Worse that Gadhafi?

layoutshooter

Veteran Expediter
Retired Expediter
Always be careful of what you wish for. As bad as Gadhafi is, and he is REALLY bad, it is possible to get worse.



Al-Qaida commander calls for Islamic rule in Libya

CAIRO – A top Libyan al-Qaida commander has urged his countrymen to overthrow Moammar Gadhafi's regime and establish Islamic rule, expanding the terror network's attempts to capitalize on the wave of unrest sweeping the region.

Abu Yahia al-Libi, al-Qaida's Afghanistan commander, said in a video posted on a militant website that after the fall of the regimes in Tunisia and Egypt, it is now Gadhafi's turn, as rebel fighters there press a nearly monthlong campaign to oust him.

Those nation's autocratic governments — enemies of Islamic militants — practiced "the worst kind of oppression" with the backing of the West and had failed to heed the lessons of history, he said.

"Now it is the turn of Gadhafi after he made the people of Libya suffer for more than 40 years," he said, adding that it would bring shame to the Libyan people if the strongman were allowed to die a peaceful death.

A transcript of the video was provided Sunday by SITE Intelligence Group, a U.S. organization that monitors militant messages.

Gadhafi has accused al-Qaida of being behind the movement seeking to end his more than 40-year rule, though the rebels have no known links to the terrorist organization. The uprisings in Egypt and Tunisia were similarly driven by widespread popular outrage at corruption, unemployment and limited outlets for political expression, rather than Islamist fervor. Nevertheless, al-Qaida has tried to make gains on the tumult, also urging formation of an Islamic government in Egypt.

Libya's Gadhafi was once demonized for sponsoring various terrorist groups and attacks like the 1988 Pan Am bombing over Lockerbie, Scotland. But in the late 1990s, the Libyan leader began efforts to emerge from international pariah status and stopped sheltering terrorists.

Gadhafi also crushed his country's Muslim militants, including those who fought in Afghanistan alongside Osama bin Laden, and banned clergymen from expressing political opinions in their Friday sermons. Gadhafi has also helped the U.S. track al-Qaida and other terrorism suspects in the region.

Since then, top al-Qaida figures have routinely targeted him in their video and audio recordings.

Al-Libi said ousting Western-backed Arab regimes was "a step to reach the goal of every Muslim, which is to make the word of Allah the highest" and establish Islamic rule.

The al-Qaida commander, whose nom de guerre is Arabic for "the Libyan," rose to prominence in the terror group after escaping from the U.S. military prison at the Bagram Air Base in Afghanistan in 2005.

He is believed by Western and Afghan intelligence to have run training camps for suicide bombers and fighters in eastern Afghanistan along the border with Pakistan. Afghan police said at the time of his escape that his real name is Abulbakar Mohammed Hassan and that he is a Libyan.

The authenticity of his 31-minute video could not be verified, but it was produced by As-Sahab, the media wing of al-Qaida, and posted late Saturday on militant websites.

He also criticized the United States, asking how it could ultimately voice support for the uprisings after having backed the regimes they toppled.

"We have to get rid of our inferiority complex and free ourselves from the West," he said.

His message came days after a North African offshoot of al-Qaida called on Muslims to support the uprising.
Al-Qaida in the Islamic Maghreb said in a statement posted on a militant website last month that it would do whatever it can to support the revolt against Gadhafi, calling him a "criminal tyrant," but it gave no specifics.

The group, based in neighboring Algeria, may be seeking to capitalize on the revolt to gain recruits or win support among Libyans.







Al-Qaida commander calls for Islamic rule in Libya - Yahoo! News
 

FIS53

Veteran Expediter
The Obama admin doesn't think the Muslim Brootherhood is all that dangerous in Egypt yet even the Egyptian governments and many others think it is very dangerous. Unfortunately in Libya who does anyone trust? At the moment there is little if anything of a real organized opposition ruling body and therefore ripe for the likes of a militant group to take over or have influence to a high degree. The intelligence community is in the dark a bit about who's who and who will come out on top.
Rob
 

layoutshooter

Veteran Expediter
Retired Expediter
I am not sure how much in the dark the intell agencies are or how much they are keeping quiet to protect sources.

Our leadership in this country, I don't know about Canada, seems to be at a loss. Gates maybe be the only one holding things together here.
 

scottm4211

Veteran Expediter
Owner/Operator
I am not sure how much in the dark the intell agencies are or how much they are keeping quiet to protect sources.

Our leadership in this country, I don't know about Canada, seems to be at a loss. Gates maybe be the only one holding things together here.

Hell I live in Canada and don't know about our leadership. I just keep plugging along. It's the Canadian way :salute:
 

layoutshooter

Veteran Expediter
Retired Expediter
Hell I live in Canada and don't know about our leadership. I just keep plugging along. It's the Canadian way :salute:

I have not heard what you government has to say about what is going on over there. Have you? Do they care?

I know your intell people used to be pretty good years ago when I worked with them. I assume that they still are good. I have no way of knowing though.
 

scottm4211

Veteran Expediter
Owner/Operator
I have not heard what you government has to say about what is going on over there. Have you? Do they care?

I know your intell people used to be pretty good years ago when I worked with them. I assume that they still are good. I have no way of knowing though.

I haven't, sorry. TMZ was saying they thought he was well dressed though :confused:
 

AMonger

Veteran Expediter
Always be careful of what you wish for. As bad as Gadhafi is, and he is REALLY bad, it is possible to get worse.



Al-Qaida commander calls for Islamic rule in Libya


That's pretty much how it goes everywhere. Look at Egypt: they throw out one jackball and the next guy is worse. It's that way here, too. Hasn't every president in all our lifetimes been worse than the one before? Except for Carter-Reagan, I guess.
 
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