assaults by foreign African mercenaries against innocent protesters. “The members of the Security Council stressed the importance of accountability,” the statement said, “They underscored the need to hold to account those responsible for attacks, including by forces under their control, on civilians.”

Anyone holding Gaddafi to account will have a long ledger to work from. It was Gaddafi, after all, who ordered the attack on the West Berlin disco that killed two U.S. servicemen and prompted the 1986 U.S. bombing known as operation El Dorado Canyon. Gaddafi was behind the bombing of Pan Am 103, which killed 270 people over Lockerbie, Scotland in 1988. And until he gave them up after the U.S. attack on Iraq in 2003, Gaddafi was pursuing nuclear and chemical weapons.

What would it mean for U.S. interests if Gaddafi were to be put on trial for any of the atrocities he’s been responsible for over his four decades in power? On the surface, Gaddafi’s fall should not pose the kind of threat to U.S. strategic interests that a disorderly transition in Egypt or Bahrain might. Egypt’s relationship with Israel and its military cooperation with Washington are as important to the U.S. as the presence in Bahrain of the Navy’s 5[SUP]th[/SUP] fleet. But Gaddafi’s sponsorship of the brutality in West Africa shows how Libya’s vast oil wealth can allow it to project instability well beyond its borders in ways that can also threaten the U.S.

Another thug could replace Gaddafi. Italian Foreign Minister Franco Frattini said Monday, “Would you imagine to have an Islamic Arab Emirate at the borders of Europe? This would be a very serious threat.” U.S. officials are unconvinced the threat is as bad as Frattini says, and they note that Gaddafi himself has been peddling the danger. “We’ve heard [Gaddafi] say that there are caliphates being formed in Libya,” says a senior administration official. “There are very valid concerns about Al Qaeda in the Maghreb, but the fact that a bunch of people have taken territory in the east [of Libya] does not a caliphate make.”

The greater danger may be of Gaddafi staying. “In the recent past [he] has been better behaved,” says a senior administration official, “But go back 20 years or so and he was a significant sponsor of terrorist acts who had a nuclear program. So a major concern is does the regime retrench in ways that affect our interests in the region? Even before this happened he was complaining that his gesture in giving up nukes had not been reciprocated with the kind of love he expected. If he somehow survives this he’ll have no interest in improving relations with the west.”

http://focusonliberia.wordpress.com/2011/08/29/gaddafi’s-blood-soaked-hands/
 
Last edited:
:0) The warmonger is at it again .. desperate to show that Obama's destruction of Libya was the wise thing to do. So desperate, they reach for lies and propaganda to support their warmongering leader. :0)

NEWSFLASH: Libya is in complete chaos, torn apart by murder, assassination, kidnapping, and rule by terrorists. The Libyan people have lost virtually everything .. that is those who are still alive.

Libya has become the headquarters for Al Qaeda and are spreading their terror throughout the region.

Go back to sleep warmonger .. continue to ignore the truth ..

Al Qaeda Terrorist Threat Is Growing

Al Qaeda affiliates in Libya are moving into the power vacuum left by the ouster of the regime of Muammar Gadhafi. The main al Qaeda affiliate there is Ansar al Sharia, blamed for the Sept. 11, 2012, attack against the U.S. diplomatic compound in Benghazi that killed four Americans, including Ambassador to Libya Chris Stevens.

France’s government recently said Paris has become increasingly alarmed about al Qaeda activities in Libya and is considering a deployment of troops near Libya for counterterrorism operations.

French President Francois Hollande said in a speech last month that Libya-based jihadists represent the main security threat to North Africa and also to Europe. He told a reporter May 23 that the terrorist threat in Mali “began in Libya and is returning to Libya.”

The concerns are based on recent intelligence reports that al Qaeda and other jihadists groups have new training camps in the southern Libyan desert.
http://freebeacon.com/al-qaeda-terrorist-threat-is-growing/
 
:0) The warmonger is at it again .. desperate to show that Obama's destruction of Libya was the wise thing to do. So desperate, they reach for lies and propaganda to support their warmongering leader. :0)

NEWSFLASH: Libya is in complete chaos, torn apart by murder, assassination, kidnapping, and rule by terrorists. The Libyan people have lost virtually everything .. that is those who are still alive.

Libya has become the headquarters for Al Qaeda and are spreading their terror throughout the region.

Go back to sleep warmonger .. continue to ignore the truth ..

Al Qaeda Terrorist Threat Is Growing

Al Qaeda affiliates in Libya are moving into the power vacuum left by the ouster of the regime of Muammar Gadhafi. The main al Qaeda affiliate there is Ansar al Sharia, blamed for the Sept. 11, 2012, attack against the U.S. diplomatic compound in Benghazi that killed four Americans, including Ambassador to Libya Chris Stevens.

France’s government recently said Paris has become increasingly alarmed about al Qaeda activities in Libya and is considering a deployment of troops near Libya for counterterrorism operations.

French President Francois Hollande said in a speech last month that Libya-based jihadists represent the main security threat to North Africa and also to Europe. He told a reporter May 23 that the terrorist threat in Mali “began in Libya and is returning to Libya.”

