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Theforeign relations ofLibya underMuammar Gaddafi (1969–2011) underwent much fluctuation and change. They were marked by severe tension with the West (especially the United States, although relations were normalised in the early 21st century prior to the2011 civil war) and by other national policies in the Middle East and Africa, including the Libyan government's financial and military support for numerous paramilitary and rebel groups.

Beginning in 1969, ColonelMuammar Gaddafi determinedLibya's foreign policy. His principal foreign policy goals were Arab unity, elimination ofIsrael, advancement of Islam, support forPalestinians, elimination of outside influence in the Middle East and Africa, and support for a range of "revolutionary" causes.
After the1969 coup d'état, U.S.-Libyan relations became increasingly strained.
Gaddafi closed American and British bases on Libyan territory and partiallynationalized all foreign oil and commercial interests in Libya.
Export controls on military equipment andcivil aircraft were imposed during the 1970s.
On 11 June 1972, Gaddafi announced that any Arab wishing to volunteer for Palestinian armed groups "can register his name at any Libyan embassy will be given adequate training for combat". He also promised financial support for attacks.[1][2][3] In response, the United States withdrew itsambassador.
Gaddafi played a key role in promoting the use of oilembargoes as a political weapon for challenging the West, hoping that an oil price rise and embargo in 1973 would persuade the West—especially the United States—to end support for Israel. Gaddafi rejected both Soviet communism and Western capitalism because he believed that communism was a violation against religion and capitalism was a violation against humanity.[4]
In 1973 theIrish Naval Service intercepted the vesselClaudia in Irish territorial waters, which carried Soviet arms from Libya to theProvisional IRA.[5][6]
In 1974, the Libyan Embassy in Rome provided financial assistance to assist the escape of Mario Tuti, a member of the neo-fascistOrdine Nero, following theItalicus Express bombing.[7]
During the mid-1970s, Gaddafi supported the unsuccessful attempts for anArgentinian nuclear weapons program, in the hope of acquiring advanced military technology for Libya.[7]
In 1976, he shelteredJosé López Rega, the leader of theArgentine Anticommunist Alliance death squad, following the1976 Argentine coup d'état.[7]
In 1976 after a series of terror attacks by the Provisional IRA, Gaddafi announced that "the bombs which are convulsing Britain and breaking its spirit are the bombs of Libyan people. We have sent them to the Irish revolutionaries so that the British will pay the price for their past deeds".[1]
Together withFidel Castro and otherCommunist leaders, Gaddafi supportedSoviet protegeMengistu Haile Mariam, the military ruler ofEthiopia,[8] who was later convicted for agenocide that killed hundreds of thousands.
Gaddafi funded many national liberation,communist andMaoist groups, including but not limited to; thePalestine Liberation Organization, theAfrican National Congress, theNational Patriotic Front of Liberia, theRevolutionary United Front in Sierra Leone, thePopular Front for the Liberation of Palestine, theBlack Panther Party,Euskadi Ta Askatasuna, theNew People's Army of the Philippines, theFRETILIN, thePolisario Front, theRed Brigades, theSandinista National Liberation Front, theTupamaros and theRed Army Faction.[9][10]
In October 1978, Gaddafisent Libyan troops to aidIdi Amin in theUganda–Tanzania War when Amin tried to annex the northernTanzanian province ofKagera, and Tanzania counterattacked. Amin lost the battle and later fled to exile in Libya, where he remained for almost a year.[11]
Libya also was one of the main supporters of thePolisario Front in the formerSpanish Sahara[citation needed] – a nationalist group dedicated to endingSpanish colonialism in the region. TheSahrawi Arab Democratic Republic (SADR) was proclaimed byPolisario on 28 February 1976, and Libyabegan to recognize the SADR as the legitimate government ofWestern Sahara starting 15 April 1980. It is still common forSahrawi students to attend their schooling in Libya.[12]
Gaddafi also aidedJean-Bédel Bokassa, the self-proclaimedEmperor of the short-livedCentral African Empire,[8][13] until the latter struck an agreement with French presidentValéry Giscard d'Estaing by which the French would fundhis coronation in exchange for severing ties with Gaddafi.[14]
U.S. embassy staff members were withdrawn from Tripoli after a mob attacked andset fire to the embassy in December 1979. TheU.S. government declared Libya a "state sponsor of terrorism" on 29 December 1979.
In May 1981, theU.S. government closed theLibyan "people's bureau" (embassy) in Washington, D.C. and expelled the Libyan staff in response to their conduct generally violating internationally accepted standards of diplomatic behavior.[15]
In August 1981, in thefirst incident of theGulf of Sidra, two Libyan jets fired on U.S. aircraft participating in a routine naval exercise overinternational waters of theMediterranean Sea claimed by Libya. The U.S. planes returned fire and shot down the attacking Libyan aircraft. On 11 December 1981, theState Department invalidated U.S. passports for travel to Libya (ade facto travel ban) and, for purposes of safety, advised all U.S. citizens in Libya to leave. In March 1982, the U.S. government prohibited imports of Libyan crude oil into the United States[16] and expanded the controls on U.S.-origin goods intended for export to Libya. Licenses were required for all transactions, except food and medicine. In March 1984, U.S. export controls were expanded to prohibit future exports to the Ra's Lanuf petrochemical complex. In April 1985, allExport-Import Bank financing was prohibited.
