AL-QADHDHAFI INTERVIEWED ON MIDEAST, TERRORISM

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CIA-RDP05-01559R000400420009-0
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K
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4
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December 22, 2016
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March 12, 2012
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9
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Publication Date: 
February 11, 1987
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Declassified and Approved For Release 2012/03/12 :CIA-RDP05-015598000400420009-0 NORTH AFRICA Q 1 AI-Qadhdhafi Interviewed on Mideast, Terrorism LD/201 S9 London !TV Television Network ]n English 2030 GMT 11 Feb 87 [Report on interview with Mu`ammar al-Qadhdhafi by cor- respondent Eamonn McCann on the "Diverse Reports" program, presented by Editor Philip Clarke; interview conducted in Libya, date not given -recorded; Al-Qadhdhafi speaks in Arabic with English subtitles providing the translation, except where noted that translation is provided by translator's voice] [Text] [Clarke] Just under a year ago.the Americana bombed Libya: Some of their planes took off from Britain. The action was widely condemned. But the raid did silence Colonel al- Qadhdhafifor awhile. But he's now keen to return to the world's stage. Our reporter, Eamonn McCann, has just ceme back from Libya, where he talked to Al-Qadhdhafi at some IenQth in the colonel's first major political interview for some time. Eamonn is a wmmitted socialist, and perhaps more sympathetic to'Libya than most Western journalists. Much of the discussion about Libya tends to be in slogans and gives a picture of the country that Libyans themselves hardly recognize. So Eamonn's report is an attempt to see Libya and events in the Middle East from their point, of view. [McCann] The sleeping capital erupted into aground-to-air battle, tracer fire arching skywards. [video shows tracer bullets streaking- into night sky, followed by scenes of destruction in Tripoli] [Tripoli resident (`Ali Bessiuni), identified by caption] It was uncivilized act, in fact, and I feel it was a barbarian act against the innocent people. [McCann] More than 50 people were killed'in Tripoli and Ban- ghazi as American bombs blasted residential areas. Col al- 'Qadhdhafi's home was among those hit; his.family among~the victims of the raid. ' [AI-Qadhdhafi] Thatcher is a'murderer, malevolent to such an extent that she allowed Britain to be used as a base by America, the most powerful country in the world, knowing that those planes were destined to destroy my house and kill my children. Of course one feels very hurt, wounded; and frustrated, because on one 'hand it's a flagrant igjustice and .on the other it's an expression of Western hatred towards Libya. Not just because it's Libya, but because their hatred extends to the whole Arab and Islamic world. ' [McCann] The intention was, apparently, to kill Al-Qadhdhafi, or to create conditions in Libya in which he might be overthrown. Al-Qadhdhafi survived: As an effort to destabilize Libya, the attack failed. Support for AI-Qadhdhafi and his revolution seems unshaken. Libya is commonly regarded in the West as the terrorist state, with its leader, Col al?Qadhdhafi, as a madman. But from the point of view of the Libyan people, this is a grotesque distortion of the truth. When you understand Libyan history, generations of struggle against foreign domination, which ended leas than 20 years ago, then perhaps you can begin to understand the way they see themselves, and see the rest of the world. Libya was under foreign oceupation for centuries; it was a province of the Ottoman Empire until 1911. Then the Italians came. [Al-Qadhdhafi] We have. suffered repeatedly at the hands of Europe. In fact we were colonized by the Italians in 1911 before the fascists and Mussolini took power. They colonized and attacked us unexpectedly, killed our people, destroyed our nation and set up places. for people to be hanged. They abducted thousands of men and women and took them to Italy. To this day we have bcen asking the Italians to tell us what happened to those thousands of Libyans -they were innocent people. [McCann].Italian rule, during which at least 100,000 Libyans were killed, ended with the victory of the 8th Army in the desert campaign. Libya was devastated in the battles between the two European armies. [A1-Qadhdhafi] Who triggered the First World War and the Second World War? Who spread war in Africa, Asia, and Latin America? Was it the Africans who started two world wars? Were they Asians? Or people from Latin America? No, it was them! [McCann] The land was left littered with the debris of someone else's war. In 1951, Libya became formally independent, after the?great powers failed to agree on [word indistinct]. Determined to maintain some control, the British installed and then patron- ized the corrupt King Idris. Libya?wae among the poorest countries of the world. Average income was S35 per year. Masses of people lived in rag tents in the desert, or in alum shantytowns. But in