[Peace-discuss] West sets out plans for massive invasion of Libya

David Johnson davidjohnson1451 at comcast.net
Tue Jan 5 09:29:51 EST 2016


Monday, January 4, 2016

West sets out plans for massive invasion of Libya 

 

 
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Libyan women raise red cards during a protest against the national unity
government proposed by United Nations envoy Bernardino Leon on October 9,
2015 in Tripoli's central Martyrs Square.


by Stephen Morgan


If you think back to 2011, we were all told that the sole aim of NATO's
bombing campaign in Libya was to help establish democracy by helping rebels
bring down Gadaffi. If anyone was taken in by this propaganda, then the
following news should clarify the real aims of the West in Libya. 

 

It has been reported that British special forces will spearhead a 6,000
strong army of European and US troops to invade Libya in the coming months.
The goal will be to take control of Libya's oil fields and defend them from
attack by ISIS fighters. At the present moment, ISIS are conducting an
attack to take control of the oil ports of Siddra and Ras Lanouf, as well as
Brega, which is home to the biggest oil refinery in North Africa. 

 

Quite clearly, the capitalists in the West are furious that their
opportunities to profit from Libya's large oil reserves could be taken away
from them. Hopes that the NATO intervention would stabilize the country and
provide the basis for Western companies to make rich pickings have been
dashed. 

 

Oil production and Western profits have already been severely disrupted,
since post-Gadaffi Libya disintegrated into waring militia groups. However,
for the West to have intervened before now, would have been blatantly
motivated by profits alone. Now fighting ISIS has given them the  perfect
opportunity to dress up their real aims and interests.

 

The West has been eying the opportunity to take control of Libya's oil
production ever since the civil war began in 2011. Before Gadaffi fell,
Libyan oil was supplying 14% of Europe's oil fields. In particular, it
supplied 22% of Italian oil, 16% of French and 13% of Spanish. The French
and British also had long-term energy interests in exploitation rights and
other investments in the country. In the oil sector, France's Total, British
Petroleum and Royal Dutch Shell, as well as Italy's ENI were making
substantial investments in what were potentially the richest reserves of oil
and gas in Africa. 

 

But under Gadaffi, the oil industry was controlled by the state, effectively
cutting off the possibilities for Western companies to make huge profits.
Therefore, removing Gadaffi was the key to unlocking the door to unhampered
exploitation of Libya's natural resources.

 

The US had less direct interests in Libya than other Western countries, and
that was the main reason it handed over the responsibility for intervention
in the civil war to NATO – principally its two largest military powers,
France and Britain. Ever since then, a smaller version of the Sykes-Picot
Agreement – by which France and Britain divided up the Middle East into
spheres of interest at the end of the 1st World War – has been secretly
agreed by the two powers, whereby Libya comes under the control of Britain,
and France maintains its dompination in the Mahgreb and West Africa.

 

France has interests in neighboring Niger, which are threatened by a further
de-stabilization of Libya and the growth of ISIS. There is a massive porous
and ungovernable border between the two countries which allows extremists to
spread through the region. There are rich natural resources to be exploited,
including potential oil fields, in both Niger and neighboring Mali, which
France invaded in 2013. French mining firms Areva and Vinci control the
uranium mines around Arlit in Niger, and it has an estimated that Mali has
5,200 tonnes of untapped uranium sources to tapped.

 

Of course, this is not to say that there aren't political aims behind the
invasion as well, but they tend to overlap with the underlying economic
concerns. Increasing production from Libya would not only be a valuable
source of profits, but it could also reduce European reliance on Russian
oil, in the event of a disruption to supplies caused by increasing tensions
between Europe and Russia. 

 

Were Libya and its oil to fall entirely into the hands of ISIS, or even a
large part of it, this would enormously strengthen ISIS internationally; The
oil fields would be a handsome addition to its funding, which already makes
it the richest terrorist group in history.

 

It was also give ISIS a firmer base to expand into the region and threaten
French and British interests elsewhere. ISIS would be in a far better
position to increase its activities in Egypt, Tunisia, Algeria and Morocco,
and, indeed, they could destabilize the whole of Northern Africa. 

 

Southern Libya borders on the Sahel region, of which Niger and Mali are
part, and which stretches from the west to the east coast of Africa. It
encompasses regions of Senegal, Mauritania, Burkina Faso, northern Nigeria,
Chad, Sudan, and Eritrea. Its deserts and mountains have provided perfect
bases for extremist groups, and the virtual impossibility of policing its
borders has the potential to allow jihadist organization to link up across
the whole of North Africa, from the Al-Shabaab in Somalia and Sudan, to
Al-Qaeda in Islamic Maghreb (AQIM) and Boko Haram in Nigeria.

 

As always, Western Imperialism will dig its own grave if it intervenes
further. Libya is another failed state, which is unlikely to achieve any
lasting political and economic stability. In fact, it could disappear
altogether. In this context, even if the oil fields are protected from ISIS,
and it is forced into retreat, the conditions will continue to exist for it
to rebuild, as it did in Iraq. 

 

The Western invasion force is destined to become another army of occupation.
Its very presence will be an enormous recruiting sergeant for ISIS. Given
the cooperation of many of the other Libyan militias with the West, ISIS
will be in a situation where it can put itself forward as the true fighters
against Western Imperialism. Defeating the Western invaders will become a
cause célèbre of jihadists everywhere and, like Syria, it will attract tens
of thousands of more foreign volunteers willing to go and fight there for
ISIS. 

 

Libyan women raise red cards during a protest against the national unity
government proposed by United Nations envoy Bernardino Leon on October 9,
2015 in Tripoli's central Martyrs Square.

 

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