In October 1981,Egyptian PresidentAnwar Sadat wasassassinated. Gaddafi applauded the murder and remarked that it was a "punishment" for Sadat's signing of theCamp David Accords with the United States andIsrael.[17]
In 1982, Libya provided $100 million in arms to Argentina during theFalklands War.[18]

During the 1980s, Libya provided financial support for theNational Front in the United Kingdom, and paid for neo-Nazis and neo-fascists from France, the Netherlands and other countries to visit Libya.[7]
In April 1984, Libyan refugees in London protested against the execution of two dissidents. Libyan diplomats shot at 11 people andkilled Yvonne Fletcher, a British policewoman. The incident led to the breaking off ofdiplomatic relations between the United Kingdom and Libya for over a decade.[19] Two months later, Gaddafi asserted that he wanted his agents to assassinate dissident refugees, even if they were just on pilgrimage in the holy city ofMecca—in August 1984, a Libyan plot in Mecca was thwarted by Saudi Arabian police.[20]
After the December1985 Rome and Vienna airport attacks, which killed 19 and wounded around 140, Gaddafi indicated that he would continue to support the Red Army Faction, the Red Brigades, and the Irish Republican Army as long as European countries support anti-Gaddafi Libyans.[21] The Foreign Minister of Libya also called the massacres "heroic acts".[22]
In 1986 Libyan state television announced that Libya was training suicide squads to attack American and European interests.[23]
Gaddafi claimed the Gulf of Sidra as his territorial water and his navy was involved in a conflict from January to March 1986.
On 5 April 1986, Libyan agentsbombed "La Belle" nightclub in West Berlin, killing three people and injuring 229 people who were spending the evening there. Gaddafi's plan was intercepted by Western intelligence. More detailed information was retrieved years later whenStasi archives were investigated by the reunited Germany. Libyan agents who had carried out the operation from the Libyan embassy in East Germany were prosecuted by reunited Germany in the 1990s.[24]
Germany and the United States learned that the bombing in West Berlin had been ordered from Tripoli. On 14 April 1986, the United States carried outOperation El Dorado Canyon against Gaddafi and members of his regime. Air defenses, three army bases, and two airfields inTripoli andBenghazi were bombed. The surgical strikes failed to kill Gaddafi but he lost a few dozen military officers.[25][26] There were around 30 military deaths, and around 15 civilian deaths, including Gaddafi's6-month-old adopted daughter, allegedly.
Gaddafi announced that he had won a spectacular military victory over the United States and the country was officially renamed the "Great Socialist People's Libyan Arab Jamahiriyah". However, his speech appeared devoid of passion and even the "victory" celebrations appeared unusual. Criticism of Gaddafi by ordinary Libyan citizens became more bold, such as defacing of Gaddafi posters. The raids against Gaddafi had brought the regime to its weakest point in 17 years.
TheChadian–Libyan conflict (1978–1987) ended in disaster for Libya in 1987 with theToyota War. France supported Chad in this conflict and two years later on 19 September 1989, a French airliner,UTA Flight 772, was destroyed by an in-flight explosion for which Libyan agents were convictedin absentia. The incident bore close similarities to the destruction ofPan Am Flight 103 (theLockerbie Bombing) a year earlier.[27] The downing of these two airliners along with the1986 Berlin discotheque bombing seemed to establish a pattern ofreprisal attacks—in the form of terrorist bombings—by Libya or at least Libyan agents. The United Nations imposed sanctions on Libya for these two acts (with UN Security Council Resolutions731,748 and883). The UN eventually lifted these sanctions (withResolution 1506) in 2003 when Libya "accepted responsibility for the actions of its officials, renounced terrorism and arranged for payment of appropriate compensation for the families of the victims."[28] In 2008 Libya established a fund to compensate victims of these three terrorist acts (and the 1986 US bombing of Tripoli and Benghazi).
Gaddafi fueled a number of Islamist and communist terrorist groups in thePhilippines,[29][30][31] as well as paramilitaries in Oceania. He attempted to radicalizeNew Zealand'sMāori people in a failed effort to destabilise the U.S. ally. In Australia, he financed trade unions and some politicians who opposed theANZUS alliance with the United States. In May 1987, Australia deported diplomats and broke off relations with Libya because of its activities in Oceania.
In late 1987 French authorities stopped a merchant vessel, theMV Eksund, which was delivering a 150-ton Libyan arms shipment to European terrorist groups.[32]
In 1988, Libya was found to be in the process of constructing achemical weapons plant at Rabta; former CIA Director Webster has called the Libyan facility "the largest chemical plant that I know for chemical warfare."[33]
Libya's relationship with theSoviet Union involved massive Libyan arms purchases from theSoviet bloc and the presence of thousands of east bloc advisers. Libya's use—and heavy loss—of Soviet-supplied weaponry in itswar withChad was a notable breach of an apparent Soviet-Libyan understanding not to use the weapons for activities inconsistent with Soviet objectives. As a result, Soviet-Libyan relations reached a nadir in mid-1987.
In January 1989, there wasanother encounter over the Gulf of Sidra between U.S. and Libyan aircraft which resulted in the downing of two Libyan jets.