fact beneath the desert there lay an ocean of oil, which Western companies were quick to exploit. A rising generation resented foreign ownership of ?I.ibya's new riches; and that feeling, expressed in an upsurge of armed nationalism, carried a group of young army officers to power in 1969. The takeover was bloodless: It was organized by this man, Mu`ammar al-Qadhdhafi. [(Bessiuni)] There was no Libya here before the revolution. There were, of course -the Americans maintained the main base here which they called Wheeler, and they used it against the Arab population in most parts of the Arab world. And in Benghazi, of course, it was a British garrison there, with British troops. And in Sabha, in the north, it was the French there - it was occupied by French. The imperialists, they use their puppets in this country against their natives. But after the revolution everything was changed. [McCann] Every aspect of life in Libya today is touched both by the legacy of colonial rule and by the revolutions's promise of a new and more equal society, in which, for the first time, Libyans could have power in Libya. [Al-Qadhdhafi] Generally speaking, the revolutionary plan is proceeding successfully. But certainly we are still suffering from what remains of the European domination of our people and their attempts to make us lose our self-confidence. We have been used Declassified and Approved For Release 2012/03/12 :CIA-RDP05-015598000400420009-0 Declassified and Approved For Release 2012/03/12 :CIA-RDP05-015598000400420009-0 ? to being ruled by invaders from Europe generation after genera- tion.Our people had no experience of independence except under the revolution. [McCann] The most immediate effect of the revolution on the lives of Libyans was a massive improvement in the standard of living. Al-Qadhdhafi himself personally supervised the clearing away of the slums. The country has undergone a massive transformation. Under law, the state must now provide every family with a home. The health and education systems are free and available to all. More than half of Libya's 4 million people are now at school, college, or university. Agricultural production has increased, boosted by an officially sponsored back-to-the- land movement, and by the biggest irrigation scheme ever under- taken anywhere. This kind of prosperity is a new experience for Libyans, as is the form of democracy introduced a decade ago. Every person in Libya is a member of a Basic People's Congress. This isn't democracy on the Western model, but its the first experience of self-rule Libyans have known -and for them it works. The thinking of Col al-Qadhdhafi is enormously influen- tial, but some of Al-Qadhdhafi's proposals, to do with education and women's rights, have been rejected. Despite this, Libyan women feel that they have made significant advances. [Unidentified female in Arabic, with translation provided via captions] As Libyan women, we are in a much better position than other Arab women, particularly when it comes to arguments and debates, as it clearly shown by our role in people's congresses where we take part and express our views freely. [McCann] Many of these ideas are threatening to more conser- vative Arab regimes, content to hold AI-Qadhdhafi at arms length. But its his radical anticolonialism which has made him a threatening figure to the West. The revolution of 1969 was motivated not only by the Libyans' desire to assert sovereignty at last over their own territory, but reflected, too, a belief that the Arabs are a single nation, divided and dominated for centur- ies by colonial powers. Libyans see the existence of the State of Israel, on what to them is Arab land, as a last intolerable example of the colonial presence, and thus the struggle against Israel as the key to ultimate Arab liberation. Under this context, they see the United States as the agent of the State of Israel. [AI-Qadhdhafl] Unfortunately, a new crusader-like spirit has emerged in the West which is anti-semitic, and of course we the Arabs are semites. Witness the unlimited support given to Israel in order to annihilate Arabs and destroy the Arab nation as a whole, enabling them without any protest or reservation to build nuclear bombs. Doesn't this show malice and bad intentions against the Arab? [Unidentified voice] This means, then, there is spite against the Arabs and that they should be destroyed. [AI-Qadhdhafi] Isn't that the theme of Western policy? [McCann] Al-Qadhdhafl hasn't always been so hostile to the West. Although the regime's first target were the British and American bases established during the Second World War, he negotiated their peaceful removal. It was a popular move. Rela- tions with the West remained reasonably friendly because Al- Qadhdhafi's nationalism was also hostile to Soviet influence. Al-Qadhdhafi sought unity with Egypt as a first step toward a single Arab nation, which might have the strength to win back a homeland for the Palestinians. Through the seventies, this spirit of Arab self-assertion, which he epitomized, was to bring Libya increasingly into conflict with the West. Libya was in the van- guard of the OPEC move, which