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	<title>Libyan Revolt | Void Network</title>
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		<title>The Libyan People&#8217;s Committees should be the foundation of a new life, not just an interim measure</title>
		<link>https://voidnetwork.gr/2011/03/22/the-libyan-peoples-committees-should-be-the-foundation-of-a-new-life-not-just-an-interim-measure/</link>
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		<pubDate>Tue, 22 Mar 2011 16:15:00 +0000</pubDate>
				<category><![CDATA[Global movement]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Insurrection]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Libyan Revolt]]></category>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">https://voidnetwork.gr/2011/03/22/the-libyan-peoples-committees-should-be-the-foundation-of-a-new-life-not-just-an-interim-measure/</guid>

					<description><![CDATA[<p>The struggle of the Libyan people, as part of the wave of popular rebellions spreading like fire in all of the Arab world, is taking a really dramatic turn, with the people advancing their struggle against a regime bent on staying in power by whatever means necessary. Gadaffi, in spite of his past as a thorn in the side of the US, had became a key ally in their War on Terror, as was proved by the late and clumsy reaction of the US to the events unfolding in Libya and the late suspension by the EU of their considerable</p>
<p>The post <a href="https://voidnetwork.gr/2011/03/22/the-libyan-peoples-committees-should-be-the-foundation-of-a-new-life-not-just-an-interim-measure/">The Libyan People&#8217;s Committees should be the foundation of a new life, not just an interim measure</a> appeared first on <a href="https://voidnetwork.gr">Void Network</a>.</p>
]]></description>
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<p></p>
<blockquote style="font-family: Verdana,sans-serif;"><p><span style="font-family: Arial,Helvetica,sans-serif; font-size: small;">The struggle of the Libyan people, as part of the wave of  popular rebellions spreading like fire in all of the Arab world, is  taking a really dramatic turn, with the people advancing their struggle  against a regime bent on staying in power by whatever means necessary.</span></p>
<div style="font-family: Arial,Helvetica,sans-serif;"><span style="font-size: small;">Gadaffi, in spite of his past as a thorn in the side of the US, had  became a key ally in their War on Terror, as was proved by the late and  clumsy reaction of the US to the events unfolding in Libya and the late  suspension by the EU of their considerable trade in weapons with the  Libyan regime. While the US and the Western powers re-discover, for  public image purposes, that they really did not like Gadaffi after all  (after a decade of friendly relations), talks have started about a  possible intervention and US carriers have moved into waters close to  the Libyan shores. The result of such a prospect would be terrible to  say the least. In the meantime, the US and their Western allied are  exploring the way to make sure that the revolt of the Libyan and the  Arab masses does not settle down in revolutionary terms, as well as  making sure that their economic and strategic interests are served in  the best possible way in the post-Gadaffi scenario.</span></div>
<div style="font-family: Arial,Helvetica,sans-serif;"><span style="font-size: small;">To  understand better what is going on there, we held another dialogue on  February 27th with our friend and comrade, the Syrian anarchist Mazen  Kamalmaz, who works on the revolutionary blog <a href="http://www.ahewar.org/m.asp?i=1385" title="http://www.ahewar.org/m.asp?i=1385">http://www.ahewar.org/m.asp?i=1385</a></span></div>
<p><span style="font-size: small;"><b>José Antonio Gutiérrez D.<br />March 3rd, 2011</b></span></p></blockquote>
<div style="font-family: Verdana,sans-serif;"><span style="font-size: small;"><br /><b><span style="color: #fff2cc;">What is actually happening in Libya and the rest of the Arab world?</span><br /></b><br />It is a revolution . After 42 years of being governed by the Qaddafi  regime, the masses took out to the streets. The bad thing here is that  because of the brutal repression of the regime, the revolution was  successful only in the eastern part, which also consists of different  tribes from the western and middle parts of Libya. Soon the forces of  the regime overcame the surprise factor and put down the revolt in  Tripoli, the capital, and the rest of Libya by extreme and brutal force.  The masses tried to go out again last Friday, which was really a day of  outraged protests in a lot of Arab countries and cities, but they  couldn&#8217;t overcome the forces of the regime. Now there is a status quo  between the two powers, that of the people and that of the regime,  although both are trying to gather momentum again. </span> <span style="font-size: small;"></p>
