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A CIA
commander For The Libyan Rebels: Hifter’s Arrival In
Benghazi
01 April 2011 By Patrick Martin
The Libyan National Council, the Benghazi-based group
that speaks for the rebel forces fighting the Gaddafi
regime, has appointed a long-time CIA collaborator to
head its military operations. The selection of Khalifa
Hifter, a former colonel in the Libyan army, was
reported by McClatchy Newspapers Thursday and the new
military chief was interviewed by a correspondent for
ABC News on Sunday night.
Hifter’s arrival in Benghazi was first reported by Al
Jazeera on March 14, followed by a flattering portrait
in the virulently pro-war British tabloid the Daily
Mail on March 19. The Daily Mail described Hifter as
one of the “two military stars of the revolution” who
“had recently returned from exile in America to lend
the rebel ground forces some tactical coherence.” The
newspaper did not refer to his CIA connections.
McClatchy Newspapers published a profile of Hifter on
Sunday. Headlined “New Rebel Leader Spent Much of Past
20 years in Suburban Virginia,” the article notes that
he was once a top commander for the Gaddafi regime,
until “a disastrous military adventure in Chad in the
late 1980s.”
Hifter then went over to the anti-Gaddafi opposition,
eventually emigrating to the United States, where he
lived until two weeks ago when he returned to Libya to
take command in Benghazi.
The McClatchy profile concluded, “Since coming to the
United States in the early 1990s, Hifter lived in
suburban Virginia outside Washington, DC.” It cited a
friend who “said he was unsure exactly what Hifter did
to support himself, and that Hifter primarily focused
on helping his large family.”
To those who can read between the lines, this profile
is a thinly disguised indication of Hifter’s role as a
CIA operative. How else does a high-ranking former
Libyan military commander enter the United States in
the early 1990s, only a few years after the Lockerbie
bombing, and then settle near the US capital, except
with the permission and active assistance of US
intelligence agencies? Hifter actually lived in
Vienna, Virginia, about five miles from CIA
headquarters in Langley, for two decades.
The agency was very familiar with Hifter’s military
and political work. A Washington Post report of March
26, 1996 describes an armed rebellion against Gaddafi
in Libya and uses a variant spelling of his name. The
article cites witnesses to the rebellion who report
that “its leader is Col. Khalifa Haftar, of a
contra-style group based in the United States called
the Libyan National Army.”
The comparison is to the “contra” terrorist forces
financed and armed by the US government in the 1980s
against the Sandinista government in Nicaragua. The
Iran-Contra scandal, which rocked the Reagan
administration in 1986-87, involved the exposure of
illegal US arms sales to Iran, with the proceeds used
to finance the contras in defiance of a congressional
ban. Congressional Democrats covered up the scandal
and rejected calls to impeach Reagan for sponsoring
the flagrantly illegal activities of a cabal of former
intelligence operatives and White House aides.
A 2001 book, Manipulations africaines, published by Le
Monde diplomatique, traces the CIA connection even
further back, to 1987, reporting that Hifter, then a
colonel in Gaddafi’s army, was captured fighting in
Chad in a Libyan-backed rebellion against the
US-backed government of Hissène Habré. He defected to
the Libyan National Salvation Front (LNSF), the
principal anti-Gaddafi group, which had the backing of
the American CIA. He organized his own militia, which
operated in Chad until Habré was overthrown by a
French-supported rival, Idriss Déby, in 1990.
According to this book, “the Haftar force, created and
financed by the CIA in Chad, vanished into thin air
with the help of the CIA shortly after the government
was overthrown by Idriss Déby.” The book also cites a
Congressional Research Service report of December 19,
1996 that the US government was providing financial
and military aid to the LNSF and that a number of LNSF
members were relocated to the United States.
This information is available to anyone who conducts
even a cursory Internet search, but it has not been
reported by the corporate-controlled media in the
United States, except in the dispatch from McClatchy,
which avoids any reference to the CIA. None of the
television networks, busily lauding the “freedom
fighters” of eastern Libya, has bothered to report
that these forces are now commanded by a longtime
collaborator of US intelligence services.
Nor have the liberal and “left” enthusiasts of the
US-European intervention in Libya taken note. They are
too busy hailing the Obama administration for its
multilateral and “consultative” approach to war,
supposedly so different from the unilateral and
“cowboy” approach of the Bush administration in Iraq.
That the result is the same—death and destruction
raining down on the population, the trampling of the
sovereignty and independence of a former colonial
country—means nothing to these apologists for
imperialism.
The role of Hifter, aptly described 15 years ago as
the leader of a “contra-style group,” demonstrates the
real class forces at work in the Libyan tragedy.
Whatever genuine popular opposition was expressed in
the initial revolt against the corrupt Gaddafi
dictatorship, the rebellion has been hijacked by
imperialism.
The US and European intervention in Libya is aimed not
at bringing “democracy” and “freedom,” but at
installing in power stooges of the CIA who will rule
just as brutally as Gaddafi, while allowing the
imperialist powers to loot the country’s oil resources
and use Libya as a base of operations against the
popular revolts sweeping the Middle East and North
Africa.
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