Libyans consider US raid in Tripoli one step too far
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| Tunis, Tunisia
Nazih聽al-Ruqai聽was returning home from prayer in Tripoli early yesterday morning聽when he was grabbed by armed men, bundled into a car, and driven off into US custody.
For the US, Mr. Ruqai鈥檚 capture聽ended a long search. Better known by his聽nom de guerre,聽Abu Anas al-Liby, he is an alleged senior Al Qaeda member and is accused by the US of helping plan devastating bombings of American embassies in Nairobi and Dar Es Salaam in 1998.
But the implications of yesterday鈥檚 raid go further. It highlights broader fears that militants from Al Qaeda or at least sympathetic to the group are getting a foothold amid the shaky security and weak governance of post-Qaddafi Libya.
For Libyans, it also poses awkward questions about US involvement in their country. Many appreciate American support for their 2011 revolution, as well as聽the efforts of former ambassador Christopher Stevens to reach out to ordinary people.聽But for some, American boots on Libyan soil is a step too far.
Most聽Libyans will understand why US authorities seized a chance to apprehend Mr. Liby, says Anas El Gomati, director of the Sadeq Institute, a Libyan affairs think tank in Tripoli. 鈥淏ut not everyone will be happy with the loss of sovereignty.鈥
The US says that Liby鈥檚 capture was lawful, but it鈥檚 unclear whether Libyan leaders knew that it would take place. Prime Minister Ali Zeidan has called the raid a聽鈥渒idnapping鈥澛燼nd demanded an explanation, reports聽Reuters.
Thriving on instability
Just two years ago, many Libyans welcomed a NATO bombing campaign 鈥 in which the US featured heavily 鈥 to help overthrow Muammer Qaddafi. His regime collapsed in August 2011, and he was killed by militiamen two months later.
However, interim leaders have struggled to keep order. Borders are porous, weapons proliferate, and rowdy militias often cause trouble with impunity. Meanwhile, a new constitution is overdue, and state spending gets snagged by red tape. Violence has severely dented this year鈥檚 oil output.
All of that is bad news for most ordinary Libyans. But for militants both homegrown and foreign, instability is a boon.
鈥淐onsider that Libya has no functioning intelligence service,鈥 says Mr. El Gomati. 鈥淔or much of the extremist community, that鈥檚 a green light.鈥
It鈥檚 not clear what, if anything,聽Liby聽may have been up to in Libya, his native country. But his presence in the capital underscores a wider 鈥 if still marginal 鈥 emergence of religious extremism and militancy.
Both of those made headlines last year with attacks on Sufi mosques by extremists who consider Sufi mysticism to be heretical. In September 2012, a mob that reportedly included Islamist militants attacked a US consulate in Benghazi, killing four Americans, including Amb. Stevens.
Last January, carloads of militants burst into a natural gas plant at In Amenas, Algeria, and rounded up foreign workers as hostages for a standoff that ended with an Algerian army assault and left 40 hostages dead.
The attack was聽planned聽from northern Mali by Mokhtar Belmokhtar, for years a senior commander in Al Qaeda鈥檚 North African franchise, says a report on the attack by Statoil, a Norwegian oil firm working at In Amenas. But it appears to have been launched from over the nearby Libyan border.
Among the alleged attackers was a Tunisian named Laroussi Derbali, whose path seems to show how Libya is for some a crossroads of militancy.聽He went there in 2010 to seek work, but last year broke contact with his family, said his brother, Said, in an interview last March. The next the family heard of Laroussi was his arrest at In Amenas.
Weak government, weak enforcement
The US has been trying to catch Liby for years. He was indicted in 2000聽in connection with聽the Nairobi and Dar Es Salaam bombings, which killed more than 200 people. The FBI offered a $5 million reward for him.
Early yesterday, three carloads of gunmen cornered Liby as he parked his car after attending dawn prayer at a Tripoli mosque,聽The Associated Press聽reports, citing Liby鈥檚 brother, Nabih. The gunmen smashed Liby鈥檚 car window, snatched the gun he was carrying, and drove off with him.
Later yesterday, US authorities said that Liby was held in American custody outside Libya. For some Libyans, Liby鈥檚 alleged career as an international terrorist is justification enough for the US raid.
鈥淚t鈥檚 a move against global terrorism,鈥 says Salah Engab, a medical student an writer in Tripoli. 鈥淲e shouldn鈥檛 be worrying about one country versus another. We should be working together.鈥
An activist for the rights of Libya鈥檚 Amazigh, or Berber, minority and a vocal proponent of secularism and religious moderation, Mr. Engab says he has been harassed and threatened by hardliners for his views.
Fahed Bakoush, a young activist in Benghazi, also wants more done to resist extremism. Last year he was among the first people to discover Stevens, the former ambassador, unconscious in the US consulate and helped organize rallies to condemn violence. Still, he says yesterday鈥檚 raid went too far.
鈥淚t鈥檚 like someone breaking into your house,鈥 he says. 鈥淲e had a revolution to build a strong, free Libya.鈥
He wants Libyan authorities to fight criminality 鈥渨ith an iron hand,鈥 he says. But he concedes that for now, they can do little. The state鈥檚 weakness was underscored yesterday when gunmen opened fire on a military checkpoint outside Tripoli, killing 15 soldiers.
鈥淲hat the raid also did was to show that the Libyan state cannot maintain security,鈥 he says.