======================================================================
Rule #1: YOU MUST clip all extraneous text when replying to a message.
======================================================================



Financial Times
http://www.ft.com/cms/s/0/198e48b4-411a-11e0-bf62-00144feabdc0.html
Britain and Libya: "No line in the sand"
By James Blitz and Lina Saigol

Published: February 25 2011 21:56 | Last updated: February 25 2011 21:56

Stood near a Bedouin tent outside Tripoli on Wednesday March 24 2004, Tony
Blair offered what he called “the hand of friendship” to Muammer Gaddafi.
That five-second handshake with the Libyan leader was one of the most
remarkable moments in Mr Blair’s decade-long premiership and in the recent
history of the Middle East.

For years, Col Gaddafi had been the pariah of the western world, the man US
President Ronald Reagan dubbed the “mad dog” of the Middle East, the
instigator of terrorist attacks across Europe. Yet here was Britain’s
charismatic leader standing alongside him, declaring that the whole world
would benefit from Libya becoming a “strong partner of the west”.

EDITOR’S CHOICE
Gaddafi forces open fire on protesters - Feb-25.Chinese oil interests
attacked in Libya - Feb-24.Editorial: Time to muzzle Libya’s mad dog -
Feb-24.Libya refugees flee to Malta - Feb-24.Libya regime admits 300 dead in
uprising - Feb-23.Editorial: EU - the feeble monster - Feb-23..That
handshake quickly came to be known as the “deal in the desert”. Col Gaddafi
promised to cease sowing terror, in return for which international oil
companies would help him extract Libya’s huge oil reserves.

But seven years on, the deal seems like a cynical and ill-judged act in the
eyes of many Britons. In the past seven days, Col Gaddafi has emerged once
again as the abominable figure he once – some would say always – was. As he
prepared for what may be his last stand in Tripoli, he called on mercenaries
to shoot ordinary Libyans protesting against his 41-year rule, whom he calls
“rats” and “cockroaches”. He has used helicopter gunships to massacre his
countrymen from the skies. In a tirade this week, he threatened to “cleanse
Libya house by house” to keep himself in power. Many in Britain now wonder
how on earth their government could have contemplated doing business with
this man.

To be fair, the UK is not the only nation that has cosied up to the colonel.
After he renounced terrorism in 2003, several sought to do business with the
despot. Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi has backed him to such a degree
that trade between Italy and Libya is today eight times that between Tripoli
and the UK. Unlike his British counterparts, President Nicolas Sarkozy of
France has received Col Gaddafi in his capital city, where the Bedouin tent
was set up within sight of the Elysée palace. The US, Brazil, Germany have
all rushed to do business with his regime.

Yet some argue there was something unusually intimate – craven, even – about
the political and business relationship between London and Libya. “You
cannot exaggerate the role that Blair and Britain played in bringing Gaddafi
in from the cold,” says Professor Fawaz Gerges of the London School of
Economics. “In 2004, Gaddafi was still a maverick – someone dismissed as an
insane, babbling idiot by most serious people. By allowing Gaddafi to
rebrand himself, Blair sacrificed principle at the altar of economic gain.
The rest of British business duly followed.”

In spite of the mayhem now being visited on Libya, architects of the deal in
the desert maintain it was the right thing to do. In the 30 years before the
event, Col Gaddafi had been a serious threat to western security, supporting
the Irish Republican Army with weapons and instigating the 1988 bombing of a
Pan Am airliner over Lockerbie in Scotland that killed 270 people. Yet Jack
Straw, foreign secretary at the time of the deal, insists it was a valuable
prize because the Libyan leader surrendered weapons of mass destruction that
included important elements of a nuclear programme.

“The situation on the ground in Libya is difficult enough today,” he says.
“But imagine what it would be like now if he had gone on developing that
nuclear capability over the last seven years. We would be dealing with an
autocrat of questionable mental stability in charge of a nuclear weapons
system. This seems to be forgotten by many people.”

Others, however, question this argument. Sir Menzies Campbell, former
Liberal Democrat leader, accepts there was a clear benefit in convincing Col
Gaddafi to surrender WMD. But once this had been secured, he believes, UK
government and business leaders were too quick to embrace him. “We should
have been far more sober and fastidious in the way we dealt with Gaddafi
after that, keeping a tough restriction on arms sales and holding him to
account on his human rights record,” he says. Prof Gerges is more blunt.
“Business interests were dominant from the very start,” he says. “We needed
to make sure that we pressed human rights and the rule of law in Libya. But
for too many people, the commercial interests were key.”