<p>Beside Libya, Yemen is on fire for weeks now. In this country there are  lots of tribes and sectarian minorities, beside the conflict between the  governing north and the marginalized south that demands autonomy.  University and High school students could manage, with their full  devotion for freedom for all and their willingness to sacrifice for that  cause, to gather all of the factions of the nation around the objective  of removing the dictatorship there. </span> <span style="font-size: small;"></p>
<p>Last Friday was very hot also in Iraq, where thousands of Iraqi youth,  from both Sunni and Shiia&#8217; background -that were on the verge of civil  war few years back-, took to the streets protesting against the corrupt  pro–American government. Policemen used the same repressive measures as  happened elsewhere, which caused the death of some of the protesters. </span> <span style="font-size: small;"></p>
<p>The Sultanate of Oman just joined the rest of revolting countries now,  the youth there took to the street chanting, as everywhere else, for  jobs, more freedom and decent life conditions.</span> <span style="font-size: small;"><br /><b><br /><span style="color: #fff2cc;">Many still see Gadaffi as a socialist and an anti-imperialist&#8230; is this true?</span><br /></b><br />This is a very misleading and deluded statement, created by the  authoritarian left before and still alive now. And this is due, partly,  to the revival of this authoritarian left by figures like Chávez. </span>  <span style="font-size: small;"></p>
<p>We have to keep in mind that Qaddafi&#8217;s regime relations with the main  Western powers improved significantly after 2003 and after the Libyan  dictator gave up his nuclear programme, the then US secretary Condolezza  Rice declared steps as a model of restoring normal relations between US  and the Third World states, including those labelled as rogue by the  US. This paved the way for Berlusconi, Blair and Sarkozy to visit Libya,  to sign multi &#8211; billion contracts, including arms trade, with Western  companies. This led Qaddafi to attend a G8 summit where he met Obama.  Like Ben Ali and Mubarak, the big capitalist powers simply ignored human  rights violations of the Qaddafi regime against his own people. Even  when Qaddafi was declaring himself an anti &#8211; imperialist, long ago, it  was just a lip service while he engaged, as an authoritarian, in trivial  terrorist acts that never meant to support the libertarian objectives  of the victims of imperialism. </span> <span style="font-size: small;"></p>
<p>We have to differentiate between being anti–American, anti–capitalist  and being a real socialist, as there are lot of anti–Americans who are  as authoritarian and repressive as the system of global corporate  fascism or the pro–American regimes. Here we have to keep Stalinism in  mind. Qaddafi himself came to power when Arab nationalism was on its  peak, that was anti–imperialist in rhetoric only, while it led Arab  countries from one defeat to another in all its confrontations against  imperialism and its most important local agent, Israel. The last one was  in 2003 in Iraq. After the June 1967 defeat of Egypt, Syria and Jordan  by Israel, many leftists came to the conclusion that the regimes&#8217;  repression and its exploitative nature were responsible for that defeat.  Next year, the Egyptian youth and students started their demonstrations  against the Nasser regime, which had libertarian character. The fact is  that Egypt under Nasser, Iraq under Saddam and Syria under Assad, all  were mere examples of bureaucratic state capitalism, namely, regimes  that repress and exploit their own people.</span> <span style="font-size: small;"><br /><b><br style="color: #fff2cc;" /><span style="color: #fff2cc;"> What has been the role of the US and of the EU in this crisis? It is  known that Gadaffi has been in very good terms with them for the last  while&#8230;</span><br /></b><br />In the Cold War both repressive superpowers, the US and the USSR,  practiced a double play: they were repressing people in their dominant  sphere and “supporting” the peoples&#8217; struggle for freedom in the sphere  dominated by the opponent. Thus, the Soviet Union supported the  Vietnamese people struggle against American intervention and the Cuban  revolution, as well as other rebellions in South America and places  which were under US packed dictatorships. On the other hand, the US and  the capitalist bloc supported the wave of revolts in Eastern Europe,  etc. This double game is still played until now. The US is ready and  wiling to support such rebellions in Iran for example, but never, never  in Saudi Arabia for example. In Iraq, the Bush administration helped  Saddam to regain power in Iraq after his defeat in the first Gulf War  1991, while he was facing a massive popular revolution and only a small  part of Iraq was under his power. They wanted to overthrow him when it  looked easier, and when doing so did not compromise its regional  dominance. </span>  <span style="font-size: small;"></p>