The concerns are based on recent intelligence reports that al Qaeda and other jihadists groups have new training camps in the southern Libyan desert.
http://freebeacon.com/al-qaeda-terrorist-threat-is-growing/

It must be really easy for someone like you from the cynical left to gloss over Ghaddafi's megalomania and his direct involvement in the killing of 1.2 million people in Liberia and Sierra Leone.
 
It must be really easy for someone like you from the cynical left to gloss over Ghaddafi's megalomania and his direct involvement in the killing of 1.2 million people in Liberia and Sierra Leone.

You can piss and moan all you want to warmonger.

The bottom line is the US and NATO destroyed Libya for profit .. and Libya is now mired in turmoil with Al Qaeda ,, the NATO hero of 'freedom' .. now well established in Libya .. and because of it, few believe that the US should be allowed to do the same thing to the Syrian people.

Thanks warmonger
 
You can piss and moan all you want to warmonger.

The bottom line is the US and NATO destroyed Libya for profit .. and Libya is now mired in turmoil with Al Qaeda ,, the NATO hero of 'freedom' .. now well established in Libya .. and because of it, few believe that the US should be allowed to do the same thing to the Syrian people.

Thanks warmonger

It apparently is very easy for you to ignore the suffering that Ghaddafi caused in Liberia and Sierra Leone. I am truly sorry for you that you think the deaths of 1.2 million Africans is just "pissing and moaning". Apparently when Ghaddafi was heavily involved in genocide of black Africans that is acceptable to you and your warped political dogma. Well at least we got that out in the open for all to see the true extent of your hero worship.
 
It apparently is very easy for you to ignore the suffering that Ghaddafi caused in Liberia and Sierra Leone. I am truly sorry for you that you think the deaths of 1.2 million Africans is just "pissing and moaning". Apparently when Ghaddafi was heavily involved in genocide of black Africans that is acceptable to you and your warped political dogma. Well at least we got that out in the open for all to see the true extent of your hero worship.

Excuse me Mr Warmongering Colonialist White Man, but Africans celebrated Gaddafi, and you do not speak for Africans, you do not speak for black people.

Africa: Why Africa Should Mourn Gaddafi's Fall

According to the United Nations Human Development Index and the Africa Development Bank country profile, Libya under Gaddafi rule was rated the best place to live in Africa.

The criteria employed by UN when measuring this index is life expectancy, availability to health and educational services, poverty index and access to other basics of life. These achievement was not based on oil revenue - other countries like Nigeria and Gabon rank better in this regard - but sheer work of Libyan leaders. For example, Libya has the biggest man-made river in the world, established in 1984 to irrigate the entire country and which supports 70 per cent of the country's population.

But now the sovereign government of Libya has been overthrown in a blatant Western armed, sponsored and supported coup by the striking arm of the new imperialism - Nato. Six months ago, the French and British governments sponsored a UN resolution to "protect the civilians of Libya from its own government."

Never mind that this sovereign government was facing an armed revolt by a dissident region of the country; never mind that these "rebels" had no legitimacy whatsoever; never mind that the so-called "democratic protesters" were responsible for the deaths of hundreds of black Africans in xenophobic racist pogroms in the year 2000.

None of this mattered. What mattered was that the turmoil of the so-called "Arab Spring" presented the West with an opportunity to get rid of a political thorn in its side, one that was leading Africa dangerously close to realising autonomy.

Gaddafi has consistently sought to involve his country in unity with, first the Arabs and then the Africans. When Gaddafi proposed pan-Arab unity, he was scoffed at, ridiculed as an ambitious madman and insulted by the Arabs. He finally and sensibly gave up and turned his eyes to Africa, believing that Africa held out more hope for unity.

While under sanctions by the West, the Africans unswervingly supported Gaddafi. Nelson Mandela upon his release from apartheid's prisons defied Western sanctions and went overland to visit and thank Colonel Gaddafi for his moral and financial support during the long struggle against apartheid. Other African leaders followed and regular visits with Gaddafi made the sanctions totally irrelevant.

At his encouragement Africa bought its own satellites and now the continent communicates without relying on Europe. African leaders should have denounced with one voice the aggression cravenly acquiesced with the Nato war.

What happens in Libya is a harbinger of what the West has in store for Africa. Africa is too rich in resources that the world needs to be allowed to control its own destiny. This war is not just about Gaddafi. It is an opening salvo in a war to reclaim the continent for foreign interests, just as it was in 1896 in the Scramble for Africa.

The AU could have called for the expulsion of diplomats from the Nato countries taking part in the war, they could have urged their citizens into the streets to demonstrate for "hands off Libya." The oil-producing countries could have slowed down their oil taps! What will happen after Gaddafi is overthrown?

