What Will Libya Look Like?

Posted By Ben Shapiro On August 24, 2011 

Reportage surrounding Libya suggests that everything will be sweetness and
light once sadistic madman Col. Muammar Qaddafi is ousted permanently.
"Who, today, does not thrill to the spectacle of freedom in Tripoli?" asks
Fouad Ajami in the pages of the Wall Street Journal.  "A brave people,
civilians in the main, exiles who returned to their devastated country,
students with no military skills - all headed to the front in their pickup
trucks to reclaim their homeland from a tyrant who had turned it into a
laboratory for his mix of megalomania and derangement.  These are the people
who have made this rebellion."

Really?  Is that who they are?  Ajami himself seems to doubt it.  "There is
no way that a blanket assertion can be made that this massive Libyan
upheaval is free of Islamists," he admits.  His only evidence to the
contrary is "the more compelling evidence of the rebellion itself - its
composition, the earnestness of the professionals and civil libertarians
active in it, their promise that the terrible autocrat will not be replaced
by a zealous, unforgiving theocracy."

Sparse evidence indeed, and a promise unlikely to be kept, particularly when
the first purported draft constitution for the reconstituted Libya centers
around the primacy of Islamic law.  The document has all of the flowery
buzzwords the foreign press loves to focus upon: "justice, equality .
progress and prosperity."  But the first General Provision of the draft
constitution reads, "Islam is the Religion of the State and the principal
source of legislation is Islamic Jurisprudence (Shariah)."  Article 8 of the
draft Constitution is purely socialist in nature: "The State shall further
guarantee the fair distribution of national wealth among citizens, and among
the different cities and districts thereof."  Article 10 guarantees the
"right of asylum" - a right that has been used by Libya in the past to
protect murderers like the Lockerbie bomber.

Forgive me if I do not "thrill" to the spectacle of such "freedom." 

We were supposed to thrill to the spectacle of Egyptian freedom, too.
Instead, Egypt has been largely in thrall to the Muslim Brotherhood since
the ousting of Hosni Mubarak, and is now involved in border skirmishes with
Israel.  Egyptians in Cairo have scaled the Israeli embassy and ripped down
the Israeli flag.  One Egyptian presidential candidate sent a "salute of
pride" to the "public hero who burned the Zionist flag that spoiled the
Egyptian air for 30 years."  Egypt has since been funneling weapons and
supplies into the Gaza Strip.  Is this the freedom we were supposed to
cheer? 

And what of Tunisia?  Everyone seemed endlessly enthusiastic about the
deposing of secular dictator Zine el-Abidine Ben Ali.  Now, we hear nothing
about progress in that powerful source of the so-called Arab Spring.  Prime
Minister Beji Caid Essebsi took over for Ben Ali, but Tunisians believe he
is a representative of the old guard - and now it looks as though there is a
serious shot that Ennahda, an Islamist political party, will win the next
open election.  Says one Ennahda opponent, with Ennahda in power, "It would
be Iran."  Ennahda pays lip service to openness and moderation, and the
world press seems to have bought the line - but that doesn't mean there's
any evidence at all for it.  Ibrahim Letaief, a radio host in Tunisia, says,
"They're doing doublespeak, and everyone knows it."  According to the New
York Times, Letaief says Ennahda "has only tempered its rhetoric in a bid to
win votes, but in power would impose strict Islamic law."

Should Muammar Qaddafi have been left in power?  Of course not.  But the
fault here lies with the Obama Administration, which did nothing to find US
allies in Libya and forward their agenda, rather than following the chaos
from behind and dropping bombs from on high.  The Obama Administration chose
the same path in Egypt, and the result has been their strong move towards
Islamism; the Obama Administration did the same thing in Tunisia, and now
they too stand on the brink.  Should we find comfort in the idea that the
Obama Administration is now calling for the ouster of Syria's President
Bashar Assad?  If past history is any indicator, Assad will be replaced by
someone even worse.

There are three real victims in all of this.  The first is the moderates in
these countries, who fight for their freedom, only to fall victim to the
well-organized Muslim Brotherhood-backed movements that usually take power.
They simply transition from life under tyranny to life under more strict
Islamist tyranny.  The second group of victims is the world markets, which
are now subject to the oil whims of Islamists.  The third group is the
Israelis, who are the scapegoat for all Islamist racism and ire, and whom
the first two groups are only too happy to blame for all of their problems.

So, should we celebrate with Ajami?  Not yet.  After all, Iran once had a
revolution, too.  Not every revolution is the American revolution.  In fact,
very few are, and none have been in the Muslim world.

  _____  

Article printed from FrontPage Magazine: http://frontpagemag.com

URL to article:
http://frontpagemag.com/2011/08/24/what-will-libya-look-like/

 



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