In 1991, two Libyanintelligence agents were indicted by prosecutors in the United States and United Kingdom for their involvement in the December 1988 bombing ofPan Am Flight 103. Six other Libyans were put on trial in absentia for the 1989 bombing ofUTA Flight 772 overChad andNiger. TheUN Security Council demanded that Libya surrender the suspects, cooperate with the Pan Am 103 and UTA 772 investigations, pay compensation to the victims' families, and cease all support for terrorism. Libya's refusal to comply led to the approval ofSecurity Council Resolution 748 on 31 March 1992, imposinginternational sanctions on the state designed to bring about Libyan compliance. Continued Libyan defiance led to further sanctions by the UN against Libya in November 1993.[34]
After the dissolution of theWarsaw Pact and the Soviet Union, Libya concentrated on expanding diplomatic ties withThird World countries and increasing its commercial links with Europe and East Asia. Following the imposition of U.N. sanctions in 1992, these ties significantly diminished. Following a 1998 Arab League meeting in which fellow Arab states decided not to challenge U.N. sanctions, Gaddafi announced that he was turning his back on pan-Arab ideas, one of the fundamental tenets of his philosophy.
Instead, Libya pursued closer bilateral ties, particularly withEgypt and Northwest African nationsTunisia andMorocco. It also has sought to develop its relations with Sub-Saharan Africa, leading to Libyan involvement in several internal African disputes in theDemocratic Republic of Congo, Sudan,Somalia,Central African Republic,Eritrea, andEthiopia. Libya also has sought to expand its influence in Africa through financial assistance, ranging from aid donations to impoverished neighbors such asNiger to oil subsidies toZimbabwe. Gaddafi has proposed a borderless "United States of Africa" to transform the continent into a single nation-state ruled by a single government. This plan has been moderately well received, although more powerful would-be participants such asNigeria and South Africa are skeptical.
Gaddafi also trained and supportedCharles Taylor, who was indicted by theSpecial Court for Sierra Leone for war crimes andcrimes against humanity committed during the conflict in Sierra Leone.[35]
Libya had close ties withSlobodan Milošević's regime inFR Yugoslavia. Gaddafi aligned himself with theOrthodoxSerbs againstBosnia and Herzegovina'sMuslims andKosovo'sAlbanians. Gaddafi supported Milošević even when Milošević was charged with large-scale ethnic cleansing against Albanians in Kosovo.[36] In 2011, former Bulgarian Foreign MinisterNadezhda Neynsky revealed in a TV documentary that the Bulgarian government had turned over to Germany an unverified report compiled by its military agency which "made clear" the existence of the plan (Operation Horseshoe), even though the military intelligence warned that the information could not be verified.[37][38][39][40][41]
Gaddafi continued the denunciation of the NATO bombing of the former Yugoslavia. Intimating that the allegations against the state were deliberate efforts by the "imperialist axis" to falsely image armedARBiH death squads inSrebrenica and elsewhere.[42]
In 1996, theIran and Libya Sanctions Act (ILSA) was enacted, seeking to penalize non-U.S. companies which invest more than $40 million in Libya's oil and gasoline sector in any one year. ILSA was renewed in 2001, and the investment cap lowered to $20 million.
In 1999, less than a decade after the UN sanctions were put in place, Libya began to make dramatic policy changes in regard to the Western world, including turning over the Lockerbie suspects for trial. This diplomatic breakthrough followed years of negotiation, including a visit by UN Secretary General Kofi Annan to Libya in December 1998, and personal appeals by Nelson Mandela. Eventually UK Foreign Secretary Robin Cook persuaded the Americans to accept a trial of the suspects in the Netherlands under Scottish law, with the UN Security Council agreeing to suspend sanctions as soon as the suspects arrived in the Netherlands for trial.[25] Libya also paid compensation in 1999 for the death of British policewomanYvonne Fletcher, a move that preceded the reopening of the British embassy in Tripoli and the appointment of ambassadorSir Richard Dalton, after a 17-year break indiplomatic relations.[19]

As of January 2002, Libya was constructing another chemical weapons production facility atTarhuna. Citing Libya's support for terrorism and its past regional aggressions the United States voiced concern over this development. In cooperation with like-minded countries, the United States has since sought to bring a halt to the foreign technical assistance deemed essential to the completion of this facility. SeeChemical weapon proliferation#Libya.[citation needed]
Following the fall ofSaddam Hussein's regime in the2003 invasion of Iraq, Gaddafi decided to abandon hisweapons of mass destruction programs and pay almost 3 billion euros in compensation to the families of Pan Am Flight 103 and UTA Flight 772.[43][44] The decision was welcomed by many western nations and was seen as an important step toward Libya rejoining the international community.[45] Since 2003 the country has made efforts to normalize its ties with theEuropean Union and the United States and has even coined the catchphrase, 'The Libya Model', an example intended to show the world what can be achieved through negotiation, rather than force, when there is goodwill on both sides. By 2004George W. Bush had lifted the economic sanctions and official relations resumed with the United States. Libya opened a liaison office inWashington, and the United States opened an office inTripoli. In January 2004, CongressmanTom Lantos led the first official Congressional delegation visit to Libya.[citation needed]
Libya has supported Sudan's PresidentOmar al-Bashir despite charges ofa genocide inDarfur.[46]
The release, in 2007, offive Bulgarian nurses and a Palestinian doctor, who had been held since 1999, charged with conspiring to deliberately infect over 400 children with HIV, was seen as marking a new stage in Libyan-Western relations.
