by Sami Moubayed
DAMASCUS - Colonel Muammar                                Gaddafi was new to the scene when he marched into                                the Arab summit in Cairo in September 1970,                                exactly one year after he had staged a successful                                coup in Libya, at the young age of 27, ousting his                                predecessor, the ailing King Idriss, aged 80.                           
Dressed in military uniform with a                                revolver strapped around his belt, the flamboyant                                young man wanted to come across as an "Arab Che                                Guevara". The Arabs assembled in Egypt were busily                                trying to hammer out a solution to a bloody                                showdown in Amman between King Hussein and the                                Palestinians, known as Black September.                           
Gaddafi, a protege of Egyptian president                                Gamal Abdul Nasser who was ostensibly committed                                to Arab nationalism, was furious with Hussein. In                                words that seem strangely appropriate today,                                Gaddafi barked, "We are faced with a madman like                                Hussein who wants to kill his own people. We must                                send someone to seize him, handcuff him, stop him                                from doing what he is doing, and take him off to a                                mental asylum!"
King Faisal of Saudi                                Arabia, a wise old man, gently said, "I don't                                think you should call an Arab king a madman who                                should be taken to an asylum." Gaddafi snapped                                back: "But he is mad! All his family is mad! It's                                a matter of record!" Gaddafi was making reference                                to Hussein's father King Talal who abdicated in                                1951 because he was mentally unfit to rule Jordan.                           
The wise Faisal remarked: "Well, perhaps                                all of us are mad." Nasser intervened, "Sometimes                                when you see what is going on in the Arab world,                                your majesty, I think this may be so. I suggest we                                appoint a psychiatrist to examine us regularly and                                find one which ones are crazy."
Days                                later, Nasser was dead - but apparently Gaddafi                                dodged the mental check-ups. Had a psychiatrist                                examined him in 1970, he probably would have                                declared him mentally unfit to rule Libya. Young                                and still very insecure, Gaddafi resorted to                                outrageous behavior and loud publicity stunts,                                probably to cover for his tremendous internal                                weakness and complexities, especially when                                compared to older, wiser and better established                                Arab leaders.
He lacked the charm of                                Nasser, the nationalistic credentials of Tunisia's                                Habib Bourgeiba, the brains of Syria's Hafez                                al-Assad, or the wisdom of Saudi Arabia's King                                Faisal. Eager to prove himself equal to all the                                rest, he entered an ill-fated union with Egypt and                                Syria in 1972, which never saw light, followed by                                another failed attempt at union with Tunisia in                                1974, which quickly turned into animosity.                           
When both attempts failed, Gaddafi took                                off his military uniform and began to dress in                                outrageous Peacock colors, certain that if his                                policies failed to attract world media, then his                                colorful costumes, and assortment of 40 women                                bodyguards (ostensibly all virgins) certainly                                would.
He then opened his country to every                                resistance movement across the planet, provided it                                was seriously involved "in fighting Western                                imperialism". In 1975, he authored his ridiculous                                philosophical work, The Green Book, copying                                from Nasser's own book, The Philosophy of                                Revolution and the works of other                                revolutionaries like Mao Zedong's Little Red                                Book. Chairman Mao's book came out over the                                years 1964-1976, while Gaddafi's was released in                                three volumes between 1975 and 1979.
When                                it was clear that his people were not going to                                take The Green Book seriously, seeing it as                                a compilation of rubbish, he imposed the book on                                schools, universities, bookstores, TV, radio, and                                every foreign visitor coming to see him in                                Tripoli, translating it into several languages. He                                did not stop there, taking up green as the                                official color of Libya.
Gaddafi then                                decided to "adopt" the Palestinian cause, lavishly                                dishing out money to then-Palestinian leader                                Yasser Arafat. When Arafat refused to track down                                and assassinate Gaddafi's opponents outside of                                Libya, Gaddafi immediately turned against him,                                expelling the Palestinians from Libya, closing                                down their offices, and halting his subsidies.                           
Another forced exodus of 30,000 followed                                in 1995, and he threatened to extradite "up to one                                million" Palestinians, regardless of what their                                fate would be, to punish Arafat for signing Oslo                                with the Israelis. The fact that he was                                persecuting the Palestinians - the sacred cow of                                Arab nationalism - did not really matter to                                Gaddafi; and nor did the fact that he was                                repeating what King Hussein had done to them in                                1970. He continued to insist that his welfare                                state was committed, in rank-and-file, to the                                Palestinians.
