*Will Seif al Islam Lead the Expulsion of the ISIS Affiliate, Al Fajr
Libya?*



by FRANKLIN LAMB

*With the Abu Baker al-Siddiq Brigade, Zintan, Libya*


 A second interview by this observer with Seif al Islam Gadhafi, formerly
the heir apparent to his father Moammar, was sought and finally arranged as
a follow up to an earlier one focusing of my interest in the Imam Musa Sadr
case. That case involves a great crime against a great man and conciliator
and his historic cause, and exposes those who betrayed him in Lebanon and
two other countries while swearing their personal devotion and shedding
crocodile tears over the past 36 years. That research is nearing completion
and publication awaits DNA results from body samples more credible than the
ones offered by the Bosnia laboratory two years ago and immediately
demonstrated to be fraudulent. The story of why that particular lab was
chosen and by who goes to the essence of the current stonewalling campaign
with respect to informing the public about what exactly happened to Imam
Sadr and his partners on 8/3l/1978 in Tripoli, Libya. It also identifies
who instructed Gadhafi to kill them over the strong objections from the
PLO’s Yassir Arafat who spoke with Gadhafi and tried to save the trio of
Lebanese Shia.


But our discussion soon turned to other subject as Seif’s jailers may have
taken seriously my joke that if they extended the original 20 minutes I was
granted to two hours, I would deliver to them 10 US Visas and they could
fill in any names the might choose. Truth told, of course I could not even
get myself a passport renewal as former US Ambassador Jeffrey Feltman
reportedly sneered at a US Embassy Christmas party a few years back, “Lamb
will serve ten years hard time in the Feds for hobnobbing with terrorists
(Hezbollah in those days…who knows today?) when we get him back home.” I
admit that Jeff and I both have a problem with Hezbollah. His is because
Hezbollah just may liberate Palestine and mine is that Hezbollah needs to
do more in Lebanon and use 90 minutes of Parliament’s time, where it has
the power, to grant Palestinian refugees in Lebanon the right to work and
to own a home.


Meanwhile, Da’ish (IS) is metastasizing fast in Libya through its main
affiliate al Fajr Libya (Libya Dawn) and plans to add Tripoli, to its
Islamic Caliphate along with Baghdad, Damascus, Amman and Beirut during the
coming months and if necessary, years. This, according to Seif al Islam and
representatives of the Zintan brigades based southwest of Tripoli as well
as two representatives of other tribes and militia moving toward supporting
the still vital Gadhafi regime remnants.


Libya may be the lowest hanging ripe fruit within easy reach of Da’ish (IS)
and its growing number of affiliates, according to US Ambassador Deborah
Jones during a recent visit to the US Embassy in Malta, to discuss her own
problems in Libya which include the 8/31/14 take-over by al Fajr Libya (FL)
of the US embassy compound barely a month after it was evacuated and moved
to Tunisia for the second time since February of 2011. Secretary of State
John Kerry reassured the media in Washington recently that “the embassy was
not really closed, but had moved out of Libya”. One Religion Professor at
Tripoli University joked last week that “Kerry is correct, the US embassy
is here but it’s in a state of occultation. We can’t see it but it’s around
and watches us.” A Libyan photographer who was at the embassy compound when
Al Fajr Libya (FL) arrived reported that the Da’ish (IS) affiliate had
moved into buildings inside the embassy complex claiming that they would
‘protect it’ as they carted off boxes of documents for ‘safe keeping.’ FL
is described by a former Dean at Tripoli U. as between al Nusra and Da’ish
(IS) with a fragile partnership between the two and presenting to the
public “A Good cop-Bad cop tag-team with differences to be worked out once
all the infidels are vanquished.


Libya, as with the Arab Maghreb, is on the cusp of a new wave of Islamist
groups, and is moving beyond al-Qaeda of Bin Laden, Zawahiri, and
Abdelmalek Droukdel, to Baghdadi’s ISIS and its widely perceived logical
offshoot ISIM being planted in North Africa and the Sahel. The threat of
the Da’ish (Islamic State is already deeply anchored and expanding in the
now lawless Libya, according to UN envoy Bernardino León. Several Libyan
organizations recently announced their loyalty to IS leader Abu Bakr
Al-Baghdadi. This has confirmed a speculation that IS has penetrated Libyan
public institutions. The Ansar al-Sharia group, affiliated with ISIS, has
declared authority during the last several days over the coastal city of
Darna which is located strategically between Benghazi and the Egyptian
border – just 289 km (179 miles) and 333 km (206 miles), respectively.


