ANALYSIS | Lessons learned in Libya - Action News
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ANALYSIS | Lessons learned in Libya

Just what is the lesson the Arab world takes away from former Libyan leader Moammar Gadhafi's fall from power, and death? The CBC's Nahlah Ayed examines the issue.
A revolutionary fighter celebrates in the captured town of Sirte, Libya. (Associated Press)

It was one thing for the Arab world to watch as two of its strongmen were ousted by popular protest within weeks of each other. That was shocking enough.

Its been quite another to watch a third by far the most brutal of them bloodied, battered, and then dead; his body later displayed like a trophy and photographed by dozens for posterity.

You can be certain though that the gruesome images of Moammar Gadhafis final moments have been contemplated by many in the Middle East with grim satisfaction. And it isnt only because he has long been viewed as a lunatic and an embarrassment to the region as a whole.

It is also because the Arab people have been largely sympathetic to the uprisings that have swept the region, not least that of the Libyans. No surprise, most of them can relate to the motives behind the revolts: they too have had to live with the utter lack of freedom, authoritarian cruelty, and economic stagnation that come with autocratic, Arab despotism.

And just like the Libyans were inspired by their neighbours' ousting of their leaders, others still fighting for their freedom will be inspired by Gadhafis ghastly demise.

Added to the fall of the regimes in Egypt and Tunisia, you can just imagine the hope it all brings for whats possible in their own countries. Almost instantly after the news broke, Syrians active online dispatched congratulations to the Libyans, praying that their turn was next.

"Youve had your day of justice. We hope ours will come soon," said one tweet.

It is the kind of inspiration that George W. Bush's administration had hoped for in the wake of Saddam Husseins capture, but didn't get.

Though many Iraqis celebrated at the time, it was still Americans who "got him." And in a region wildly sensitive to foreign read Western intervention, that did not sit well. And neither did Bush's insistence that Iraq's liberation was the start of an "Arab spring."

There was foreign intervention in Libyas case too, you might argue. And it may be that NATO bombs are what won the day. Yet there were few cries of foul.

Because it was Libyans who asked for that intervention, repeatedly, and insisted that it come from the skies, and not on the ground as in Iraqs case. And only after thousands of them kept coming back to face Gadhafis aircraft and 14 mm bullets in Benghazi, and only after they had first liberated that city themselves.

And, one might add, only after several key defections, including the first, that of Mustapha abd al Jalil. Once Gadhafis justice minister, he went on to form the National Transitional Council, the body which unified the anti- Gadhafi voice at the time, and called on the world to save Benghazi from annihilation.

So if the Libyans themselves hadnt risen up in the first place, NATO wouldnt have considered intervening, and Gadhafi would almost certainly still be alive and in charge.

A valuable lesson

Thats the lesson the Arab world takes away from Gadhafis fall, and its a valuable one.

Many if not most in the Arab world likely believe it was the Libyans who 'got' Moammar Gadhafi. (Associated Press)

Many if not most in the Arab world likely believe it was the Libyans who "got" Gadhafi.

In those pictures he was surrounded by Libyan fighters, not foreign troops. It is precisely the image if not the exact circumstances that both the NTC and NATO wanted right from the start, to avoid the Iraq mistake and the baggage that came with that.

Among Arabs those nuances count for a lot. And so those images will undoubtedly breathe new life into the flagging uprisings in Syria and Yemen. They will also give pause to the autocrats who still rule them.

Arab editorials in today's papers openly wondered who would be next in what they now willingly call the Arab Spring, and what might be on the minds of the possible candidates as they watched Gadhafis final moments.

It is a very different Arab world than it was when Saddam was caught. This Arab Spring, sparked singlehandedly by a desperate Tunisian young man, is all about people, and therefore legitimate in the eyes of most of the region. The old rules lurk behind the scenes, but they are weakening as the people continue to press for substantive change.

Even in countries where there has been no large scale protest, old regimes have clamoured to introduce change. Saudi Arabia would not have given women the right to vote and run in municipal elections without the Arab revolts. Jordan has had two governments resign in the span of months in the name of introducing reform.

A messy affair

The Arab Spring has been a messy affair, and it will continue to be, and in some countries, spring may never come. But in each of those countries where it has or will, it unfolds differently as evidenced by those affected so far and with different speeds and efficacy.

Having world powers on your side certainly seems to help--whether it's moral or military. In future, other revolutions may or may not involve foreign intervention, and we may yet see an example that involves only regional intervention, without the involvement of Western powers.

But the one common, requisite ingredient in all of them has been a willing people. People who have broken the barrier of fear, who refuse to remain silent even after they might have managed to fell longstanding regimes, as in Egypt's case.

After now watching three strongmen fall in successively higher degrees of humiliation, you can bet the continuing uprisings will have a renewed momentum.

There are people who are still very willing and determined to bring about change, even oust their own leaders, complicated and as deadly fraught as it might be. Its just a matter of how they will make it happen.