For the past 41 years,                                Gaddafi has tried to fill the oversized shoes of                                Nasser, who died one year after the Libyan colonel                                came to power. He saw Anwar al-Sadat's 1979 peace                                with Israel as a god-sent opportunity to become                                godfather of Arab nationalism, but was outsmarted                                by Syria's Assad, who picked up the mantle after                                Nasser.
Realizing that the Arab                                neighborhood was not his cup of tea, he began                                supporting liberation movements and rebels in West                                Africa, notably Sierra Leone and Liberia,                                declaring that Libya was more African than it was                                Arab. In the 1980s, Gaddafi graced the world stage                                as a firm opponent of US president Ronald Reagan,                                who personally dubbed him the "mad dog of the                                Middle East".
By March 1982, the US had                                declared a ban on import of Libyan oil, and the                                export of US technology to Libya. In April 1986,                                the US intercepted messages from the Libyan                                Embassy in East Berlin suggesting Libyan                                involvement in bombing of La Belle, a now famous                                Berlin discotheque.
Reagan ordered a                                massive bombing of Libyan cities in response,                                which led to the killing of hundreds of civilians,                                including Gaddafi's adopted daughter Hanna.                                Gaddafi fired two Scud missiles at the US Coast                                Guard stationed next to an Italian island, both of                                which landed in the sea, with no casualties.                           
His relations with Britain also suffered                                when a British policewoman was shot outside the                                Libyan Embassy in London while monitoring                                anti-Gaddafi demonstrations. As a result,                                Gaddafi's relations with London were suspended for                                an entire decade, and restored after Tony Blair                                visited him in Tripoli in 2004.
Probably                                Gaddafi's most infamous act was the Lockerbie                                Bombing of 1988, bringing down Pan Am Flight 103                                over Scotland, killing 270 innocent passengers.                                International sanctions were imposed over Libya                                throughout the 1990s, and were only lifted when                                Gaddafi decided to come clean, shortly after the                                toppling of his friend and comrade, Saddam                                Hussein.
In August, 2003 Gaddafi wrote to                                the United Nations formally accepting                                responsibility for Lockerbie, paying compensation                                of up to US$2.7 billion for the families of                                victims. World leaders flocked to Libya in reward,                                with French President Nicolas Sarkozy paying him a                                visit in July 2007, followed by Italian Prime                                Minister Silvio Berlusconi in August 2008, and UN                                secretary of state Condoleezza Rice in September.                           
For four decades, ordinary Arabs dealt                                with Gaddafi as a sad reality that they just had                                to live with - given that they could not change.                                Gaddafi has worked with four Saudi kings, three                                Syrian and three Egyptian presidents, and five                                Arab League secretary generals. He has survived                                eight US presidents, several of whom served for                                two terms, and five French ones.
He would                                often gloat that he is the "king of kings in North                                Africa" and "dean of Arab kings and presidents".                                Arab leaders were never too fond of him, because                                of his eccentric behavior, humoring him early into                                his regime, because he was a protege of Nasser.                           
Gaddafi learned, at the young age of 27,                                that he could do just about anything he pleased in                                the Arab world - and get away with it. Nothing                                stuck to Gaddafi, no scandal from eccentric                                behavior, no guilt because of bloodshed, and                                embarrassment because of poor leadership.                           
That all explains why the "king of kings"                                did not even blink when mowing down protesters in                                Benghazi and Tripoli over the past week, whipping                                up a death toll of nearly 300 Libyan citizens. He                                hired African tribes to kill his own countrymen,                                fired at the unarmed demonstrators from airplanes,                                contaminated the waters of Benghazi, and cut off                                fuel to prevent opponents from commuting between                                Libyan cities. It was Gaddafi being Gaddafi, right                                until the apparent end.
The outrageous                                Gaddafi, who likes to be called "Brother Muammar",                                has made it clear, through his son Seif al-Islam,                                that he will not step down, because if he does,                                "Western imperialism" will return to Libya. He                                will fight until the last man, and woman, and                                insists on staying in power until curtain fall.                           
Seif al-Islam's speech was one ripped                                right out of his father's dictionary, reeking of                                violence, brute force, and dictatorship. Probably                                learning from the Tunisia and Egypt scenarios, he                                will refuse to flee like Tunisia's Zine el-Abidine                                Ben Ali or resign like Egypt's Hosni Mubarak.                           
"Big Brother Muammar" will either be                                toppled when and if the angry Libyan street storms                                his palaces in Tripoli, or if he is arrested by a                                military coup. Suicide perhaps, would be easier                                for him, than surrender.
Original URL:http: //www.atimes.com/atimes/Middle_East/MB23Ak02.html
Sami Moubayed  is editor-in-chief of Forward                                Magazine in Syria.
Copyright - Original materials copyright (c) by the authors. 
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