Countless militia are forming, merging, changing names and lying low as
perceived interests dictate. Soldiers of the Caliphate in Algeria was
retitled, revitalized and repackaged to enhance its appeal on social media
as has the Furqan Brigade of the AQIM in Tunisia. Ansar Al-Sharia is
another one becoming very active.The Uqba bin Nafi Brigade, has just
declared allegiance to ISIS as has the Islamic Caliphate in the Islamic
Maghreb. al-Ummah Brigade, which operates out of Libyan coasts and
airports, another is Al-Battar is attracting pro-ISIS elements. Majlis
Shura Shabab al-Islam (the Islamic Youth Shura Council), or MSSI. According
to Libyan sources and journalist Adam al-Sabiri, writing in Al Akbar, Abu
Bakr al-Baghdadi asked these elements to deploy to the Libyan front to
counter the attacks by the Libyan army led by Khalifa Haftar as part of
Operation Dignity seeking to “purge Libya of terrorists.”


Libyan friends, some from three years ago, advise that more people have
been killed in the past three years than during the 2011 revolution and
they now fear a Somalia-like “failed state” given all the weapons,
lawlessness, and growing number of Islamists. The South of Libya has not
been spared the lawlessness, as tribal battles continue for control of a
lucrative smuggling trade. Friends point out that the country no longer
even bothers to celebrate the National Holiday commemorating the 10/23/2011
“total liberation of Libya.” “It’s a cruel joke” my friend Hinde advised as
she explains that many Libyans yearn for the stability of the Gadhafi days.
“Maybe wanting to turn the clock back is the same in Iraq and Egypt and
Syria?” she wondered.

“The rampant regional, ideological and tribal conflicts are worse than the
rule of the dictator,” said Salah Mahmud al-Akuri, a doctor in Benghazi.
“Some Libyans are looking back to the old regime.”


Amidst all the chaos, Libyan Prime Minister Abdullah Al-Thinni claimed last
week that groups loyal to the IS, such as al Fajr Libya, are presently in
control of the city of Derna and other Libyan towns and have begun
summoning townspeople to public squares to witness declarations of fealty
to Da’ish (IS), even beginning their signature public executions. Libya’s
“government” claims that its “army” is preparing to expel Fajr Libya (FL)
and retake the capital, as more militia rush to join FL. Prime Minister
Abdullah al-Thani’s said in a statement this week that he gave orders to
the government forces to “advance toward Tripoli to liberate it and to free
it from the grip of al Fajr Libya”. The Libyan embassy in Washington told a
House Foreign Affairs committee staffer that they expect that residents in
Tripoli will launch “a civil disobedience campaign until the arrival of the
army.” Walking around the former “Green Square” this observer saw no signs
of this rather he observed citizens stocking up on necessities or packing
their cars. Later, Thani added, military forces in the strife-torn country
“have absolutely united to also recapture Libya’s second city Benghazi from
the local IS affiliate, al Fajr Liyba (FL). Leading one to wonder whether
the Libyan “army” will fare better than Maliki’s did in Mosul and Anbar.


According to students and staff at Tripoli University, (known as Fatah
University during the Gadhafi decades) a few of whom this observer first
met in the summer of 2011, and who lived the political events in their
country since while some of their friends and relatives, as in Iraq, Syria
and Lebanon, are preparing to leave and start a new life somewhere. Hasan,
a Gadhafi supporter I was with nearly daily three years ago in Tripoli
still curses what, “NATO| did this to our country. The Gadhafi regime was
changing as you know Franklin, but the reformers were prevented from making
the changes that Seif al Islam and his associates got their father to agree
to. Remember when Saif said “My father wants to live in a tent where he is
most happy and write a history of the Jamahiriya (land of the masses). He
will offer advice but have just a ceremonial role out of politics? You
remember that? We believed Seif didn’t we?. Anyhow, khalas!, Libya is
finished! NATO gave it to Da’ish just as they gave Afghanistan, Iraq and
Syria to Iran.”


