Exposing the
Libyan Agenda: A Closer Look at Hillary’s Emails
By Ellen Brown
March 14,
2016 "Information
Clearing House"
-
Critics have
long questioned why violent intervention was
necessary in Libya. Hillary Clinton’s recently
published emails confirm that it was less about
protecting the people from a dictator than about
money, banking, and preventing African economic
sovereignty.
The brief
visit of then-Secretary of State Hillary Clinton to
Libya in October 2011 was referred to by the media
as a “victory lap.” “We came, we saw, he died!” she
crowed
in a CBS video interview on hearing of the
capture and brutal murder of Libyan leader Muammar
el-Qaddafi.
But the
victory lap, write
Scott Shane and Jo Becker in the New York Times,
was premature. Libya was relegated to the back
burner by the State Department, “as the country
dissolved into chaos, leading to a civil war that
would destabilize the region, fueling the refugee
crisis in Europe and allowing the Islamic State to
establish a Libyan haven that the United States is
now desperately trying to contain.”
US-NATO
intervention was allegedly undertaken on
humanitarian grounds, after reports of mass
atrocities; but human rights organizations
questioned the claims after finding a
lack of evidence. Today, however, verifiable
atrocities are occurring. As
Dan Kovalik wrote in the Huffington Post, “the
human rights situation in Libya is a disaster, as
‘thousands of detainees [including children]
languish in prisons without proper judicial review,’
and ‘kidnappings and targeted killings are
rampant’.”
Before
2011, Libya had achieved economic independence, with
its own water, its own food, its own oil, its own
money, and its own state-owned bank. It had arisen
under Qaddafi from one of the poorest of countries
to the richest in Africa. Education and medical
treatment
were free; having a home was considered a human
right; and Libyans participated in an
original system of local democracy. The country
boasted the world’s largest irrigation system,
the
Great Man-made River project, which brought
water from the desert to the cities and coastal
areas; and Qaddafi was embarking on a program to
spread this model throughout Africa.
But that
was before US-NATO forces
bombed the irrigation system and wreaked havoc
on the country. Today the situation is so dire that
President Obama has asked his advisors to draw up
options including
a new military front in Libya, and the Defense
Department is reportedly standing ready with “the
full spectrum of military operations required.”
The
Secretary of State’s victory lap was indeed
premature, if what we’re talking about is the
officially stated goal of humanitarian intervention.
But her newly-released emails reveal another agenda
behind the Libyan war; and this one, it seems, was
achieved.
Mission
Accomplished?
Of the
3,000 emails released from Hillary Clinton’s private
email server in late December 2015, about a third
were from her close confidante Sidney Blumenthal,
the attorney who defended her husband in the Monica
Lewinsky case.
One of these emails, dated April 2, 2011, reads
in part:
Qaddafi’s government holds 143 tons of gold, and
a similar amount in silver . . . . This gold was
accumulated prior to the current rebellion and
was intended to be used to
establish a pan-African currency based on the
Libyan golden Dinar. This plan was designed to
provide the Francophone African Countries with
an alternative to the French franc (CFA).
In a
“source comment,” the original declassified email
adds:
According to knowledgeable individuals this
quantity of gold and silver is valued at more
than $7 billion. French intelligence officers
discovered this plan shortly after the current
rebellion began, and this was one of the factors
that influenced President Nicolas Sarkozy’s
decision to commit France to the attack on
Libya. According to these individuals Sarkozy’s
plans are driven by the following issues:
- A
desire to gain a greater share of Libya oil
production,
-
Increase French influence in North Africa,
-
Improve his internal political situation in
France,
-
Provide the French military with an
opportunity to reassert its position in the
world,
-
Address the concern of his advisors over
Qaddafi’s long term plans to supplant France
as the dominant power in Francophone Africa
Conspicuously absent is any mention of humanitarian
concerns. The objectives are money, power and oil.
Other
explosive confirmations in the newly-published
emails are detailed by
investigative journalist Robert Parry. They
include admissions of rebel war crimes, of special
ops trainers inside Libya from nearly the start of
protests, and of Al Qaeda embedded in the US-backed
opposition. Key propaganda themes for violent
intervention are acknowledged to be mere rumors.
Parry suggests they may have originated with
Blumenthal himself. They include the bizarre claim
that Qaddafi had a “rape policy” involving passing
Viagra out to his troops, a charge later raised by
UN Ambassador Susan Rice in a UN presentation. Parry
asks rhetorically:
So do
you think it would it be easier for the Obama
administration to rally American support behind
this “regime change” by explaining how the
French wanted to steal Libya’s wealth and
maintain French neocolonial influence over
Africa – or would Americans respond better to
propaganda themes about Gaddafi passing out
Viagra to his troops so they could rape more
women while his snipers targeted innocent
children? Bingo!
Toppling the
Global Financial Scheme
Qaddafi’s
threatened attempt to establish an independent
African currency was not taken lightly by Western
interests. In 2011, Sarkozy reportedly called the
Libyan leader a
threat to the financial security of the world.