Foreign economic interests will come in to carve up the pie, instability will take root as in Iraq under the guise of multi-party democracy, the West will set up permanent military bases to control the Mediterranean Sea and a bridgehead for the re-conquest of Africa will have been established.
http://allafrica.com/stories/201109190069.html

Gaddafi's death no celebration for Africa
http://www.globaltimes.cn/NEWS/tabid/99/ID/680842/Gaddafis-death-no-celebration-for-Africa.aspx

Many in Sub-Saharan Africa Mourn Qaddafi’s Death
http://www.nytimes.com/2011/10/23/w...saharan-africa-mourn-qaddafis-death.html?_r=0
 
Excuse me Mr Warmongering Colonialist White Man, but Africans celebrated Gaddafi, and you do not speak for Africans, you do not speak for black people.

It is truly embarrassing the lengths you will go to avoid facing the fact that Ghaddaffi was a megalomaniac who cause the deaths of 1.2 million people. Any amount of bluster and ad homs will not remove that elephant from the room. Your talk of colonialism is especially ironic considering that Ghaddafi was intent on creating a new empire in Africa.

http://www.africaundisguised.com/ne...or-inside-story-how-gaddafi-tried-rule-africa
 
Last edited:
Excuse me Mr Warmongering Colonialist White Man, but Africans celebrated Gaddafi, and you do not speak for Africans, you do not speak for black people.

[/QUOTE]

It is truly embarrassing the lengths you will go to avoid facing the fact that Ghaddaffi was a megalomaniac who cause the deaths of 1.2 million people. Any amount of bluster and ad homs will not remove that elephant from the room.

Kiss my ass ... Mr Warmongering Colonialist White Man who doesn't give a fuck about black people.

Nelson Mandela upon his release from apartheid's prisons defied Western sanctions and went overland to visit and thank Colonel Gaddafi for his moral and financial support during the long struggle against apartheid. Other African leaders followed and regular visits with Gaddafi made the sanctions totally irrelevant.

I know, fuck Mandela and what black Africans think. Only B'wana White Man know what's best.

Kiss my ass.
 
:0) The warmonger is at it again .. desperate to show that Obama's destruction of Libya was the wise thing to do. So desperate, they reach for lies and propaganda to support their warmongering leader. :0)

NEWSFLASH: Libya is in complete chaos, torn apart by murder, assassination, kidnapping, and rule by terrorists. The Libyan people have lost virtually everything .. that is those who are still alive.

Libya has become the headquarters for Al Qaeda and are spreading their terror throughout the region.

Go back to sleep warmonger .. continue to ignore the truth ..

Al Qaeda Terrorist Threat Is Growing

Al Qaeda affiliates in Libya are moving into the power vacuum left by the ouster of the regime of Muammar Gadhafi. The main al Qaeda affiliate there is Ansar al Sharia, blamed for the Sept. 11, 2012, attack against the U.S. diplomatic compound in Benghazi that killed four Americans, including Ambassador to Libya Chris Stevens.

France’s government recently said Paris has become increasingly alarmed about al Qaeda activities in Libya and is considering a deployment of troops near Libya for counterterrorism operations.

French President Francois Hollande said in a speech last month that Libya-based jihadists represent the main security threat to North Africa and also to Europe. He told a reporter May 23 that the terrorist threat in Mali “began in Libya and is returning to Libya.”

The concerns are based on recent intelligence reports that al Qaeda and other jihadists groups have new training camps in the southern Libyan desert.
http://freebeacon.com/al-qaeda-terr...bilities-covert-CIA-trained-cells-of-fighters
 
Kiss my ass ... Mr Warmongering Colonialist White Man who doesn't give a fuck about black people.

Nelson Mandela upon his release from apartheid's prisons defied Western sanctions and went overland to visit and thank Colonel Gaddafi for his moral and financial support during the long struggle against apartheid. Other African leaders followed and regular visits with Gaddafi made the sanctions totally irrelevant.

I know, fuck Mandela and what black Africans think. Only B'wana White Man know what's best.

Kiss my ass.

Did Nelson Mandela thank him for causing the deaths of 1.2 million Africans in Liberia and Sierra Leone?
 
I remember back during the Cold War, Jerry Falwell making a speech about the realities of our choices in halting the spread of communism. He pointed out that many critics were correct in complaining that often the sides the USA backed were lead by skunks, as bad as the Soviet-backed skunks.

He went on to say that when choosing between two skunks, you pick the skunk that is spraying the other guy. You don't pick a skunk who's going to spray you.

At the time of Qaddafi's toppling, he was a skunk spraying the other guy.

Now we have a skunk that is spraying us.

Not really much more complicated than that.
 
Gaddafi's fall may have caused chaos in the Sahara, but Africa is still bette...

Kiss my ass ... Mr Warmongering Colonialist White Man who doesn't give a fuck about black people.

Nelson Mandela upon his release from apartheid's prisons defied Western sanctions and went overland to visit and thank Colonel Gaddafi for his moral and financial support during the long struggle against apartheid. Other African leaders followed and regular visits with Gaddafi made the sanctions totally irrelevant.

I know, fuck Mandela and what black Africans think. Only B'wana White Man know what's best.

Kiss my ass.

And Mandela knows best?
 
Back
Top