U.S. created Al-Qaida. Al-Qaeda supports rebels in Libya

Al-Qaida, an American creation used to fight the Soviets in Afghanistan, has supported U.S. plans to destabilize Africa and the Middle East for years.

JerusalemPost.com
March 23, 2011

A senior member of al Qaida urged Libyan rebels to continue their fight against Muammar Gaddafi and warned of the consequences of defeat, in a videotaped message posted on Jihadi websites, the Qatar-based Gulf News reported on Sunday.

The message from Libya native, Abu Yahya al-Libi, marked the first time a top ranked al Qaida commander had commented on the uprising in Libya. Gaddafi has repeatedly blamed al Qaida for inciting the unrest against him.

“The Libyan people have suffered at the hands of Gaddafi for more than 40 years … He used the Libyans as a testing ground for his violent, rambling and disgusting thoughts,” Abu Yahya stated.

He warned that “Retreating will mean decades of harsher oppression and greater injustices than what you have endured.”

Abu Yahya also accused the West, and the US in particular, of having supported oppressive Arab regimes at the expense of the people.

The taped message could not be independently authenticated, according to the Gulf Times report.

An assault on Libya’s rebel-held city of Misrata was stalled on Sunday by renewed fighting between members of Muammar Gaddafi’s security forces, rebels said, but the government denied reports of a mutiny.

Residents said fighting broke out on Saturday after some units of the Libyan leader’s force refused to attack Misrata, Libya’s third-biggest city and the only place in the west of the country still openly defying Gaddafi’s rule.

The reports of a mutiny could not be verified because Libyan authorities have not allowed reporters access to the city of 300,000 which is 200 km (130 miles) east of the capital.

“From the early morning they (the security forces) are fighting among each other. We hear the fighting,” Mohammed, one of the rebel fighters, told Reuters by telephone on Sunday.

“This division between them came to us from God. Just when we thought the end was coming, this happened. Now we are waiting to see what will happen.”

Mutiny Reports “Rubbish”

Asked about reports of a mutiny in Misrata, government spokesman Mussa Ibrahim said: “This is rubbish. It is not true.”

“The army has surrounded the centre of Misrata. They are in the city. Tribal elders are talking to them (the rebels) to surrender,” he said in Tripoli.

Misrata residents said they could hear the sound of heavy fighting from a military airfield to the south of the town, where pro-Gaddafi forces have been based. They said there were no clashes between rebels and security forces on Sunday.

“They (Gaddafi’s forces) are still fighting each other. The shelling hit a house and a shop in southern Misrata, I don’t know whether there are any casualties,” said rebel spokesman Gemal.

He said shops in the city were open as normal, but added: “Of course there is tension as everybody is waiting to see what will happen.”

Puppets of the West or Victims of Proxy Wars

Arab-Muslim regimes are artificial, the militant Salafis said. The regimes are oppressive, Western-controlled entities, designed to keep “true Islam” in check.

Nationalism, state borders that divide Muslims and secularism were all seen by al-Qaida ideologues, like Bin Laden’s mentor Palestinian cleric Abdullah Azzam, as foreign ideas adopted by the Arab regimes and used to keep the Muslims weak.

Dislodging the regimes of Egypt, Libya, Saudi Arabia and others and replacing them with an Islamic superstate, a caliphate, has been the main objective of al- Qaida for more than two decades.

The war between jihadi movements and Arab-Muslim states has been raging for years. It was a war prosecuted by the jihadis with much fury and dedication, but without much success.

In fact, it was the failure of the global jihadi movement to achieve its aim to establish sovereignty in place of Arab regimes that drove its members and leaders to seek refuge on the Internet, and set up a virtual caliphate, a place where they could safely spread their ideology, recruit soldiers and plan the structure and policies of their future caliphate.

Now, the very premise of al-Qaida could be in jeopardy.

While it is far too early to begin to know how the uprisings in Egypt, Libya, Tunisia and other Arab nations will turn out in the long run, it is obvious to all that the Arab regimes so despised by al-Qaida were challenged and, in some cases, removed from power without its help.

Bloomberg reported this week that al-Qaida’s secondin- command, Zawahiri, “urged Egyptians to revive Islamic rule and criticized Hosni Mubarak as a ‘modernday pharaoh’ in remarks that came before the former Egyptian president was toppled.”

“The Egyptian regime is in fact a repressive regime that relies on brutality and rigged elections, while the Islamic system is consultative and seeks to achieve justice,” Zawahiri said in an online audio recording. It was an attempt to score some points on the back of the uprising.

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About Luis Miranda
The Real Agenda is an independent publication. It does not take money from Corporations, Foundations or Non-Governmental Organizations. It provides news reports in three languages: English, Spanish and Portuguese to reach a larger group of readers. Our news are not guided by any ideological, political or religious interest, which allows us to keep our integrity towards the readers.

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