How Al-Qaeda Got to Rule in Tripoli
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Journal Du Qatar Dossier N° 1 Du 25.12.11
PALESTINE – SOLIDARITÉ http://www.palestine-solidarite.org Journal du Qatar Dossier N° 1 du 25.12.11 Par C.De Broeder & M.Lemaire a) Le "Journal d'Iran " est visible sur les blogs : http://journaldeguerre.blogs.dhnet.be/ http://journauxdeguerre.blogs.lalibre.be/ b) sur le site de Eva Resis : no-war.over-blog.com c) sur le site de Robert Bibeau : http://www.robertbibeau.ca/palestine.html d) Et sur le site Palestine Solidarité : NB : Si vous voulez-me contacter ou obtenir le Journal par mail une seule adresse : [email protected] Sommaire. Tiré à part Badis Guettaf : Libye : la «victoire occidentale» du Qatar. Sami Kleib : La vérité sur les visées inquiétantes du Qatar et des puissances occidentales. 1 Médias & Manipulation de l’opinion / Vidéos 1-1 H. Z : Al-Jazeera n’est pas une voix indépendante de l’Amérique ! 2 Les dosser & point de vue 2-1 Mounir Abi : Les manœuvres du Qatar en Algérie. 3 Courrier des lecteurs & trouvé sur le net & témoignage. 3-1 France: un fonds qatari de 50 millions d’euros pour les entrepreneurs de banlieue… 3-2 Parti Anti Sioniste : Le Qatar lorgne sur les banlieues françaises... Pourquoi ? 4 Analyse - Géopolitique et stratégie – Réflexion 4-1 Fatma Benmosbah : Les pérégrinations Qataries en Afrique du Nord. 5 Annexe 5-1 Rappel : Arnaud Castaignet : Libye: après l'OTAN le Qatar. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Tiré à part Badis Guettaf : Libye : la «victoire occidentale» du Qatar. Si l’on en croit les médias, (car quand il ne s’agit pas de faire la guerre il leur arrive de donner de l’information), le Qatar ferait cavalier seul en Libye. -
«Libya Al-Mostakbal»
TUNISIA Tripoli Derna Zawiya Misrata Tobruk Zintan Zliten Marj Bayda Gherian Benghazi Bani Walid Sirte The West The East LIBYA Mapping Libya’s Factions A project by the Middle East and North Africa Programme at the European Council on Foreign Relations EGYPT Author: Mary Fitzgerald ALGERIA Design maps: Laura Canali NIGER CHAD SUDAN Designed by Laura Canali www.lauracanali.com POLITICOS 1. Two camps, two governments, two parliaments TUNISIA Tripoli Derna Zawiya 2. Who is in charge? Misrata Tobruk Zintan Zliten Marj Bayda Gherian Benghazi 3. Islamists and anti-Islamists Bani Walid Sirte ARMED GROUPS The West The East 1. Benghazi LIBYA 2. The East Understanding the fault lines of Libya’s turmoil requires moving beyond the one-dimensional narratives peddled by various actors in the conict. All have an interest in spinning certain 3. The West tropes about the crisis, painting it either as Islamists versus “liberals” or self-proclaimed “revolutionaries” versus former regime elements trying to stage a comeback. Others hold that 4. Derna & ISIS the ghting is primarily driven by tribal rivalries or regional power plays like that between Zintan and Misrata in the west and federalists and their opponents in the east. In fact, all of these EGYPT elements are present to various degrees in Libya’s unraveling, but none overrides the others as a dominant narrative. Power is diuse in Libya, and the two broad camps in the current crisis are built on loose and often shifting alliances of convenience drawn from a constellation of political and armed factions. The inuence of individual players, particularly political gures, ALGERIA can shift dramatically depending on the actions of armed groups on the ground. -
A Strategy for Success in Libya
A Strategy for Success in Libya Emily Estelle NOVEMBER 2017 A Strategy for Success in Libya Emily Estelle NOVEMBER 2017 AMERICAN ENTERPRISE INSTITUTE © 2017 by the American Enterprise Institute. All rights reserved. The American Enterprise Institute (AEI) is a nonpartisan, nonprofit, 501(c)(3) educational organization and does not take institutional positions on any issues. The views expressed here are those of the author(s). Contents Executive Summary ......................................................................................................................1 Why the US Must Act in Libya Now ............................................................................................................................1 Wrong Problem, Wrong Strategy ............................................................................................................................... 2 What to Do ........................................................................................................................................................................ 2 Reframing US Policy in Libya .................................................................................................. 5 America’s Opportunity in Libya ................................................................................................................................. 6 The US Approach in Libya ............................................................................................................................................ 6 The Current Situation -
Transitional Justice and Violent Extremism
