New York
Times on Clinton and Libya: Portrait of a War
Criminal
By Bill Van
Auken
March 01,
2016 "Information
Clearing House"
- "WSWS"
-
A two-part
series entitled “The Libya Gamble” published in the
Sunday and Monday editions of the New York Times
is a damning indictment of Hillary Clinton, the
former secretary of state and current front-runner
for the Democratic presidential nomination.
The piece,
written by Times national security
correspondent Scott Shane and investigative reporter
Jo Becker, details the leading role played by
Clinton in fomenting a war of aggression that killed
tens if not hundreds of thousands. The fact that it
is not intended as an exposure of these imperialist
atrocities makes it all the more incriminating.
The
Times has endorsed Clinton’s presidential
campaign, describing her as “one of the most broadly
and deeply qualified presidential candidates in
modern history” and as a president who “would use
American military power effectively.” The paper has
helped promote the political propaganda touting her
as a feminist icon and a candidate deserving the
support of African-Americans.
No one
would suspect that Ms. Clinton’s criminal record
makes her the political equivalent of a black widow
spider.
Even the
Libya piece suggests that her pivotal role in
instigating the US-NATO war of 2011 casts a
favorable light “on what kind of president she might
be.” It describes her as a “diligent student and
unrelenting inquisitor, absorbing fat briefing
books, inviting dissenting views from subordinates,
studying foreign counterparts to learn how to win
them over. She was a pragmatist, willing to
improvise...”
Taken for
granted in this account is that all of this
diligence, pragmatism and improvisation was in
furtherance of a criminal war of aggression that
laid waste to an entire society.
Today, as
the article notes, Clinton deflects questions about
the war with bromides about the Libyans having
participated in two elections—which have produced
what are now three competing governments, none of
which can claim to rule any significant part of the
country enmeshed in a bloody civil war. It is “too
soon to tell” how things will evolve in Libya, she
adds, five years after the war and under conditions
in which Washington is once again deploying special
operations troops on the ground and bombing the
country from the air.
The article
acknowledges that Clinton had fought within the
Obama administration against “dropping support for
Hosni Mubarak” under conditions in which the masses
of Egypt had risen up in a revolutionary struggle
against the US-backed dictator.
Yet somehow
in Libya, the article argues, “Clinton had a new
opportunity to support the historic change that had
just swept out the leaders of its neighbors Egypt
and Tunisia. And Libya seemed a tantalizingly easy
case—with just six million people, no sectarian
divide and plenty of oil.”
Here the
phrases “tantalizingly easy” and “plenty of oil”
were the operative ones in Clinton’s real
calculations. A regime change operation was mounted
against the Libyan government of Muammar Gaddafi not
to further the revolutionary upheavals that were
dubbed the “Arab spring,” but rather to contain them
by imposing a US-controlled puppet state in the
country separating Egypt and Tunisia, and asserting
unfettered Western control over Africa’s largest oil
reserves in the bargain.
The article
establishes that Clinton “pressed for a secret
program that supplied arms to rebel militias,”
composed largely of Islamist groups, some with
direct ties to Al Qaeda.
Within the
administration, the Times reports, she
pressed for direct US military intervention on the
grounds that the British and French governments
would go ahead without the US and Washington would
be “left behind” and “be less capable of shaping”
the scramble for control of Libya and its oil
wealth.
The
pretext, that Libyan government forces were on the
verge of a “genocidal massacre” of “protesters” in
the eastern city of Benghazi, was subsequently
refuted by international human rights groups, and
the total number killed in armed clashes before the
US and NATO began their bombing of Libya amounted to
barely 350.
At the
outset of this bombing campaign, the article
recounts, numerous attempts were made by Libyan
officials, UN functionaries, other African
governments and the African Union to negotiate a
ceasefire and a political settlement, all of which
were rejected by Washington. Charles Kubic, a
retired rear admiral who received a proposal from a
top Libyan military officer for a 72-hour ceasefire,
was told by the US military command to immediately
cut off the discussion based on orders that had come
from “outside the Pentagon.”
“The
question that stays with me is, why didn’t you spend
72 hours giving peace a chance?” he told the
Times. The obvious answer was that those who
had promoted the Libyan intervention, with Clinton
in the lead, were determined to have their war for
regime change fought to a bloody conclusion.
That came
in October 2011 with the vicious lynch-mob murder of
Gaddafi by the US-backed Islamist “rebels.” After
watching a video on an aide’s BlackBerry of the
Libyan leader being beaten and sodomized with a
bayonet before he was killed, Clinton exclaimed
“Wow!”
She then
infamously turned to her television interviewer,
exclaimed “We came, we saw, he died!” and cackled in
delight.
Murdered
alongside Gaddafi was his son Mutassim, who just two
years earlier had been warmly welcomed to the State
Department with smiles and handshakes by the same
Hillary Clinton.
As the
article makes clear, these bloody crimes were viewed
by Clinton and her supporters as grist for her 2016
presidential campaign. Her top aide at the State
Department issued a memo stating that the record
demonstrated Clinton’s
“leadership/ownership/stewardship of this country’s
Libya policy from start to finish.”
“The memo’s
language put her at the center of everything,” the
article states: “‘HRC announces ... HRC directs ...
HRC travels ... HRC engages,’ it read.”
In the
aftermath of the catastrophe in Libya, the article
credits Clinton with “pushing for an aggressive
American program to arm and train Syrian rebels
trying to topple President Bashar al-Assad.”
It fails,
however, to spell out the concrete connection
between these two imperialist interventions. Arms
seized from Libyan government stockpiles were
funneled, along with Libyan Islamist fighters, into
Syria, under the supervision of the CIA, which
established a secret station in Benghazi along with
another in southern Turkey.
After
rivalries and recriminations between the agency and
the Islamists erupted in the September 11, 2012
attack on the US facilities in Benghazi that killed
the US ambassador and three security personnel,
Clinton came under Republican fire, not for waging
an illegal war, assassinating a foreign leader or
arming Al Qaeda, but for an alleged “cover-up” of
the Benghazi incident.
Similarly,
a continuing investigation has been mounted over
Clinton’s use of a non-secure private email server
which handled material deemed secret, but little
attention has been paid to the content of these
emails, which again implicate Clinton in the bloody
crimes carried out in Libya, Syria and beyond.
Summed up
in Clinton’s role in the Libyan events is the
arrogance and recklessness of a US foreign policy
that is inseparable from militarism and aggression.
In Clinton’s shameless attempt to exploit events
that killed tens of thousands and turned millions
into refugees to further her grubby political
ambitions, one finds a consummate expression of the
degraded character of the American ruling elite and
its political system as a whole, and of the
Democratic Party in particular.
In a just
world, or at least one in which the principles upon
which the Nuremberg war crimes trials of the
surviving leaders of the Third Reich continued to be
observed, Hillary Clinton would not be running for
US president but, at best, be spending the rest of
her life in a prison cell.
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