Libya is now moving beyond al-Qaeda of Bin Laden, Zawahiri, and Abdelmalek
Droukdel, to Baghdadi’s ISIS and its widely perceived logical offshoot
Islamic State in the Islamic Maghreb (ISIM-Damis) now expanding in North
Africa and the Sahel. Former rebels who fought against Gadhafi have formed
powerful militias and seized control of large parts of Libya in the past
three years. Back in mid-august of 2011, the late American journalist Marie
Colvin and I stood on the balcony of the Corinthia Hotel opposites the
still empty Marriott where some kid was practicing sniping from the roof,
at my expense, as I pointed out to Marie a body floating just off the beach
of the Mediterranean across the road. We walked over and examined it and
decided while it was dressed in religious garb the man may have been an
army deserter; there were increasing numbers in those days, because of his
military style boots. We alerted some militia guys driving along the
corniche who said they would report the body and before long an ambulance
did arrive. Two of the militia waded out waist deep and pulled in the
bloated body to shore, unlaced his tan leather boots while holding their
noses from the stench. They then threw the new boots in the back of their
pick-up and drove off with no more than a smiling ‘shukran habibis’ (thanks
dears). Later that day Marie and I counted a column of 143 pickups with
AK-47 jubilant fist waving rebels entering along the coastal road toward
downtown Tripoli having come from battles in the east around Misrata. In
the next few days we discussed how there seemed to be countless
‘free-cigarettes, $200 on the first of each month and your personal
Kalasnikov’ militia popping up like mushrooms after a summer rain. Three
years ago one of their battle cries was “Death to Gadafi—Yes to Freedom!”
Today one hears around Tripoli another slogan from the lips of young men
many of whom may be the same, chanting, “Death to the kafirs
(disbelievers,” or infidels) Yes to Islam!Abas (that’s all!”

Seif el Islam still resides at his cell in Zintan which, even though jail
is jail, has been upgraded from when he was captured in the Sahara making
his way toward Niger and his finger was cut off as a warning.


Seif, has proposed talks and is ready to participate in bringing together
Libya’s warring parties and aiding the transition to what he claims he was
working on before the February 17, 2011 uprising in Benzhazi which quickly
spread. Seif’s team would likely include his father’s cousin and confident
Ahmed Gaddaf al-Dam, former Deputy Foreign Minister Khaled Kane, long-time
Libyan diplomat, the widely respected Omar el Hamdi now is Cairo, and
Seif’s sister Aisha, now living with his mother and children in the Gulf.


Seif has no illusions of returning Libya to the past, but argues that
elements of the former regime deserved to be heard. “We were in the process
of making broad reforms and my father gave me the responsibly to see them
through. Unfortunately the revolt happened and both sides made mistakes
that are now allowing extreme Islamist group like Da’ish to pick up the
pieces and turn Libya into an extreme fundamentalist entity in their
regional plans.”


With respect to Seifs trials, whether ins the Tripoli courthouse or at the
International Criminal Court in the Hague, the odds of either happening
anytime soon, ior at all, are fading as negotiations for an arrangement are
reportedly progressing.

A solution is being sought, according to sources at the Justice Ministry in
Tripoli because there are many problems with Seifs case which was supposed
to begin earlier this year, and the case has been criticized by a number of
international actors. Not least for which how Libya and the ICC have
handled their cases. For example, Human Rights Watch has accused the Libyan
government of failing to provide adequate legal representation and the ICC
it has been unable to compel the Libyan government to allow it access —
just one of many challenges to the ICC’s legitimacy in recent years.
Meanwhile it is likely that Seif’s jailers, who increasing respects and
admires him, may have other ideas that would enhance their own standing in
Libya. In addition, certain NATO countries are said to be privately
discussing with Washington, Paris London and Bonn the idea of finding a
role for Seif and certain of his associates and family members in “the new
Libya.”


According to Seif, and former regime officials, several NATO countries have
sent messages claiming they did not intend for his father to be killed but
were searching during the summer of 2011 for a refuge for his father in
Africa. Seif does not believe them.


Seif al Islam still has substantial influence among tribes still loyal to
Gaddafi as well as former regime officials in the army and government. The
delegation Seif could assemble, including Ahmad Gadaff al-Dam, would
benefit from the latter’s still strong connections with Arab governments,
Morocco, Egypt, Algeria, Saudi Arabia and the UAE as well as some European
countries.


More on this and other subjects related to Seif and the growing
international recognition over the need for expulsion of Islamists from
Libya, and a possible significant role for Seif, are expected to be
discussed publicly soon.


*Franklin Lamb** is a visiting Professor of International Law at the
Faculty of Law, Damascus University and volunteers with the Sabra-Shatila
Scholarship Program (**sssp-lb.com* <http://sssp-lb.com/>*). He is
reachable c/ofpl...@gmail.com <ofpl...@gmail.com>*
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