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Is it Time to Revise U.S. Policy Toward Libya?
| Article
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15837 |
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Section : |
CURRENT ISSUES
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| Issue
Date : |
1 / 1989 |
2,887 Words |
| Author
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William H. Lewis William H. Lewis is director of security policy studies at
George Washington University. |
Muammar Qaddafi, the Libyan strongman with a messianic mission, continues to confound U.S. policymakers. Since time immemorial, the Libyan chieftain has been a thorn in the side of both fellow Arabs and Americans. An adventurer without scruples, he has supported terrorist and liberation forces worldwide, his most recent venture being the supply of advanced weaponry to the Irish Republican Army, which has launched murderous attacks against British forces in Northern Ireland and NATO Europe.
For the Reagan administration, the Qaddafi performance has been particularly galling. Since early 1981, Qaddafi has been viewed as public enemy number one. This led to the Gulf of Sidra incident in mid-1981, in which two Libyan aircraft were downed by U.S. Sixth Fleet F-14s, and Qaddafi's decision to form a defensive alliance with Ethiopia and the People's Democratic Republic of South Yemen, directed against the United States and its allies in northeast Africa.
The record of U.S.-Libyan relations has reflected undisguised animosity over the past eight years. The Reagan administration has responded with military support for the government of Chad and encouragement of Egyptian contingency plans to dispose of the Qaddafi regime. After these efforts misfired, former CIA Director William Casey subsidized sundry Libyan exile groups in an effort to overthrow the regime. Finally, in April 1986, after a series of military incidents and terrorist attacks, the president authorized bombing attacks against Tripoli and Benghazi.
Nevertheless Qaddafi survives, despite the perception by the Reagan administration that the Libyan colonel is not in a strong
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