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Chapter 6 - The limits of the revolution, 1986–2000

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 June 2012

Dirk Vandewalle
Affiliation:
Dartmouth College, New Hampshire
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Summary

In the wake of the US bombing of Tripoli and Benghazi in April 1986, the Libyan regime faced a number of internal and international challenges that gradually reduced Qadhafi’s ability to pursue his activist policies abroad and at home. They limited his ability to use continuous waves of political mobilization within Libya, and, by the end of the century, brought a halt to the waves of unpredictable political and economic directives at home. His revolutionary harangues throughout the period continued unabated – at a pitch temporarily heightened by the US military operation that killed Hanna al-Qadhafi, one of his adopted children – but there was an increasingly desperate tone and hackneyed quality to his rhetoric. Caged in by a combination of economic sanctions and diplomatic isolation, the Libyan regime responded with one of the few tools still at its disposal: a deepening involvement with international terrorism that would reach its most notorious climax in 1988 and 1989. But these, in more ways than one, were measures of last resort.

The international sanctions in 1992, and particularly the Arab countries’ initially neutral response to them, also prompted an important realignment of the county’s foreign relations. After years of pursuing unity schemes with various Arab regimes, Qadhafi announced that he could no longer tolerate their leaders’ lackluster responses to the Arab–Israeli conflict, or their passivity and their acquiescence in a political status quo throughout the region dominated by the US presence and its policies. As a result, the Libyan leader deepened his involvement with sub-Saharan Africa which he viewed as an area for projecting Libya’s power, and for implementing new regional, economic, and political unity projects (see Chapter 7).

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Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2012

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