The United States removed Gaddafi's regime, after 27 years, from its list of states sponsoring terrorism.[47]
On 16 October 2007, Libya was elected to serve on theUnited Nations Security Council for two years starting in January 2008.[48]
In August 2008 Italian Prime MinisterSilvio Berlusconi signed an agreement to pay Libya $5 billion over 25 years – this was a "complete and moral acknowledgement of the damage inflicted on Libya by Italy during the colonial era", the Italian prime minister said.[49] In September 2008, US Secretary of StateCondoleezza Rice met with Gaddafi and announced thatUS-Libya relations have entered a 'new phase'.[50]
Libyan-Swiss relations strongly suffered after the arrest ofHannibal Gaddafi for beating up his domestic servants inGeneva in 2008. In response, Gaddafi removed all his money held in Swiss banks and asked the United Nations to vote to abolishSwitzerland as a sovereign nation.[51]
In February 2009, Gaddafi was selected to bechairman of the African Union for one year.[52] The same year, the United Kingdom and Libya signed a prisoner-exchange agreement and then Libya requested the transfer of the convicted Lockerbie bomber, who finally returned home in August 2009.[53]

On 23 September 2009, Colonel Gaddafi addressed the 64th session of theUN General Assembly in New York, his first visit to the United States.[54]
As of 25 October 2009, Canadian visa requests were being denied and Canadian travelers were told they were not welcome in Libya.[55] Specifically, Harper's government was planning to publicly criticize Gaddafi for praising the convicted Lockerbie bomber.[56]
The sincerity of the good faith efforts of the Libyan government may be questionable since Moroccan Foreign Minister Taieb Fassi Fihri, told a U.S. diplomat in 2009 that the Libyans were willing to host wounded Guinean junta leader CaptainMoussa Dadis Camara after a failed assassination attempt in 2009.[citation needed] Libya also still provided bounties for heads of refugees who criticized Gaddafi, including 1 million dollars for Ashur Shamis, a Libyan-British journalist.[57]
Despite this brief rapprochement with the West, Libya and Gaddafi retained their anti-imperialist stances. In 2009, Gaddafi, along withVenezuelan presidentHugo Chávez, signed a declaration rejecting "intentions to link the legitimate struggle of the people for liberty and self-determination with terrorism."[58][59] At the meeting, Gaddafi suggested a "South Atlantic Treaty Organization", an anti-imperialist alternative toNATO for the Third World.[60]
Gaddafi and Libya always retained its staunch anti-Zionist stance. Throughout the 2000s, Gaddafi and Libya provided support to Palestinian groupHamas, and developed a close relationship with its leader,Khaled Mashal.[61] During the2008 Gaza War, Libya was the first country to send a shipment of aid to Gaza, Gaddafi also called for Arab volunteers to be sent to Gaza.[62]
Whilst it was presented that Gaddafi had "renounced terrorism", he maintained contact and support for many insurgent groups, namely, theFARC and theELN in Colombia,[63] theKurdistan Workers' Party and theKurdistan National Congress,[64] as well as theFree Papua Movement.[65] Gaddafi also maintained strong links with groups that had previously received support from Libya as armed groups, but had since laid down arms, such as theAfrican National Congress inSouth Africa, theURNG inGuatemala,SWAPO in Namibia, theSandinistas in Nicaragua, and theCommunist Party of Chile, whose erstwhile paramilitary wing, theManuel Rodríguez Patriotic Front, received support from Libya.[63][66]
Gaddafi strongly supported and forged close ties withpink tide-era Latin American socialist leaders, such asHugo Chávez inVenezuela,Daniel Ortega inNicaragua,Evo Morales inBolivia,José Mujica inUruguay andRafael Correa inEcuador.[67][68][69][70][71]
During the start of theArab Spring, Gaddafi condemned theTunisian revolution in January 2011, saying protesters were misled byWikiLeaks and voicing solidarity with ousted PresidentZine El Abidine Ben Ali.[72]
The progress made by Gaddafi's government in improving relations with the Western world was swiftly set back by the regime's authoritarian crackdown onprotests that began the following month. Many Western countries, including the United Kingdom,[73] the United States,[74] and eventuallyItaly[75] condemned Libya for the brutal crackdown on the dissidents.Peru became the first of several countries to severdiplomatic relations withTripoli on 22 February 2011,[76] followed closely byAfrican Union member stateBotswana the following day.[77]
Libya was suspended fromArab League proceedings on 22 February 2011, the same day Peru terminated bilateral relations.[78] In response, Gaddafi declared that in the view of his government, "The Arab League is finished. There is no such thing as the Arab League."[79]
On 10 March 2011, France became the first country to not just break off relations with thejamahiriya, but transfer diplomatic recognition to the rebelNational Transitional Council established inBenghazi, declaring it to be "the sole legitimate representative of the Libyan people".[80] As of 20 September 2011, a total of 98 countries had taken this step.
