Qaddafi vows to stay or die as 'a martyr'; world weighs limited options
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| Washington
Some officials in Washington are calling for the United States to consider reimposing sanctions on Libya, and at least one United Nations official says the Libyan regime should be investigated for possible crimes against humanity in the wake of deadly antiprotester violence in the North Africa country.
But a defiant Muammar Qaddafi 鈥 the country鈥檚 dictator of more than 41 years and a longtime Western nemesis 鈥 vowed in a national TV appearance Tuesday to cling to power or 鈥渄ie [in Libya] as a martyr.鈥 As diplomats gathered in the UN Security Council Tuesday afternoon to consider events in Libya, it was unclear what, if any, leverage the US or the world has to influence Mr. Qaddafi and the course of events in his country.
Early in the past decade, Qaddafi agreed to give up his country鈥檚 weapons-of-mass-destruction programs and to meet other US demands, motivated at least in part by a desire to shed his pariah status and rejoin the international community. But now, with his hold on power on the line, Qaddafi may dig in his heels and battle to resist outside pressures, some regional experts say.
Given the lack of any clear institutional alternative to Qaddafi, some say, the international community is likely to think twice before pushing him to the brink.
鈥淭he US and the West don鈥檛 have anywhere near the leverage in Libya that they had or have with either Egypt or Tunisia,鈥 says Kamran Bokhari, Middle East and South Asia regional director for Stratfor, a global-security forecasting company that is based in Austin, Texas. 鈥淏ut even if they did, there is a very important key difference influencing [the international community鈥檚] actions on this,鈥 he adds. 鈥淭here is no alternative force, no cohesive institutions to take power should this regime crumble, and so the alternatives become civil war and chaos.鈥
A case in point is the Libyan military. Unlike the Egyptian military 鈥 which has strong ties to the US and which eventually assumed power when President Hosni Mubarak stepped down 鈥 Libya鈥檚 military forces are 鈥渄eeply fractured鈥 and have been kept weak by a suspicious Qaddafi, says Frederic Wehrey, a Libya expert at the RAND Corp. in Santa Monica, Calif.
鈥淭he military in Libya doesn鈥檛 have its own corporate identity that ties it to some embodiment of the state,鈥 he says. Describing the US military-to-military relationship with Libya as 鈥渘ascent,鈥 Mr. Wehrey says that Qaddafi has been careful to squash any reformist wing in the military (or anywhere else in the government) that might have provided an opening for outside influence.
The lack of US leverage is not stopping some officials from proposing tough measures against the Libyan regime. US Sen. John Kerry (D) Massachusetts, chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, said on Tuesday that the US should consider reimposing economic sanctions on Libya that were lifted under President Bush. International oil companies should immediately cease operations there, Senator Kerry says.
The United Nations high commissioner for human rights, Navi Pillay, said in a statement that Libya鈥檚 鈥渨idespread and systematic attacks against the civilian population鈥 should be investigated in the International Criminal Court as possible crimes against humanity.
But some analysts expect that the UN Security Council 鈥 which was meeting Tuesday afternoon at the request of the Libyan UN delegation鈥檚 breakaway diplomats 鈥 will limit itself to at most a statement condemning attacks on civilians and urging government restraint.
鈥淎t the UN, you鈥檙e going to have the Arab regimes and others whispering in our and other countries鈥 ears, 鈥楧o you really want to push this too far, when what you might end up with is civil war or anarchy?鈥 鈥 says Mr. Bokhari of Stratfor.
The one possible leadership alternative in Libya might be the country鈥檚 tribal leaders, he adds. But other Arab regimes ruling over tribal societies 鈥 from Saudi Arabia to Jordan and Yemen 鈥 will not want to see the kind of 鈥渞eal regime change鈥 that a shift to tribal governance would constitute.
鈥淪audi Arabia has no love for Qaddafi,鈥 Bokhari says, 鈥渂ut they are terrified of the upheaval they see and what the alternative to him might be.鈥
Wehrey of RAND says that the US once hoped that the 鈥渞eformist鈥 elements within Qaddafi鈥檚 so-called 鈥渕en of the tent鈥 鈥 the tribal leaders and relatives he consulted with 鈥 might press the regime to open up. But that pressure was never allowed to develop, he says.
And at this point, he adds, Qaddafi is hunkering down and unlikely to heed anyone. 鈥淎t one time, he saw some of the multilateral institutions like the UN or the African Union as vehicles by which he could raise his own stature, but we鈥檙e past that,鈥 Wehrey says. 鈥淣ow it鈥檚 pure survival.鈥