Who Is
Khalifa Hifter?
Who is the American citizen leading one side of the
civil war in Libya, and why did he spend 20 years in
suburban Virginia, reportedly under the auspices of
the CIA?
By Chris Ernesto
February 24,
2016 "Information
Clearing House"
-
"AntiWar"
- In
1991, the New York Times
reported that 350 exiled "Libyan soldiers were
trained by American intelligence officials in
sabotage and other guerrilla skills. The plan to use
the exiles fit neatly into the Reagan
Administration’s eagerness to topple Colonel
[Muammar] Qaddafi."
Former
Libyan General Khalifa Hifter was the leader of that
group, the Libyan National Army, and was one of
those flown to the United States and
granted exile.
Within
three years, Hifter was given U.S. citizenship and
spent much of the next 20 years in suburban
Virginia, near the CIA’s headquarters in Langley,
VA.
Switched
sides in the ’80s
Born in
1943 in eastern Libya, Hifter was an army officer
when he participated in the coup that brought
Qaddafi to power in 1969. But in the late 1980s,
Hifter was
captured in neighboring Chad while fighting for
Qaddafi’s army. Qaddafi refused to admit that any
Libyans were being held captive in Chad, and thus,
many of those captives
formed an anti-Qaddafi insurgent group while
imprisoned. Shortly thereafter, Hifter and others
were flown by the US Air Force to New York for
resettlement.
Leader
of a US based "contra-style group"
A 1996
Congressional Research Service report
claimed
that Hifter began “preparing an army to march on
Libya.” The report also stated that the Libyan
National Army is in exile “with many of its members
in the United States.”
In the same
year, the Washington Post
reported
that Hifter was alleged to be the leader of "a
contra-style group based in the United States called
the Libyan National Army."
Hifter
"spent most of the previous two decades, at least
some of that time working with the Central
Intelligence Agency,"
according to the New Yorker magazine.
The New
York Times’ Ethan Chorin
reported that he found "many traces of a long
relationship between General Hifter, the United
States and the National Front for the Salvation of
Libya, the main exile group opposing Colonel Qaddafi
at the time. These included assertions that the CIA
recruited General Hifter to help prepare military
activity against [Qaddafi]. General Hifter settled
in Virginia and … was put in charge of training
like-minded Libyans as prospective insurgents."
"So a
former Qaddafi general who switches sides is
admitted to the United States, puts down roots in
Virginia outside Washington, D.C. and then somehow
supports his family in a manner that mystifies a
fellow who has known Hifter his whole life. Hmm,"
pondered Russ Baker in the Business Insider.
"The
likelihood that Hifter was brought in to be some
kind of asset is pretty high. Just as figures like
Ahmed Chalabi were cultivated for a post-Saddam
Iraq, Hifter may have played a similar role as
American intelligence prepared for a chance in
Libya," Baker continued.
Hifter
and the 2011 US intervention in Libya
On March
20, 2011, the United States joined France and Great
Britain in an air attack against Libya. Eleven days
later, Dennis Kucinich (D-OH)
addressed congress.
Kucinich
challenged the Obama administration’s
widely-accepted narrative that the US intervention
was being conducted to prevent a deepening of the
humanitarian crisis caused by the Qaddafi
government.
Kucinich
pointed out that it was the Libyan National Army’s
"call for opposition to the Qaddafi regime in
February which was the catalyst of the conflict
which precipitated the humanitarian crisis which is
now used to justify our intervention … But I ask …
how spontaneous was this rebellion?"
Kucinich
continued, “the new leader of Libya’s opposition
military left for Libya two weeks ago, apparently
around the same time the president signed the covert
operations order … The new leader spent the past two
decades of his life in Libya? No. In suburban
Virginia, where he had no visible means of support.
His name, Colonel Khalifa Hifter. One wonders when
he planned his trip … and who is his travel agency?"
"Like
Clint Eastwood"
Hifter
returned to Libya expecting to have no problem
winning over others who were attempting to oust
Qaddafi.
Mustafa
Gheriani, an opposition spokesman,
said Hifter had swaggered into town “like Clint
Eastwood,” with aspirations of leadership.
But after
being absent from the country for over two decades,
Hifter was unable to wrestle full control of the
rebel faction from Abdul Fattah Younes, Qaddafi’s
former interior minister. Within months, though,
Hifter gained complete command after Younes was
mysteriously assassinated.
By 2014
Hifter had secured his position and he launched
Operation Dignity in May of that year. In March
2015, Hifter was officially
sworn in as army chief by Libya’s UN-recognized
government based in Tobruk. But Libya’s Supreme
Court
ruled that Hifter’s opposition in Libya, the
General National Congress, was the national
legislature, essentially leaving Libya with two
competing governments.
US
allies currently supporting Hifter
In May
2014, when asked if Egypt and the UAE were behind
Hifter, the US Ambassador to Libya Deborah Jones
said, “I have nothing for you on that.”
But in
February 2015, the BBC
reported that, "since the 2011 ousting of
Qaddafi, no government has managed to establish
control over the whole country. Two military
coalitions claim to represent the legitimate
government.
One is
Libya Dawn, a grouping of militias that includes
various Islamist groups as well as forces from the
east of the country, which supports the former
elected parliament … It vehemently opposes any role
for former members of the Qaddafi regime in
politics, and is backed by Qatar and Turkey.
The other
is Dignity, headed by a general, Khalifa Hifter … It
would prefer to include some members of the previous
regime in politics, and is backed by Egypt and the
UAE."
Is
Hifter still supported by the US?
The US
continues to send mixed signals on whether or not
they currently support Hifter.
In May
2014, when asked about Hifter, then US State
Department spokesperson Jen Psaki
said, "we have not had contact with him
recently." She went on to say that the department
did not condone the violent attacks being led by
Hifter in Libya.
But just a
few days later, Ambassador Jones
said that she would not "condemn blanketly" the
actions of Hifter, who declared war on Islamic
“terrorists” in Libya and forced the country to call
new parliamentary elections. Hifter’s actions were
described as "a de facto coup" by some.
The
Ambassador added that Hifter is “clearly one of the
influencers” in Libya and that “our approach now is
to reach out to all the influencers.”
But mixed
signals continued to be sent when an anonymous
senior US official
told The New Yorker magazine, that “the US
government has nothing to do with General Khalifa
Hifter. Hifter is killing people, and he says he is
targeting terrorists, but his definition is way too
broad."
Who are
US bombs targeting in Libya?
It has been
established that Hifter was supported by the CIA for
some period of time, but whether he continues to
receive direct US support is uncertain.
If nothing
else, Hifter’s cause is being aided by the US
In November
2015, two US F-15 aircraft
launched an airstrike against Hifter’s rivals in
Derna, Libya. At the time, residents in Sirte and
Tripoli reported US drones and spy planes orbiting
above.
Another US
airstrike
followed last week as fighter-bombers struck an
alleged ISIS training camp in rural Libya near the
Tunisian border, killing at least 49 people,
including two Serbian embassy staffers who were
being held hostage by ISIS.
As both
airstrikes were directed at some of his rivals, it
appears that US citizen Khalifa Hifter will, at
worst, have his cause furthered by his second home
country.
Chris
Ernesto is cofounder of
St. Pete for
Peace, an antiwar organization in St.
Petersburg, FL that has been active since 2003. Mr.
Ernesto also created and manages
OccupyArrests.com and
USinAfrica.com. |