On 19 March 2011, a coalition of United Nations member states led by France, the United Kingdom, and the United States beganmilitary operations in Libyan airspace and territorial waters after theUnited Nations Security Council approvedUNSCR 1973, ostensibly to prevent further attacks on civilians as loyalist forces closed in on Benghazi, the rebel headquarters.[81] In response, Gaddafi declared that a state of "war with no limits" existed between Libya and the members of the coalition.[82] Despite this, he sent a three-page letter to US PresidentBarack Obama imploring him to "annul a wrong and mistaken action" and stop striking Libyan targets, repeatedly referring to him as "our son" and blaming the uprising on the terrorist groupal-Qaeda.[83]

In 2003 Libya began to make policy changes with the open intention of pursuing a Western-Libyandétente. The Libyan government announced its decision to abandon itsweapons of mass destruction programs and pay almost $3 billion in compensation to the families of Pan Am Flight 103 and UTA Flight 772.[43]
Starting in 2003, the Libyan government restored normal diplomatic ties with theEuropean Union and the United States and has even coined the catchphrase, "The Libya Model", an example intended to show the world what can be achieved through negotiation rather than force when there is goodwill on both sides.[84]
On 30 August 2008, Gaddafi and Italian Prime MinisterSilvio Berlusconi signed a historiccooperationtreaty inBenghazi.[85][86] Under its terms, Italy will pay $5 billion to Libya as compensation for its formermilitary occupation. In exchange, Libya will take measures to combatillegal immigration coming from its shores and boost investments in Italian companies.[87] The treaty was ratified by Italy on 6 February 2009,[85] and by Libya on 2 March, during a visit toTripoli by Berlusconi.[88]
On 31 October 2008, Libya paid $1.5 billion, sought through donations from private businesses, to a fund that would be used to compensate both US victims of the 1988 bombing of Pan Am flight 103 and the 1986 bombing of theLa Belle disco in Germany. In addition, Libyan victims of US airstrikes that followed the Berlin attack will also be compensated with $300 million from the fund. US state department spokesman,Sean McCormack called the move a "laudable milestone ... clearing the way for continued and expanding US-Libyan partnership." This final payment under the US-Libya Claims Settlement Agreement was seen as a major step towards improving ties between the two, which had begun easing after Tripoli halted its arms programmes.George Bush also signed anexecutive order restoring Libya's immunity from terror-related lawsuits and dismissing pending compensation cases.[89]
On 17 November 2008,FCO ministerBill Rammell signed five agreements with Libya. Rammell said: "I will today sign four bilateral agreements with my Libyan counterpart,Abdulatti al-Obidi, which will strengthen our judicial ties, as agreed duringTony Blair's visit to Libya in May last year. In addition, we are signing today a Double Taxation Convention which will bring benefits to British business in Libya and Libyan investors in the UK – benefits in terms of certainty, clarity and transparency and reducing tax compliance burdens. We are also in the final stages of negotiating an agreement to protect and promote investment."
"UK/Libya relations have significantly improved in recent years, following Libya's voluntary renunciation ofWMD. Today we are partners in theUN Security Council. We also wish to assist Libya to establish closer relations with theEuropean Union to continue and strengthen the reintegration of Libya within the international community. We therefore support the commencement of negotiations between Libya and the EU on a framework agreement which should cover a range of issues including political, social, economic, commercial and cultural relations between the EU and Libya."[90]
On 21 November 2008, theUS Senate confirmed the appointment ofGene Cretz to be the first US ambassador to Libya since 1972.[91]
In June 2009, Gaddafi made his first visit to Rome, where he met Prime Minister Berlusconi,PresidentGiorgio Napolitano,Senate PresidentRenato Schifani, andChamber PresidentGianfranco Fini, among others. TheDemocratic Party andItaly of Values opposed the visit,[92][93] and many protests were staged throughout Italy by human rightsorganizations and theRadical Party.[94] Gaddafi also took part in theG8summit inL'Aquila in July asChairman of the African Union.[95]
In the 2005–2009 period, Italy has been the first EU arms exporter towards Libya, with a total value of €276.7m, of which one third only in the last 2008–2009 years. Italian exports cover one third of total EU arms exports towards Libya, and include mainlymilitary aircraft but alsomissiles and electronic equipment.[96]
In the late 2000s, Libyan-US relations soured due to the establishment of theUnited States Africa Command (AFRICOM), of which Gaddafi and the Libyan government were highly critical.[97]
During theLibyan Civil War, Italy terminated relations withTripoli and recognized therebel authority inBenghazi as Libya's legitimate representative, effectively startingrelations with the anti-Gaddafi government. The Italian government has urged the international community to follow suit.
