📄 Extracted Text (802 words)
Europe courts new Libyan government
in Paris
Robert Marquand Staff writer The Christian Science Monitor I Sep 01. 2011
Today's conference on Libya, hosted in Paris by French President Nicolas Sarkozy and
British Prime Minister David Cameron, introduces Libyan rebel leaders to an
international gathering in an effort to establish their legitimacy and to release frozen
Libyan assets abroad.
It may more largely signal a "new relationship" between Europe and North Africa, with
French diplomats stressing an emphasis on "listening" and trying to eclipse the post-
colonial legacy of European states that long teamed up with Arab autocrats toppled
during the Arab Spring.
In practical terms, the meeting in Paris this evening is all about "transition" — especially
at a sensitive moment when the rebel effort could still go badly or fail, French diplomats
say. The main issue: How can a country ruled for 42 years by an autocrat transform
itself into a democracy in a stable fashion?
Yet after six months of what often seemed an inconclusive war, it is also a moment of
quiet celebration in Paris and London after a European summer of debt crisis, riots, and
uncertainty.
The gathering follows a March 19 Paris conference that agreed to launch airstrikes to
save rebels in the eastern Libyan city of Benghazi, and it takes place with fighting still
underway and Muammar Qaddafi still at large.
Paris hosts refashioned the event as "Friends of Libya" to include nations like Russia,
China, and Germany that did not participate in the air campaign or were critical of it.
National Transitional Council (NTC) members Mustafa Abdul Jalil and Mahmoud Jibril
are expected to talk about a road map to democracy with 60 delegations, 13 heads of
state, UN chief Ban Ki-moon, and US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton.
Page I 1 of 3
EFTA01103695
Avoiding the chaos of postwar Iraq in 2004 is a strong undercurrent here. Indeed, the
NATO-led Libya venture, unlike the Iraq war, is seen in Paris as a correct example of
"humanitarian intervention" — sanctioned by the UN Security Council, backed by a
genuine uprising, and launched to save lives.
Not lost on anyone is that Libya is not impoverished, but a rich oil country with a small
population. Libyan bank foreign reserves prior to the war are estimated at $107 billion;
gold reserves now top $9 billion. Libyan sovereign wealth is $70 billion. Qaddafi family
holdings range from at least $50 billion to possibly $180 billion. Libya's population is 6.4
million.
"The NATO countries will get their money back, and much more. They know this," says
Paris-based Middle East expert Karim Emile Bitar. "The danger is an Iraq-style messy
transition ... massive corruption, mysterious deals, unaccountable contractors."
The NTC has requested an immediate release of $5 billion in frozen assets to pay for
needs ranging from payroll to food and humanitarian aid. The UN has given a green
light for the release of some $1.6 billion in the UK and some $1.5 billion in the U.S.
Canada announced it is readying a similar amount and France wants to unfreeze about
$2 billion by the end of the week, according to Le Figaro. Germany is waiting on the UN
sanctions committee for a release of $1.4 billion.
Reports today from Elysees Palace officials suggest that France desires to delay a new
UN resolution canceling sanctions and allowing a complete unfreezing of assets,
arguing that airstrikes conducted under previous Resolution 1973 are still under way.
Libya will be forming a new governing structure over the top of its old despotic
structures, analysts say. The ideal balance for the international community is to assist
with new civil structures, but without colonial-style meddling or salacious profiteering.
UN agencies on the ground have started with aid. But prominent groups from the two
Libyan poles of Tripoli and Benghazi (see map) will be urged to cooperate and work out
modes of authority for the string of towns and tribes between western and eastern
Libya, and in the south.
Page 12 of 3
EFTA01103696
A key question not likely to be answered today: How far can the new NTC realistically
go without needing or using elements of the old Qaddafi system?
Whether France and Europe more largely can develop a new relationship and new
habits regarding Arab states is seen here as a promise. A fresh approach will require
humility, an opening of markets, and a better attitude towards minorities, writes Vincent
Giret, the editor of Liberation on the eve of the meeting:
"After years of erring, and connivance with the most authoritarian regimes of the south
Mediterranean, France is finally on the side of history.... France can lay the milestones
of a great Arab policy it has always dreamed of, often with grandiloquence and too
much hypocrisy."
***** ****
Page 13 of 3
EFTA01103697
ℹ️ Document Details
SHA-256
0081f23106d6d0a98c3f0c11a81ad8a8aceb7e66a0e9d7a5ccb9af404ce8ebbe
Bates Number
EFTA01103695
Dataset
DataSet-9
Document Type
document
Pages
3
Comments 0