i n s t i t u t e f o r i n t e g r at e d t r a n s i t i o n s Transitional Justice and Violent Extremism September 2020 About IFIT The Institute for Integrated Transitions (IFIT) aims to help fragile and conflict-affected states achieve more sustainable transitions out of war or authoritarianism by serving as an inde- pendent expert resource for locally-led efforts to improve political, economic, social and security conditions. IFIT seeks to transform current practice away from fragmented inter- ventions and toward more integrated solutions that strengthen peace, democracy and human rights in countries attempting to break cycles of conflict or repression. The ideas in this publication are informed by the diverse global experiences of IFIT’s Law and Peace Practice Group, whose members have had direct involvement in the negotia- tion of amnesty and accountability issues in over 20 countries. About the Project This publication is part of a project that aims to fill a major gap in policy making: the fail- ure to integrate lessons learnt and best practices from the field of transitional justice in relation to conflict resolution strategies with two kinds of unconventional armed actors: 1) “violent extremist” groups, such as jihadists; and 2) organised crime groups, such as mafia, gang networks and drug cartels. IFIT’s work on the former began in 2017 with the UN University Centre for Policy Research (UNU-CPR). The project was concerned with the fact that, to date, what has reigned is an overwhelmingly punitive and dragnet approach which, rather than helping address root causes and break cycles of resentment and vio- lence, instead risks renewing or reinforcing them. -
Download Clinton Email May Release/C05739890.Pdf
UNCLASSIFIED STATE DEPT. - PRODUCED TO HOUSE SELECT BENGHAZI COMM. U.S. Department of State SUBJECT TO AGREEMENT ON SENSITIVE INFORMATION & REDACTIONS. NO FOIA WAIVER. Case No. F-2015-04841 Doc No. C05739890 Date: 05/13/2015 RELEASE IN PART B6 From: Sidney Blumenthal B6 Sent Monday, August 27, 2012 6:36 PM To: Subject H: Intel, Libyan President, Sid Attachments: lirc memo Libya President 082711.dorx CONFIDENTIAL August 27, 2012 For: Hillary From: Ski Re: New President of Libya SOURCE: Sources with direct access to the Libyan National Transitional Council, as well as the highest levels of European Governments, and Western Intelligence and security services. 1. (Source Comment: As the new interim President of Libya Mohammed Yussef el Magariaf is determined to establish a democratic state based on Islamic principles. In the opinion of an extremely sensitive source, Magariaf sees this moment as the climax his entire life's work. Having first served deposed dictator Muammar al Qaddafi as a policy advisor and diplomat, in 1979 Magariaf became disenchanted with what he saw as the cult of personality that Qaddafi was building for himself while turning against the basic beliefs of the Islamist movement. Magariaf was member of the Egyptian Muslim Brotherhood in his student days and remains a devout Islamist intellectual, albeit one who believes that Islam can coexist and even work with the non-Muslim world, particularly the United States and Western Europe. This source also believes that Magariaf is convinced that Libya, with its great natural wealth, can become a leading player in North Africa, as well as the rest of the Islamic world. -
Although the Use of the Term Al Qaeda Remains Dubious and As I've Stated
KC & Associates Investigations Research Associates Quinault Valley Guns & Blades / Urban Escape & Evasion Course International Relations * Military * Terrorism * Business * Security www.kcandassociates.org [email protected] Kathleen Louise dePass Press Agent/Publicist .360.288.2652 Triste cosa es no tener amigos, pero más triste ha de ser no tener enemigos porque quién no tenga enemigos señal es de que no tiene talento que haga sombra, ni carácter que impresione, ni valor temido, ni honra de la que se murmure, ni bienes que se le codicien, ni cosa alguna que se le envidie. A sad thing it is to not have friends, but even sadder must it be not having any enemies; that a man should have no enemies is a sign that he has no talent to outshine others, nor character that inspires, nor valor that is feared, nor honor to be rumored, nor goods to be coveted, nor anything to be envied. -Jose Marti Briefing Paper Saudi Arabian nation-state involvement in 9/11 Attacks on WTC From the desk of Craig B Hulet? September 12, 2011 Saudi Arabian nation-state involvement in 9/11 Attacks on WTC/WTO By Craig B Hulet? Although the use of the term al Qaeda remains dubious and as I’ve stated many times it was never used prior to the 9/11 attacks in any diplomatic cable, declassified documents, state department travel warnings, nor anywhere else for that matter, one is forced into this paradigmatically useful term after ten years of that forced usage. And bearing this in mind and that it was not Ussamah Bin Laden who orchestrated 9/11, please allow the point to be taken here for making my argument, which is all we can do these days. -