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Steven Emerson,
Executive Director
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July 12, 2016
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A
final footnote on Gadhafi
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The report from the
House Benghazi Committee discloses a previously unknown but incredibly
instructive footnote to the story of the Obama administration's disastrous
foreign policy toward Libya's Moammar Gadhafi.
It was Gadhafi loyalists who rescued the Americans who
bravely fought for their lives through the night of Sept. 11, 2012 against
the Islamist onslaught on the Benghazi Mission compound.
The Salafi-jihadist Muslim Brotherhood-inspired groups — whom
the U.S. trained, equipped and supported in overthrowing and assassinating
Gadhafi — actively participated in the assault and murdered Ambassador
Chris Stevens and three other Americans.
Why did former Gadhafi elements, who disappeared underground
for fear of assassination after he fell, assist the same government that
had betrayed them only months earlier?
Like their former boss, they understood the need to defeat the common
Islamist enemy of the U.S. and Libya. Gadhafi warned me of the true threat
to global stability when I met with him on three occasions during the
2000s.
The history of Libya is clear. Over the course of 40 years, it became
isolated from much of the West. U.S. policy — through successive Republican
and Democratic administrations — diminished it to pariah status over its
state sponsorship of terror.
Those who ran the country were ruthless enforcers serving an autocrat
who committed atrocities against Libyans during his reign, yet they kept a
choke collar on jihadists committed to more sinister plans.
Between 2003 and 2004 Gadhafi approached the West to rehabilitate his
country on the world stage. He would pay reparations to the victims of his
heinous attacks, relinquish his nuclear and chemical weapons programs and
become a partner in the fight against radical Islam. That was the deal, and
he honored it.
In early 2011 President Obama and Secretary of State Hillary Clinton,
for disproven reasons, decided to remove Gadhafi from power. They sought to
legitimize their idealistic enthusiasm for deposing his government by
engaging members of NATO.
It wasn't a contest.
By the end of the year, NATO overthrew his regime and Gadhafi was dead.
In the aftermath, Libya quickly deteriorated into an Islamist sewer that
continues exporting weapons, fighters and ideology throughout the Middle
East and Africa to this day.
Libya stood as a source of stability in volatile northern Africa in
2011. The administration turned it into a failed state that exposed
southern Europe to refugees and terrorist elements, all of which Gadhafi
had warned about.
The U.S. then continued contracting for security with the same henchmen
that it armed during the uprising to its peril.
The forces that
rescued Americans on Sept. 11, 2012 were not the U.S. military. They were
not the militias that overthrew Gadhafi. They were Gadhafi devotees who
were loyal to him and to the U.S. government with whom their leader reached
a "deal."
Where was the American manpower? Indecision and concerns over
appearances among politically correct officials in Washington left them
rudderless. Rapid deployment personnel didn't move for 13 hours. It should
have been an inexcusable embarrassment for the administration, if it was
possible for it to experience any sense of shame.
Who arrived on the scene when America needed help? The very people whom
it betrayed only months earlier.
Americans owe a debt of gratitude to those Gadhafi faithful who rescued
them.
Even though the administration threw them and their leader under the
bus, when presented with the opportunity to save or leave it with dozens of
dead patriots, they saved them.
Too bad America
didn't possess the same foresight when it was provided the choice a year
prior between Gadhafi and his Islamist enemies.
The U.S. must remember — as the Gadhafi loyalists have and Turkey, Saudi
Arabia and Bangladesh are now realizing — that it cannot get into bed with
groups affiliated with the jihadist movement.
The administration needs to slam the doors of Washington shut to the
Muslim Brotherhood, its global affiliates and most importantly, its front
organizations within the U.S.
As the House Select Committee on Benghazi memorializes in its report, at
least Gadhafi's men upheld their end of the agreement by continuing to
recognize and combat the Muslim Brotherhood threat.
Pete Hoekstra is the
Shillman Senior Fellow at the Investigative Project on Terrorism and the
former Chairman of the U.S. House Intelligence Committee. He is the author
of "Architects
of Disaster: The Destruction of Libya."
Related Topics: Pete
Hoekstra, Pete
Hoekstra, Moammar
Gadhafi, IPT,
Investigative
Project on Terrorism, Libya,
Hillary
Clinton, Turkey,
Saudi
Arabia, Bangladesh,
Muslim
Brotherhood, Architects
of Disaster
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