How could this tiny country of six million people
pose such a threat? First some background.
It is
banks, not governments, that create most of the
money in Western economies, as the Bank of England recently
acknowledged. This has been going on for
centuries, through the process called “fractional
reserve” lending. Originally, the reserves were in
gold. In 1933, President Franklin Roosevelt
replaced gold domestically with central bank-created
reserves, but gold remained the reserve currency
internationally.
In 1944,
the International Monetary Fund and the World Bank
were created in Bretton Woods, New Hampshire, to
unify this bank-created money system globally. An
IMF ruling said that no paper money could have gold
backing. A money supply created privately as debt at
interest requires a continual supply of debtors; and
over the next half century, most developing
countries wound up
in debt to the IMF. The loans came with strings
attached, including “structural adjustment” policies
involving austerity measures and privatization of
public assets.
After 1944,
the US dollar traded interchangeably with gold as
global reserve currency. When the US was no longer
able to maintain the dollar’s gold backing, in the
1970s it made a deal with OPEC to “back” the dollar
with oil, creating the “petro-dollar.” Oil would be
sold only in US dollars, which would be deposited in
Wall Street and other international banks.
In 2001,
dissatisfied with the shrinking value of the dollars
that OPEC was getting for its oil, Iraq’s Saddam
Hussein broke the pact and sold oil in euros. Regime
change swiftly followed, accompanied by widespread
destruction of the country.
In Libya,
Qaddafi also broke the pact; but he did more than
just sell his oil in another currency.
As these
developments are
detailed by blogger Denise Rhyne:
For
decades, Libya and other African countries had
been attempting to create a pan-African gold
standard. Libya’s al-Qadhafi and other heads of
African States had wanted an independent,
pan-African, “hard currency.”
Under
al-Qadhafi’s leadership, African nations had
convened at least twice for monetary
unification. The countries discussed the
possibility of using the Libyan dinar and the
silver dirham as the only possible
money to buy African oil.
Until the recent US/NATO invasion, the gold
dinar was issued by the Central Bank of Libya
(CBL). The Libyan bank was 100% state owned and
independent. Foreigners had to go through the
CBL to do business with Libya. The Central Bank
of Libya issued the dinar, using the country’s
143.8 tons of gold.
Libya’s
Qadhafi (African Union 2009 Chair)
conceived and financed a plan to unify the
sovereign States of Africa with one gold
currency (United States of Africa). In
2004, a pan-African Parliament (53 nations) laid
plans for the African Economic Community –
with a single gold currency by 2023.
African
oil-producing nations were planning to abandon
the petro-dollar, and demand gold payment for
oil/gas.
Showing What
Is Possible
Qaddafi had
done more than organize an African monetary coup. He
had demonstrated that financial independence could
be achieved. His greatest infrastructure project,
the Great Man-made River, was turning arid regions
into a breadbasket for Libya; and the $33 billion
project was being funded interest-free without
foreign debt, through Libya’s own state-owned bank.
That could
explain why this critical piece of infrastructure
was destroyed in 2011.
NATO not only bombed the pipeline but finished
off the project by bombing the factory producing the
pipes necessary to repair it. Crippling a civilian
irrigation system serving up to 70% of the
population hardly looks like humanitarian
intervention. Rather, as Canadian Professor
Maximilian Forte put it in his heavily researched
book
Slouching Towards Sirte: NATO’s War on Libya and
Africa:
[T]he
goal of US military intervention was to disrupt
an emerging pattern of independence and a
network of collaboration within Africa that
would facilitate increased African
self-reliance. This is at odds with the
geostrategic and political economic ambitions of
extra-continental European powers, namely the
US.
Mystery Solved
Hilary
Clinton’s emails shed light on another enigma
remarked on by early commentators. Why, within weeks
of initiating fighting, did the rebels set up their
own central bank?
Robert Wenzel wrote in The Economic Policy
Journal in 2011:
This
suggests we have a bit more than a rag tag bunch
of rebels running around and that there are some
pretty sophisticated influences. I have never
before heard of a central bank being created in
just a matter of weeks out of a popular
uprising.
It was all
highly suspicious, but as
Alex Newman concluded in a November 2011
article:
Whether
salvaging central banking and the corrupt global
monetary system were truly among the reasons for
Gadhafi’s overthrow . . . may never be known for
certain – at least not publicly.
There the
matter would have remained – suspicious but
unverified like so many stories of fraud and
corruption – but for the publication of Hillary
Clinton’s emails after an FBI probe. They add
substantial weight to Newman’s suspicions: violent
intervention was not chiefly about the security of
the people. It was about the security of global
banking, money and oil.
Ellen
Brown is an attorney, founder of the Public
Banking Institute, and author of twelve books
including the best-selling Web
of Debt. Her latest book, The
Public Bank Solution, explores successful public
banking models historically and globally. Her 300+
blog articles are at EllenBrown.com.
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