quadrupled oil prices in 1973 and jolted the economies of the West. Next, Al-Qadhdhafl vigorously opposed the American-sponsored Camp David agreement, which detached Egypt from the Arab consensus on the question of Israel. The agreement was presented in the West as a major step toward an honorable peace; in the Arab world it was seen as nothing of the sort. [Al-Qadhdhafi] Politically there have been a number of setbscks in the Arab world. One of them was the recognition by Egypt of the occupation of Palestine, their recognition of international Zionism, and their acceptance of the status quo. But I don't believe Egypt did these things because she was convinced, but rather because she was defeated in the 1973 war with Israel. [The preceding sentence, audible in Arabic, differs from ITV's English subtitle translation as follows:- But I believe Egypt did these things because it was defeated in war, not because it was con- vinced that Palestine should remain under Zionist occupation.] [McCann] Politically, Al-Qadhdhafi had become a thorn in the side of the West. The first moves toward sanctions against Libya were made by the United States in 1979. Increasingly, Al- Qadhdhafl saw America as an implacable enemy of Libyan and Arab interests. (Al-Qadhdhafi] The invaders have not allowed the Libyan people to live in peace. We have not been left alone to build up our country. Hence, we feel bitter. [McCann] Do you believe that the United States has any legiti- mate interests at all in this region? [Al-Qadhdhafi, superimposed by voice of translator] None what- soever. [McCann) It was that view which, more than anything else, has made Al-Qadhdhafl a focus for fierce American hostility. Elected in 1980, Ronald Reagan reflected an American desire to reassert itself in the world. In Libyan eyes, American power was being deployed to ensure the continuing humiliation of Arabs, even at the expense of some other Western interests. [AI-Qadhdhafi] Europe is known to be somewhat wise and rational but America is known to be childish, crazy, and irratio- nal. The mentality of the cowboy and the criminal dominates U.S. policy. [McCann] In August 1981, U.S. fighters shot down Libyan planes in a clash over the Gulf of Sidra. The pretext was that America had a duty to assert the right of free passage for shipping in the gulf. No effort had been made to establish this right in international law. Libyans argued that the gulf was not a strate- gic waterway, like Panama or Suez -that it leads to nowhere but Libya. What's more, the American position appeared both arrogant and hypocritical. Declassified and Approved For Release 2012/03/12 :CIA-RDP05-015598000400420009-0 Declassified and Approved For Release 2012/03/12 :CIA-RDP05-015598000400420009-0 ? [Al-Qadhdhafi] It's a matter of sovereigty; it's not a question of whether it's useful or not. But the Gulf of Sidra is of great significance to Libya. It's an integral part of our territorial waters and historically Libya always exercised authority over it. Even those who colonized Libya, including the Americans, extended their domination over the Gulf of Sidra as part of their dom- ination over Libya as a whole. The same with Britain after the Second World War. The Gulf of Sidra is vital for Libya. It separates the two halves of the country. We cannot allow military maneuvers. If you're talking about commercial vessels or tourism -ships coming to Libyan ports - we welcome this. [McCann] In March 1986, the Americans attacked again, sink- ing Libyan patrol boats and bombing radar stations. At least 20 Libyans died. These attacks, as well as American support for the Israeli assault on Lebanon, had an inevitable effect on Libya's general orientation to world politics. [AI-Qadhdhafi, superimposed by voice of translator] Because America has a global strategy and we are the victim of this strategy; they want to encircle and contain, in the end, the Soviet Union, and this containment is taking place through us. That's why we and the Soviet Union find outselves facing a common enemy. An enemy is approaching the Soviet Union, but we find ourselves that we are the victim number one, using us as a springboard toward the Soviet Union, the ultimate end. [McCann] It is American imperialism, then, which has compelled Libya and the Soviet Union to come closer together? [AI-Qadhdhafi, superimposed by voice of translator] They serve the Russian-Libyan relations a great deal. [McCann) To Libyans, all this looks very much like aggressive determination to reassert military domination over the Arab world, to turn the clock back. Meanwhile, we in the West have been told a very different story: Almost every major terrorist incident in Europe in the eighties has been attributed in much of the Western media to the malign activity of Libya and Al- Qadhdhafi. What Libya has done is to support movements around the world seen as struggling against the old colonial powers. They openly proclaim their support for the Palestinians, as do most Arab countries. [(BessiuniD You call the fighters, the Palestinian fighters, when they are fighting for their freedom, you call them terrorists, but we call them a fighter, to