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Placing the
Libya Breakthrough in Perspective
W. Andrew
Terrill
Colonel Muammar Qaddafi’s decision to open Libyan
weapons of mass destruction sites to international
inspection is a welcome development in establishing a
region-wide non-proliferation norm. Yet, President
Bush’s recent statements suggesting that this
development is due to the invasion of
Iraq
must be placed in a broader perspective. The
Administration claim of victory on this matter overlooks
the reality that Qaddafi made his decision as the result
of a long process involving the policies of three
earlier U.S.
presidents, Ronald Reagan, George H. W. Bush and Bill
Clinton.
The process of taming Libya began with President
Reagan’s April 1986 bombing of Tripoli in retaliation
for the bombing of a Berlin disco. In this attack, the
Libyan defenders performed pathetically, mostly firing
their anti-aircraft weapons after the air raid was
over. Later, in 1987, Libya was militarily defeated by
Chad (yes, Chad) in series of battles that highlighted
the absolute incompetence of the Libyan military. Libyan
capabilities have only deteriorated since that time, and
with its conventional military a joke, the Libyans
sought chemical weapons and other WMD to protect them
and deter future attacks.
Unfortunately for Qaddafi, the centerpiece of his WMD
effort, the Rabta chemical plant, was quickly detected
by the United
States. In the
face of almost certain bombing, the Libyans staged a
phony fire there in March 1990 and closed the plant
down. Libya’s WMD programs remained in place after the
Rabta fire but with little prospect for the development
of a serious military capability. Significant WMD
progress appeared unlikely due to Libya’s lack of a
strong technological base and the ongoing effectiveness
of United Nations’ sanctions supported by the watchful
eye of the U.S. intelligence community. As the danger
of U.S.-Libya confrontation continued, the rest of the
Arab World looked on with little sympathy for the
embarrassing Libyan eccentric. Moreover rumors of coup
attempts became standard fare, and Libyan citizens,
likewise, appeared fed up with their leader’s foreign
adventures.
By the early 1990s, Colonel Qaddafi was under crippling
sanctions, facing domestic unhappiness and unable to
defend his regime from possible Western military
strikes. Facing this reality, the Colonel turned to the
only real option that he had left, diplomacy. In his
own bizarre way, he began seeking reconciliation with
the post-Reagan U.S. presidents. Qaddafi referred to
the Bush Sr. administration as “experienced and wise”
and called Bill Clinton “a man of peace” elected by
“blacks, [American] Indians, and the minorities.” He
ended ties with terrorists sometime in the early 1990s
and eventually turned over two Libyan intelligence
agents to international justice for their involvement in
the 1988 attack on the PAM AM 103 Flight. In public
speeches, the Colonel asserted that the struggle against
imperialism was over because the “satanic” days of
Ronald Reagan and Margaret Thatcher had ended. As his
oil-rich country descended into prolonged
sanctions-induced poverty and isolation, he was ready to
surrender.
Reagan, Bush Sr., and Clinton thus prepared the way for
an important win by the current administration. Also
important was the vigilance of the
U.S.
intelligence community which eventually led Qaddafi to
believe that his WMD program could only starve for a
lack of useful technological imports. When the current
administration rolled him up, Qaddafi was not the same
fire-breathing radical he was in 1969 when he came to
power. Rather, he was a broken failure with few other
options. Special gratitude is therefore owed to the
administrations of Ronald Reagan, George H. W. Bush, and
Bill Clinton for maintaining the process that led to
this event. The appreciation of the
U.S. should also be
directed at the present administration for agreeing to a
new start, brokering Qaddafi’s surrender, and reaping
the intelligence gains that will clearly follow such
actions. Nevertheless, due to the actions of his
predecessors, President Bush would probably have been
able to do this in absence of an Iraqi invasion.
W. Andrew Terrill,
Ph.D. is a research professor and the Middle East
specialist at the Strategic Studies Institute of the
U.S. Army War College. The views expressed here are
those of the author and do not necessarily reflect the
policy or position of the Army, DOD or the U.S.
government.
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