During theLibyan Civil War, allEuropean Union andNATO member states withdrew diplomatic staff fromTripoli and shut their embassies in the Libyan capital.[98][99] Several foreign embassies and UN offices were badly damaged by vandals on 1 May 2011, drawing condemnation from the United Kingdom andItaly. The UK also expelled the Libyan ambassador in London from the country.[100]
On 1 July 2011, Gaddafi threatened to sponsor attacks against civilians and businesses in Europe in what would be a resumption of his policies of the 1970s and 1980s.[101][102]
On 13 November 2001, a German court found four persons, including a former employee of the Libyan embassy inEast Berlin, guilty in connection with the1986 Berlin discotheque bombing, in which 229 people were injured and two U.S. servicemen were killed. The court also established a connection to the Libyan government.[103]
In November 1991, two Libyanintelligence agents,Abdelbaset al-Megrahi andLamin Khalifah Fhimah, were charged with the December 1988Lockerbie bombing. Libya refused to extradite the two accused to the U.S. or toScotland. As a result,United Nations Security Council Resolution 748 was approved on 31 March 1992, requiring Libya to surrender the suspects, cooperate with thePan Am Flight 103 andUTA Flight 772 investigations, pay compensation to the victims' families, and cease all support for terrorism. The UN imposed further sanctions with Resolution 883, a limited assets freeze and an embargo on selected oil equipment, in November 1993.[104] In 1999, six other Libyans who had been accused of the September 1989 bombing of UTA Flight 772 were put on trial in their absence by a Paris court. They were found guilty and sentenced tolife imprisonment.[27]
The Libyan government eventually surrendered the two Lockerbie bombing suspects in 1999 for trial at theScottish Court in the Netherlands and UN sanctions were suspended. On 31 January 2001, at the end of thePan Am Flight 103 bombing trial, Megrahi was convicted of murder and sentenced to 27 years in prison. Fhimah was foundnot guilty and was freed to return to Libya. Megrahi appealed against his conviction but this was rejected in February 2002. In 2003, Libya wrote to the UN Security Council admitting "responsibility for the actions of its officials" in relation to the Lockerbie bombing, renouncing terrorism and agreeing to pay compensation to the relatives of the 270 victims. The previously suspended UN sanctions were then cancelled.[105]
In June 2007, theScottish Criminal Cases Review Commission decided that there may have been amiscarriage of justice and referred Megrahi's case back toCourt of Criminal Appeal in Edinburgh for a second appeal.[106] Expected to last for a year, the appeal began in April 2009 and was adjourned in May 2009. Having been diagnosed with terminal cancer, Megrahi dropped the appeal and on 20 August 2009, was grantedcompassionate release from jail and repatriated to Libya. In an interview withThe Wall Street Journal on 24 September 2009, the day after his address to theUnited Nations General Assembly inNew York City, Gaddafi said, "As a case, the Lockerbie question: I would say it's come to an end, legally, politically, financially, it is all over."[107]
In the late 1990s, aBenghazichildren's hospital was the site of anoutbreak of HIV infection that spread to over 400 patients. Libya blamed the outbreak on five Bulgarian nurses and a Palestinian doctor, who were arrested and eventually sentenced to death (eventually overturned and a new trial ordered). The international view is that Libya has used the medics asscapegoats for poor hygiene conditions, andBulgaria and other countries including theEuropean Union and the United States repeatedly called on Tripoli to release them. A new trial began 11 May 2006, in Tripoli. On 6 December a study was released showing that some children had been infected before the six arrived in Libya, but it was too late for inclusion as evidence. On 19 December 2006, the six were again convicted and sentenced to death. They were finally released in June 2007, after mediation of French presidentNicolas Sarkozy, in exchange for a variety of agreements with the EU, and they were returned to Bulgaria safely.
On 15 July 2008 the fifth eldest son of Muammar Gaddafi, Hannibal Gaddafi,[108] and his wife were held for two days and charged with assaulting two of their staff inGeneva, Switzerland and then released on bail on 17 July. Hannibal Gaddafi has a history of violent and aggressive behaviour having been charged with battery by his later wife and having attacked Italian police officers.[109]
The government of Libya subsequently put a boycott on Swiss imports, reduced flights between Libya and Switzerland, stopped issuing visas to Swiss citizens, recalled diplomats fromBern, and forced all Swiss companies such asABB andNestlé to close offices. General National Maritime Transport Company, which owns a large refinery in Switzerland, also halted oil shipments to Switzerland.[109]
Two Swiss businessmen, Rachid Hamdani and Max Göldi, Libya head of ABB, who were in Libya at the time were denied permission to leave the country and were forced to take shelter at the Swiss embassy in Tripoli.[110][111] Both were initially sentenced to 6 months in prison for immigration offenses, but Hamdani was cleared on appeal and Göldi's sentence was reduced to four months.[112] Göldi surrendered to Libyan authorities on 22 February 2010, while Hamdani returned to Switzerland on 24 February.[113]
At the35th G8 summit in July 2009, Muammar Gaddafi called Switzerland a "world mafia" and called for the country to be split between France, Germany and Italy.[114]
In August 2009 Swiss PresidentHans-Rudolf Merz visitedTripoli and issued a public apology to Libya for the arrest of Hannibal Gaddafi and his wife. Geneva's prosecutor dropped the case against the Gaddafis when the employees withdrew their formal complaint after reaching an undisclosed settlement.
In February 2010, the dispute with Switzerland spread, with Libya refusing to issueentry visas to nationals of any of the countries within theSchengen Area, of which Switzerland is a part.[115] This action was apparently taken in retaliation for Switzerland blacklisting 188 high-ranking officials from Libya.[116][117]
As a result of the ban, foreign nationals from certain countries were not permitted entry into Libya atTripoli airport,[116] including 22Italians[118] and eightMaltese citizens, one of whom was forced to wait for 20 hours before he was able to return home.[116] Three Italians, nine Portuguese nationals, a Frenchman and a European citizen[clarification needed] who arrived fromCairo were repatriated.[118] In addition to citizens of Schengen Area countries being refused entry, it has been reported that several Irish citizens have been turned away, despite Ireland not being a member of theSchengen agreement.[119] An unnamed Libyan official at the airport asked to confirm the ban told Reuters: "This is right. This decision has been taken. No visas for Europeans, except Britain."[120]
In response, theEuropean Commission criticised the actions, describing them as "unilateral and disproportionate", although no immediate 'tit-for-tat' response was announced.[121]
The government of Libya had in the past received criticism and trade restrictions from Western countries and organisations for allegedly providing several armed rebel groups with weapons, explosives and combat training.
