Why NATO Destroyed Libya Ten Years Ago
Global
Research, April 12, 2021
Region: Middle East & North Africa
Theme: History, Media Disinformation, US NATO War Agenda
In-depth Report: NATO'S WAR ON LIBYA
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Ten years ago, on
March 19, 2011, US/NATO forces began their bombardment of Libya by air and by
sea. The war was initiated directly by the United States, first through Africa
Command (AFRICOM), and then through NATO under US command. Over the course of seven
months, US/NATO airplanes carried out 30,000 missions, including 10,000 strikes
involving over 40,000 bombs and missiles. Italy – with the consensus of its
multi-party Parliament (with the Democratic Party-Pd in the front row) – played
a part in the war, providing seven air bases (Trapani, Gioia del Colle,
Sigonella, Decimomannu, Aviano, Amendola and Pantelleria), fighter-bombers
Tornado, Eurofighter and other warplanes, and the Garibaldi aircraft carrier
and other warships. Even before the air-naval offensive, tribal and Islamist
groups hostile to the government had already been financed and armed, and
special forces were infiltrated, especially by Qatar, in order to spread armed
conflict within the country.
And that’s how an African country which, as documented
by the World Bank in 2010, maintained “high levels of economic growth”, where
GDP rose 7.5% a year, which demonstrated “high human development indicators”
such as universal access to primary and secondary education and a 40%
university attendance rate, came to be destroyed.
Taking disparities into account, the average standard
of living in Libya was higher than in other African countries. About two
million immigrants, mostly African, found work there. The Libyan state, which
possessed the largest oil reserves in Africa, in addition to natural gas, ceded
limited profit margins to foreign companies. Thanks to energy exports, the
Libyan balance of trade was in the black to the tune of $27 billion USD per
year.
Those resources enabled Libya to make about $150
million USD in foreign investments. Libyan investments in Africa were decisive
in the African Union’s creation of three financial organizations: the African
Monetary Fund, headquartered in Yaoundé, Cameroon; the African Central Bank,
based in Abuja, Nigeria; and the African Investment Bank, headquartered in
Tripoli. The mission of these organizations was to create a common market and
common currency in Africa.
It’s no coincidence that the NATO war to destroy the
Libyan state was initiated barely two months after the rise of the African
Union, which, on January 31, 2011, led to the creation that year of the African
Monetary Fund. This is proven by emails written by the Obama Administration’s
Secretary of State, Hillary Clinton, later released by WikiLeaks, showing how
the United States and France wanted to eliminate Qaddafi before he used Libya’s
gold reserves to create a pan-African currency as a an alternative to the
dollar and the CFA franc, the currency France imposed on 14 former colonies.
It’s also proven by the fact that the banks were
released even before the bombers in 2011, ceasing $150 million USD of Libya’s
foreign investments, most of which have disappeared. Goldman Sachs, the most
powerful investment bank in the United States, whose vice president was Mario
Draghi, played a leading role in the looting.
In Libya today, energy export revenues are hoarded by
power groups and multinationals amidst the chaos of armed conflicts. The
standard of living for most of the population has been decimated. African
immigrants, accused of being “Qaddafi’s mercenaries,” have been imprisoned in
zoo cages, tortured and killed. Libya has become the main transit route for
human traffickers in a chaotic wave of migration towards Europe that has taken
the lives of more victims that the 2011 war. In Tawergha, the NATO-supported
Islamist militias of Misurata, who assassinated Qaddafi in October 2011, have
truly carried out an ethnic cleansing, forcing around 50,000 Libyan citizens to
flee with no hope of returning.
Also responsible for all of this is the Italian
parliament, which on March 18, 2011 committed the Italian government to “adopt
any and all initiatives (including the entrance of Italy into the war against
Libya) to ensure the protection of the region’s populations.”
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This article was originally published in
Italian on Il Manifesto. Translated by Danica Jorden.
Manlio Dinucci is
a Research Associate of the Centre for Research on Globalization.
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