free their nation; you can see in Lebanon how they feel; we feel very sorry about that, but all the West - notonly America, but all the West -they're always on one side, on Israel's. They're always persuaded by Israel; and they always support the Israeli's point of view. [McCann] But when you look for specific examples of what the Libyans are persistently charged with -the instigation of international terrorism -they are hard to find. Amnesty Inter- national estimates that there have been 19 victims of Libyan terrorism, all but 4 Libyan dissidents. Libya sees itself as being at war with anti-Al-Qadhdhafi groups. Such groups have assas- sinated a Libyan ambassador, and staged coup attempts. Libya does pursue the dissidents abroad. It was during the demonstration by the National Front for the Savlation of Libya that woman police constable Yvonne Fletcher was shot dead. Despite Libyan denials, all the evidence is that the bullet which killed her came from Libyans inside at the embassy. It seems equally certain that WPC Fletcher was not the intended target. [Al-Qadhdhafi] Though we are prepared to fight, it's not in our nature to kill innocent people. That policewoman could never have been a target for us. She was a security officer concerned with order and security and she didn't deserve to be killed. [McCann] Through 1985, pressure in the United States mounted for action against Libya, as they were blamed for a aeries of dramatic terrorist attacks. These included the hijacking of a TWA airliner, and of the Achille Lauro; and the massacres at Rome and Vienna airports. No evidence has ever been produced linking Libya directly to these attacks. But it was another incident in April, last year, which produced the most unequivocal allegations against Libya. Far from proving Libyan guilt, the evidence which has emerged points toward Syria. But Syria is large and powerful. America used the Berlin bombing as a pretext for the raid on Libya. (video shows President Reagan giving nationwide address on the bombing of Libya, saying that it was conducted in such a way as to minimize casualties among the Libyan people] That's not the way they see it. In the conflict between Libya and the United States, the Libyans have been responsible for far fewer deaths than America. In broader perspective, their involvement in violent activity beyond their own borders is insig- nificant when compared with America's. Given their history, including their very recent history, Libyans have good reasons to regard themselves as the victims, rather than the villains, of international terrorism. Their perception of the West, and of what the West has done to them, has inevitably produced a fervor which could have very serious consequences. [Al-Qadhdhafi] All these hostile acts against the Arab people are charging us up like a bomb which will one day explode, destroying British, American, and Zionist interests. We are now targetted by the United States, the most powerful state in the world. Yesterday it was America and Britain; today it is America and France. It is an historic period for us -both heroic and tragic. This will produce a generation that will retaliate. So, if a retaliatory generation emerges from this land it will have been created by them. )ANA Editor on `Threats' From U.S. Administration LD111916 Tripoli Domestic Service In Arabic 1230 GMT 11 Feb 87 [Text] The Israeli Shultz, the secretary of state of Israel's rabid dog, Reagan, bas, with great insolence, pounced upon Arabs and described the Lebanese Arab people as animals and [words indistinct]. Shultz has threatened to use military force against Declassified and Approved For Release 2012/03/12 :CIA-RDP05-015598000400420009-0 Declassified and Approved For Release 2012/03/12 :CIA-RDP05-015598000400420009-0 ? ~ ? V. 12 Feb 87 Q 4 NORTH AFRICA the Lebanese Arab people, using the hostages problem as a pretext. He added, in statement which he made in Washington the day before yesterday, we are on the point of carrying out some sort of action in this respect and there are various means to do so [words indistinct]. William Cmwe, chairman of Joint?Chiefa of Staff, also bragged about the use of force against Lebanon and added that the 6th Fleet, which has been joined by striking aircraft carriers in the Mediterranean, near Lebanon, is ready to carry out Reagan's orders and we are able to carry out a number of actions (words indistinct]. JANA's Arab affairs editor commented on the Israeli Shultz's bragging about military force, conspiracies, and insults [word indistinct] with which he is now describing the Arabs and using the hostages issue in Lebanon and asserted: This is not new and will not be the last in the (?chain) of acts of terrorism, threats, and impudent conspiracies which the United States is, day in and day out, (?hatching) against the Arab nation by taking advantage of the current worsening Arab situation. Washington and its rabid dogs have given the green light to their priority of hitting the forces of revolution and liberation wherever they may be and at any time, particularly in the Arab homeland. The editor added: The Israeli Shultz has found in the heroic Lebanese