Paramilitaries supported by Libya past and present include:
Libya has in the past claimed a strip along their border of about 19,400 square kilometres (7,500 sq mi) in northernNiger and part of southeasternAlgeria. In addition, it is involved in amaritime boundary dispute withTunisia.[127]
As with all other African countries, Libya is a member of theNon-Aligned Movement. As with most international organizations to whichTripoli is a party, NAM recognizes it under the name Libyan Arab Jamahiriya.[128]
Algeria–Libya relations have generally been friendly.[129] Libyan support for thePolisario Front in theWestern Sahara facilitated early post independence Algerian relations with Libya.[129] Libyan inclinations for full-scale political union, however, have obstructed formal political collaboration becauseAlgeria has consistently backed away from such cooperation with its unpredictable neighbour.[129]
Libya long claimed theAouzou Strip, a strip of land in northernChad rich withuranium deposits that was intensely involved inChad's civil war in the 1970s and 1980s.
In 1973, Libya engaged in military operations in the Aouzou Strip to gain access to minerals and to use it as a base of influence in Chadian politics. Libya argued that the territory was inhabited by indigenous people who owed allegiance to theSenussi Order and subsequently to theOttoman Empire, and that this title had been inherited by Libya. It also supported its claim with an unratified 1935 treaty between France andItaly, thecolonial powers of Chad and Libya, respectively. After consolidating its hold on the strip, Libyaannexed it in 1976. Chadian forces were able toforce the Libyans to retreat from the Aouzou Strip in 1987.
A cease-fire between Chad and Libya held from 1987 to 1988, followed by unsuccessful negotiations over the next several years, leading finally to the 1994International Court of Justice decision granting Chad sovereignty over the Aouzou Strip, which ended Libyanoccupation.
Chadian-Libyan relations were ameliorated when Libyan-supportedIdriss Déby unseated Habré on 2 December. Gaddafi was the first head of state to recognize the new regime, and he also signed treaties of friendship and cooperation on various levels; but regarding the Aouzou Strip Déby followed his predecessor, declaring that if necessary he would fight to keep the strip out of Libya's hands.[130][131]
The Aouzou dispute was concluded for good on 3 February 1994, when the judges of the ICJ by a majority of 16 to 1 decided that the Aouzou Strip belonged to Chad. The court's judgement was implemented without delay, the two parties signing as early as 4 April an agreement concerning the practical modalities for the implementation of the judgement. Monitored by international observers, the withdrawal of Libyan troops from the Strip began on 15 April and was completed by 10 May. The formal and final transfer of the Strip from Libya to Chad took place on 30 May, when the sides signed a joint declaration stating that the Libyan withdrawal had been effected.[132]
During theLibyan Civil War, after meeting with high-level representatives of the Chadian government, United States Secretary of StateHillary Clinton announced thatN'Djamena opposes Gaddafi and has reached out to the rivalNational Transitional Council in rebel-heldBenghazi. This claim was disputed by at least oneforeign policy analyst, who brought up previous remarks made by Ambassador Daoussa Déby, the Chadian president's half-brother, and said, "Déby's words seem to echo Gaddafi's claims that the terrorist groupal-Qaeda masterminded the national uprising in Libya."[citation needed]
After the neighboring countries ofEgypt and Libya both gained independence in the early 1950s, relations were initially cooperative. Libya assisted Egypt in the 1973Yom Kippur War. Later, tensions arose due to Egypt's rapprochement with the west.[133] Following the 1977Libyan–Egyptian War, relations were suspended for twelve years.[134] However, since 1989 relations have steadily improved. With the progressive lifting of UN and US sanctions from 2003 to 2008, the two countries have been working together to jointly develop their oil and natural gas industries.[135]
This article'sfactual accuracy may be compromised due to out-of-date information. Please help update this article to reflect recent events or newly available information.(July 2011) |
| Country | Formal Relations Began | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| 1992 | SeeBelarus–Libya relations
| |
| SeeForeign relations of Bulgaria Relations withBulgaria have been troublesome after thea group of Bulgarian nurses and a Palestinian doctor were accused of infecting Libyan children with HIV when they worked at a Libyan hospital; the nurses were sentenced to death in a Libyan court, but the death sentences were ultimately commuted and the Bulgarian nurses and Palestinian doctor were sent back to Bulgaria. | ||
| SeeCroatia–Libya relations | ||
| 1960s | SeeCyprus–Libya relations
| |
| 1993 | SeeCzech Republic – Libya relations
| |
SeeDenmark – Libya relations
| ||