<p>But things are happening all the time, sometimes against the will of the  US, as it happened in Egypt and Tunisia. Despite all of its best  efforts to maintain Ben Ali and Mubarak in power, the masses there  created a new reality, and the US is trying to adapt to it. In Libya it  looks somewhat different. The US is now like a predator, as Qaddafi&#8217;  regime looks very weak and so much hated by his own people, and above  all, because the Libyan territory is full of oil, it looks a very easy  and big target. Besides that, this can help the main supporter of  dictatorships in our region, the US, to look like a freedom fighter  liberating a helpless nation from its bloody dictator, one they regarded  until recently as a new friend. The bad thing about being a predator is  that it cannot resist easy targets, despite all past and painful  experiences. One very important thing about this possible US plan is  that no one in Libya today, nor the revolting masses, nor even the  Libyan opposition that resides in the West, accepts any foreign military  intervention. </span> <span style="font-size: small;"></p>
<p>Of course, this would be a blow for the whole struggle of the Libyan  nation, not only it would damage its independent fight for its freedom,  but it would also threaten its future. The Libyans are near to overthrow  the regime and regain possession of their oil and their life, I don&#8217;t  think they, at least most of them, are ready to sacrifice what they  gained up to now for the sake of an easy victory that isn&#8217;t their  victory.</span> <span style="font-size: small;"><br /><b><br style="color: #fff2cc;" /><span style="color: #fff2cc;"> What’s the nature of the civilian-military government declared today in Benghazi?</span><br /></b><br />Still there are no clear State institutions as such in the liberated  areas. There are some trying to install their elite leadership, but  until this very moment, not successfully yet.</span>  <span style="font-size: small;"></p>
<p>Just recently, American and pro-American Arab press started talking  about an interim council in Benghazi headed by an ex-minister of  Qaddafi’s cabinet, just to highlight their welcoming position of a  possible US intervention. Aside for this so called interim council, no  other force or group in the liberated areas accepts or calls for such an  intervention.</span> <span style="font-size: small;"><br /><b><br /><span style="color: #fff2cc;">What’s the role of the Libyan People’s Committees? Are the masses creating their own means for direct democracy?</span><br style="color: #fff2cc;" /> </b><br />In fact, these committees became part of every revolution everywhere in  the Arab world. I accept that these are good examples of direct  democracy, the whole liberated areas are run in this way now, as was the  situation after the fall of Ben Ali regime in Tunisia and after Mubarak  ordered his security forces to pave the way for thugs to practice  looting everywhere to intimidate the revolting masses. What is needed  now is to make this a way of life, not just an interim measure: this  must be our message to the masses.</span>  <span style="font-size: small;"><br /><b><br /><span style="color: #fff2cc;">Flags of the monarchy had been raised&#8230; Do you see the spectre of a comeback of the old regime of Idris?</span><br /></b><br />To tell the truth, anything can happen. I think that the revolting  Libyans themselves don&#8217;t have clear idea about who will and how to run  their country after they manage to overthrow Qaddafi. They have to learn  their way. What I feel is that this is difficult to happen, that they  will never submit easily to any new regime. They got to know their  strength and this is not easy to be taken away from them again .</span>  <span style="font-size: small;"><br /><b><br /><span style="color: #fff2cc;">What´s the immediate prospect for this revolt?</span><br /></b><br />It depends. Still the battle against the dictatorship isn&#8217;t over, not  yet won . But we have to realize the high potential that there is. The  victory of the revolution will make a big difference in the region. We  have to keep in mind that the new world order was declared and  implemented here for the first time during the 1990–1991 Gulf crisis.  This region, since then, replaced Southern America for Washington&#8217;s  backyard. Added to what already has happened in Tunisia and Egypt, the  changes will be deep and lasting. There are two main possibilities as  ever, either to install a new elite regime, or that the masses could  make their way to a really free society, organised on the model of these  popular committees that the people themselves have created in the heat  of the struggle.&nbsp;</span></p>
<p><span style="font-size: small;">&nbsp;</span>  </div>
<p>The post <a href="https://voidnetwork.gr/2011/03/22/the-libyan-peoples-committees-should-be-the-foundation-of-a-new-life-not-just-an-interim-measure/">The Libyan People&#8217;s Committees should be the foundation of a new life, not just an interim measure</a> appeared first on <a href="https://voidnetwork.gr">Void Network</a>.</p>
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