Why and how was British business seduced by Libya? There were two prizes.
First, oil and gas. With 44.3bn barrels of proven reserves, Libya has more
oil than any other African country, four times as much as Britain and Norway
combined. A confidential document recently released by the UK government
declares that Libya is one of the few countries “with medium-term capacity
to bring significantly more energy to world markets”. For BP, a company with
close relations to the UK government, this was immensely attractive. In
2007, it agreed to invest $900m in a deal to explore Libyan fields. As Tony
Hayward, then chief executive, said at the time, this was BP’s “single
biggest exploration commitment anywhere in the world”.

The second attraction was the operation of Libyan Investment Authority, a
sovereign wealth fund worth $60bn-$80bn, according to analysts. The fund,
which opened a London office in 2009, has invested in Britain to a lesser
degree than rivals in Qatar and Dubai. But it has recently disclosed a 3.01
per cent stake in Pearson, the educational publisher and owner of the
Financial Times. It also owns considerable London commercial property
assets. Mohamed Layas, LIA’s head, told US diplomats last year that he
preferred operating in the British capital to the US because of the “ease of
doing business” and the “relatively uncomplicated tax system”.

However it is not just the scale of the trading relationship that has caused
alarm but also the close ties between leading UK establishment figures and
the Gaddafi regime.

Mr Blair has repeatedly insisted he has never had any commercial
relationship or advisory role with any member of the Gaddafi family or
Libyan company. But the former prime minister, who now runs an advisory
business called Tony Blair Associates, has since leaving office travelled to
Tripoli on business for JPMorgan Chase, the US bank – and met Col Gaddafi as
recently as last summer. Saif al-Islam, one of the Libyan leader’s sons, has
been a regular figure on the London business and social circuit.

Other close links exist between former UK government figures and Libya. Sir
Mark Allen, the former MI6 officer widely credited with negotiating Col
Gaddafi’s volte-face, later went to work for BP. Robin Lamb and Oliver
Miles, who both served in the UK embassy in Tripoli, are leading figures in
the trade promotion body, the Libyan British Business Council. Baroness
Symons, a Foreign Office minister in the Blair government, is a paid member
of the National Economic Development Board of Libya.

. . .

There have also been repeated indications of how serving British ministers
and officials have been keen to accommodate Libya. The most striking is the
saga of Abdel Basset al-Megrahi, the Lockerbie bomber, who was returned to
Libya in August 2009. A government inquiry this month judged that the last
Labour government had done “all it could’’ to help secure his release from a
Scottish jail.

However, leaked US cables give insight into UK enthusiasm for working with
the regime. Last year, Sir Vincent Fean, while UK ambassador to Libya, urged
US diplomats to engage with the leader’s family. “We need to work with what
we have in Libya and you shouldn’t be frightened by the name Gaddafi. It
goes with the territory,” Sir Vincent is reported as saying. On the same
occasion, he told a group of diplomats: “It’s our job to deliver what
[Libya] can absorb, which means starting engagement on their terms.”

In all of this, there is no allegation that any UK figure is guilty of legal
wrongdoing. In the meantime, those who promoted the relationship stand by
their actions. “I deplore the military action against unarmed civilian
protesters,” says Lord Trefgarne, a former government minister who now
chairs the Libyan British Business Council. “But hindsight is a wonderful
thing. Nobody for one moment imagined that what has happened in recent days
was going to happen.”

Mr Straw, too, is unrepentant. “Libya has oil and so do other countries
whose regimes we would not voluntarily choose,” he says. “The world needs
energy and the simple truth is that if we had been more fastidious in our
approach, then other countries – notably China – would have moved in to take
our place.”

Still, as they watch the mayhem in Tripoli this weekend on their
televisions, there will be those who find this argument wanting. Convincing
Col Gaddafi to give up his WMD may have been an achievement. But for many
politicians, the enthusiasm with which he was feted by Britain, Italy,
France and other states is troubling.

As Sir Menzies says: “There was certainly a need for some hard-headed
engagement ... and that can be accepted. But the extent to which the Libyan
leader was embraced and endorsed by many people in recent times now looks
very foolish.”
.Copyright The Financial Times Limited 2011. You may share using our article
tools. Please don't 
.


________________________________________________
Send list submissions to: Marxism@greenhouse.economics.utah.edu
Set your options at: 
http://greenhouse.economics.utah.edu/mailman/options/marxism/archive%40mail-archive.com

Reply via email to