Arab people -who have exposed the United States and com- pelledits fleets and forces to flee like rats from this small nation, leaving behind more than 400 American corpses - a breathing space to vomit'his dirtiest insults against the Lebanese which is also a reaction of the U.S. politicians' deep rancor against an ancient nation whose main task is the liberation of its teritoriea and to live peacefully and freely. The editor pointed out that the United States rancor against the Arabs began with the onset of the Egyptian revolution of 23 July 19521ed by the late leader `Abd al-Nash and reached its peak following the eruption of the great al-Fatih revolution in 1969, which [words indistinct] unity as well as supporting all free men and strugglers anywhere in the world against U.S. colonialist hegemony. JANA's Arab affairs editor added that with the arrival of athird-rate actor, who is a maniac for force in the U.S. Presidency, this U.S. enmity has become flagrant and overt toward whatever is Arab, because Mu`ammar al-Qadhdhafi is an Arab and because the Arab masses as well as nationalist and unionist forces of this Arab nation have?been saturated with,his principles and aspirations for unity and freedom from all sorts of exploitation, hegemony, and slavery. Thus, U.S. enmity to Arabs culminated in the abortive 'U.S.-NATO wanton aggression against the great Jamahiriyah on the 15th of last April, the main target of which was the brother leader of the revolution. This has been in addition to the provocative campaigns, economic encir- clement, and expulsion of Libyan Arab students from the U.S. universities. The editor concluded his comment: The cheap and insolent threats of the key figures of the imperialist U.S. Administration, who have become exposed and naked following the many con- secutivescandals, whose main character consists of lies, cheating, and deception, will ~t stop as long as the current Arab situation continues to deteriorate and as long as there are those who are .[words indistinct] friends of the United States and those who have recognized the Zionists in occupied Palestine and normalized their relations with them. JANA Condemns Equating 1 `Zionist' to 400 Arabs. , . LD111503 Tripoli JANA in English /419 GMT. 11 Feb 87 [Text],Tripoli, Al Nowar I1, Jamahiriyah News Agency World news agencies indicated that contacts were going on for arrangements to release a Zionist pilot in return for 400, Arab prisoners in occupied Palestine... The editor of Arab affairs in JANA commented on this issue. He said the least one can describe this cheap deal is to say .that it is a disgraceful and contemptuous to any Arab to equalise one Zionist to 400 Arabs. It would have been better if the equation was put rightly. and within its appropriate framework: One Arab equals 400 elements from any other nationalities.. . The editor added that it would have been better, faced with this situation, to have left those 400 prisoners in detention or die rather than for this humiliation, of which any Arab per'son's forehead would sweat, occurs. [sentence as received] The editor of Arab affairs pointed out that the mere suggestion of such degradmg exchange constitutes a humiliation to the dignity of the Arab individual, for is there any humiliation stronger than a destitute Zionist' becoming equal to 400 Arabs and exchanging him for them. The editor concluded his commentary by saying that Arab feelings are hurt before these reports and proposals which repre-. sent a state of .submissivness, fear and surrounder. The. Arab nation is the best nation sent'to mankind and the Arab individual by all historical, ethical and civilised standards equals thousands of peoples fiom any other nationalities. JANA Editor on Mitterrand Remarks.on Chad LDlll S28 Tripoli JANA in English 1437 CMT 11 Feb 87 [Text] Paris, Al Nowar 11, Jamahlriyah News Agency -The French newspaper Le Matin published a statement by French President Francois Mitterrand in which he said that the~era of colonialism was over and that France was not seeking to impose colony for it in Chad. The editor of African affairs commented on the statement of the French president.. The editor pointed out "it is a strange logic indeed for this statement to be made by head of a state whose forces are still deployed, since the colonial era until today,. on territories of countries from which if is separated by: [word indistinct] oceans and continents and under whose colonial rule people 'are .still suffering throughout world continents from Guadeloupe to, the Martinique through the Islands of Reunion and New Caledonia besides military .bases which carried a French flag in the heart of mole than? one African country and amongst them some surrounding Chad and represent the funda- mental support in backing the mutinous clique of agent Habre in Ndjamena.". The editor wondered: "If Mitterrand did not find it shameful in denying the colonial face of his policy then what world this military presence of his coutry be called. And what would the continuous arrival of French forces and use of Chadian lands Declassified and Approved For Release 2012/03/12 :CIA-RDP05-015598000400420009-0