On Thisday January 15 in 1970 Muammar al-Qaddafi, the young Libyan army captain is proclaimed premier of Libya by the
so-called General People’s Congress.
Born in a tent in the Libyan desert, Qaddafi was the son of a Bedouin
farmer. He attended university and the Libyan military academy and
steadily rose in the ranks of the Libyan army. An ardent Arab
nationalist, he plotted with a group of fellow officers to overthrow the
Libyan monarchy, which they accomplished on September 1, 1969.
Blending Islamic orthodoxy, revolutionary socialism, and Arab
nationalism, Qaddafi established a fervently anti-Western dictatorship.
In 1970, he removed U.S. and British military bases and expelled Italian
and Jewish Libyans. In 1973, he nationalized foreign-owned oil fields.
He reinstated traditional Islamic laws, such as prohibition of alcoholic
beverages and gambling, but liberated women and launched social
programs that improved the standard of living in Libya. As part of his
stated ambition to unite the Arab world, he sought closer relations with
his Arab neighbors, especially Egypt. However, when Egypt and then
other Arab nations began a peace process with Israel, Libya was
increasingly isolated.
Qaddafi’s government financed a wide variety of terrorist groups
worldwide, from Palestinian guerrillas and Philippine Muslim rebels to
the Irish Republican Army. During the 1980s, the West blamed him for
numerous terrorist attacks in Europe, and in April 1986 U.S. war planes
bombed Tripoli in retaliation for a bombing of a West German dance hall.
Qaddafi was reportedly injured and his infant daughter killed in the
U.S. attack.
In the late 1990s, Qaddafi sought to lead Libya out of its long
international isolation by turning over to the West two suspects wanted
for the 1988 explosion of an airliner over Lockerbie, Scotland. In
response, Europe lifted sanctions against Libya. After years of
rejection in the Arab world, Qaddafi also sought to forge stronger
relations with non-Islamic African nations such as South Africa,
remodeling himself as an elder African statesman.
Qaddafi surprised many around the world when he became one of the
first Muslim heads of state to denounce al-Qaida after the attacks of
September 11, 2001. The next year, he offered a public apology for the
Lockerbie bombing, later agreeing to pay nearly $3 billion in
compensation to the victims’ families. In 2003, he gained favor with the
administration of George W. Bush when he announced the existence of a
program to build weapons of mass destruction in Libya and that he would
allow an international agency to inspect and dismantle them. Though some
in the U.S. government pointed to this as a direct and positive
consequence of the ongoing war in Iraq, others pointed out that Qaddafi
had essentially been making the same offer since 1999, but had been
ignored. In 2004, U.K. Prime Minister Tony Blair visited Libya, one of
the first western heads of state to do so in recent memory; he praised
Libya during the visit as a strong ally in the international war on
terror.
In February 2011, as unrest spread through much of the Arab world,
massive political protests against the Qaddafi regime sparked a civil
war between revolutionaries and loyalists. In March, an international
coalition began conducting airstrikes against Qaddafi strongholds under
the auspices of a U.N. Security Council resolution. On October 20,
Libya’s interim government announced that Qaddafi had died after being
captured near his hometown of Sirte.
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