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"...The secret of the uprising’s final days of success lay in a popular revolt 
in the working-class districts of the capital, which did most of the hard work 
of throwing off the rule of secret police and military cliques. It succeeded so 
well that when revolutionary brigades entered the city from the west, many 
encountered little or no resistance, and they walked right into the center of 
the capital...."
 
The main theme of Cole's article, written early this morning, is "10 myths" 
about Libya, including:
 
"6. Libya is not a real country and could have been partitioned between east 
and west.
Alexander Cockburn wrote,

“It requites no great prescience to see that this will all end up badly. 
Qaddafi’s failure to collapse on schedule is prompting increasing pressure to 
start a ground war, since the NATO operation is, in terms of prestige, like the 
banks Obama has bailed out, Too Big to Fail. Libya will probably be balkanized.”
I don’t understand the propensity of Western analysts to keep pronouncing 
nations in the global south “artificial” and on the verge of splitting up. It 
is a kind of Orientalism. All nations are artificial. Benedict Anderson dates 
the nation-state to the late 1700s, and even if it were a bit earlier, it is a 
new thing in history. Moreover, most nation-states are multi-ethnic, and many 
long-established ones have sub-nationalisms that threaten their unity. Thus, 
the Catalans and Basque are uneasy inside Spain, the Scottish may bolt Britain 
any moment, etc., etc. In contrast, Libya does not have any well-organized, 
popular separatist movements. It does have tribal divisions, but these are not 
the basis for nationalist separatism, and tribal alliances and fissures are 
more fluid than ethnicity (which is itself less fixed than people assume). 
Everyone speaks Arabic, though for Berbers it is the public language; Berbers 
were among the central Libyan heroes of the revolution, and will be rewarded 
with a more pluralist Libya...."
 
full: http://www.juancole.com/2011/08/top-ten-myths-about-the-libya-war.html 

                                          
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