| SeeFrance–Libya relations Libya developed particularly close relations with France after theJune 1967 War, when France relaxed its arms embargo on nonfront-line Middle East combatants and agreed to sell weapons to the Libyans. In 1974 Libya and France signed an agreement whereby Libya exchanged a guaranteed oil supply for technical assistance and financial cooperation. By 1976, however, Libya began criticizing France as an "arms merchant" because of its willingness to sell weapons to both sides in the Middle East conflict. Libya later criticized France for its willingness to sell arms to Egypt. Far more serious was Libya's dissatisfaction with French military intervention in the Western Sahara, Chad, and Zaire. In 1978 Gaddafi noted that although economic relations were good, political relations were not, and he accused France of having reverted to a colonialist policy that former French president Charles de Gaulle had earlier abandoned.[144] In the 1980s, Libyan-French discord centered on the situation in Chad. As mentioned, the two countries found themselves supporting opposite sides in theChadian Civil War. In late 1987, there were some French troops in Chad, but French policy did not permit its forces to cross the sixteenth parallel. Thus, direct clashes with Libyan soldiers seemed unlikely.[144] On 10 March 2011, France was the first country in the world to recognise theNational Transitional Council as the legitimate government of Libya, in the context of theLibyan Civil War againstMuammar Gaddafi.[80] | ||
| SeeGermany–Libya relations Germany is represented in Libya with an embassy inTripoli, while Libya has an embassy inBerlin. The relationship between these countries was tense in the late 1980s following a bombing incident, but has improved since with increasingly close co-operation especially on economic matters.[145] On 13 June 2011, Germany began to recognize theNational Transitional Council as the sole legitimate government of Libya.[146] | ||
| SeeForeign relations of Greece | ||
| SeeForeign relations of Italy | ||
SeeLibya–Malta relations
| ||
SeeLibya–Russia relations
| ||
| 1955 | SeeLibya–Serbia relations
| |
| 1955 | SeeLibya–Turkey relations
| |
| SeeLibya–Switzerland relations Relations were severed in 2009, Gaddafi publicly called for the dissolution of Switzerland. | ||
SeeLibya – United Kingdom relations
|
In early 2004, the U.S. State Department ended its ban on U.S. citizens using their passports for travel to Libya or spending money there. U.S. citizens began legally heading back to Libya for the first time since 1981.
On 15 May 2006David Welch,Assistant Secretary of State for Near Eastern Affairs, announced that the U.S. had decided, after a 45-day comment period, to renew full diplomatic relations with Libya and remove Libya from the U.S. list of countries that foster terrorism.[148] During this announcement, it was also said that the U.S. has the intention of upgrading the U.S. liaison office in Tripoli into an embassy.[149] The U.S. embassy in Tripoli opened in May, a product of gradual normalization of international relations after Libya accepted responsibility for the Pan Am 103 bombing. Libya's dismantling of its weapons of mass destruction was a major step towards this announcement.
The United States suspended its relations with Gaddafi's government indefinitely on 10 March 2011, when it announced it would begin treating theNational Transitional Council inBenghazi as legitimate negotiating parties for the country's future.[150]
On 15 July 2011, Secretary of StateHillary Clinton announced that America would now recognize theNational Transitional Council as the legitimate government of Libya, thus severing any and all recognition of Gaddafi's government as legitimate.[151]
Gaddafi was in many ways critical of China on international issues. He also said that China had betrayed socialism.[152] Despite this, Chinese companies engaged in talks to sell weapons to the Libyan government during the First Libyan Civil War, however the Chinese government stated it was unaware of these negotiations, and that weapons were never sold.[153]
Beginning in 1989, Libya supported the Free Aceh Movement through GAM's second wave with troops and aid.[154]
Libya supportedIran againstIraq during theIran–Iraq War (1980–1988). For this reason, in 1985, Iraq broke all ties with Libya.[155] However Libya ended support for Iran in 1987 and moved to reestablishing relations with Iraqi presidentSaddam Hussein. Libya opposed theIraqi invasion of Kuwait but also opposed the multinationalcoalition against Iraq during theGulf War.[156] Gaddafi was a lifelong critic of the2003 invasion of Iraq, sharply criticising the war and the execution of Saddam Hussein at a 2008Arab League summit,[157] and going so far as to suspend all relations with the post-Ba'athist authorities in 2003, until Iraq's "freedom, independence and sovereignty" was restored.[158]
During hisaddress to the United Nations General Assembly in September 2009, Gaddafi rejected that eitherIndia orPakistan should control the disputed territory ofKashmir, but instead proposed the establishment of an independentBa'athist state between the two nations, stating "Kashmir should be an independent state, not Indian, not Pakistani. We should end this conflict. It should be a Ba'athist state between India and Pakistan."[159]
Vanuatu and Libya established official diplomatic relations in 1986, at the initiative of the former. The aim, for Vanuatu, was to obtain access to favourable economic relations with a majoroil-producing country, and to strengthen its policy ofnon-alignment by establishing relations with a notable country not aligned with theWestern Bloc.[160]
This article needs to beupdated. Please help update this article to reflect recent events or newly available information.(May 2012) |
As of 18 October 2011, at least 100 UN member states have explicitly recognised theNational Transitional Council, as have all international organisations to which Libya is a member. Only the 8 countries of theBolivarian Alliance for the Americas[161][162] and the African countries ofNamibia[163] andZimbabwe[164] have explicitly continued to denounce the NTC and insist on Gaddafi's legitimacy.
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