A very interesting book ruined by the last 15 pages.
Let's start with the bulk of it:
The author offers a fairly colorful recap of the Libyan history, from ancient (Greek) times via Arab and Ottoman rule, covering the Italian colonial rule in more detail, and finally, giving most focus to the last 50 years, under the rule of Colonel Qaddafi.
There are some rather interesting facts in the book, the likes of Italian oppression, the feeble rule of the Al-Sanusi family after the independence, all of which led to the military uprising that became Qaddafi's reign.
From the early start, Qaddafi tried to balance his sense of African identity and tribe with the riches of oil, and how he could use that to manipulate and influence the Western powers, most notably the US and the UK, and to some extent Italy. He also wooed the Soviet Union, but he never liked the areligious aspect of socialism.
I also liked reading and learning more on the inter-African affairs. Libya tried to play its part in de-colonizing Africa by becoming a colonial influence of its own, supporting and toppling regimes across the continent. Most notably, there was an almost neverending rivalry and conflict with other countries in the Maghreb region, Sahara and Sahel, and central Africa. This is probably the best part of the book, especially since it covers a topic that is largely overshadowed in modern politics.
Along side all that, we learn about the Green Book, the domestic quasi-socialist "direct democracy" policies that Qaddafi tried to implement, his flamboyance and liking of the public stage, his role in sponsoring and then fighting terrorist groups, and the finally, the warming of his relations with the West in mid-2000s. So far so good.
And now, the ending:
On P.282, the author writes that "Qaddafi tried to perpetuate the myth that there would be civil war if he was toppled".
What? Well, it did happen. Qaddafi predicted this very accurately.
The last part is written hastily, skipping many details and veiling it all in a rosy, happy-go-lucky here's the future, full of democracy and freedom. Which is nonsense, because none of that happened.
He tells us nothing of the way Qaddafi was captured and killed without trial. He tells nothing of the actual war that led to Qaddafi's end, and he portrays this optimistic note that everything would be good now that Libya has democracy! ZOMG.
What actually happened is:
The US embassy attack in 2012.
Ongoing civil and tribal war with some 6-7 factions now fighting over Libya, including the transitional government that was supposed to have stepped down. More in line with the chaos and anarchy that Qaddafi predicted.
Libya has become a ruined country without a functioning government.
And this is what annoys me the most about this book.
For someone writing history about the Middle East, northern Africa and related topics, the author seems to have ZERO understanding of non-Western cultures and mentalities. He assumes that people in that region are just WAITING for the West to give them democracy so they can be enlightened, as if it's a matter of flipping a switch on.
Democracy only works in Europe (and its direct descendants), after 500 years of cultural, religion, industrial, and social revolutions, including several brutal mega-wars that killed 60 million people in Europe alone in the last century.
Democracy is the LAST step of this process, not the first.
The notion that the West intervened to "help human rights" in Libya is silly. The same happened in Iraq, and golly, the formula is the same - intervention, old regime gone, chaos, endless civil war. The same is happening in Syria. Also the democracy and enlightened socities in Europe had no problem with two fascist regimes (Salazar and Franco) on its own soil well into the 70s. So the concept of helping the poor and oppressed is absolute nonsense.
Reading the book gives interesting insights into long-standing diplomatic resentments. Qaddafi refused to give the Americans a strategic regional base (at the Wheeler field), and this is probably the turning point where he lost it. The French and the British never forgave him for his anti-colonial meddling. And the Russians stepped in too late (they learned their lesson and implemented it in Syria).
Looking across the wider region, the idea of imported democracy - to say nothing of the fact it completely ignores deep cultural and hierarchical orders in non-Western societies - becomes even more absurd when you take Saudi Arabia, Iraq or Egypt into account. For instance, Saddam Hussein was the darling of the West during the Iran-Iraq war, but he fatally miscalculated twice when he invaded Kuwait and then when he called the US desire to respond to the invasion with force a bluff. In Egypt, again, there was the attempt to promote "democracy" but once the Western powers (much more strategically invested in Egypt unlike Libya) understood the dangers of impending chaos, they helped restore the military rule quickly enough.
If I wanted a daily dose of feel-good brainwash, I could just watch the primetime TV. I don't need books to teach me an ideological lesson into how the world order should be done, especially not when it blantantly ignores the complex constraints of the world and different cultures.
So, to sum it up:
The first 270-odd pages are pretty good, and they do shed a lot of interesting info on Libya - its oil policies in particular. But the last part is a farce, and it portrays civil wars with foreign intervention as something good and desired, because of course, the ultimate goal is democracy, right! For the time being, instead of having one dictator, I'm sure the people of Libya are grateful for the democratic plurality of warring factions and the massive drop of their living standards since 2011.
As William Wallace once said:
They can take away our reviews, but they can't take our FREEDOM!
Igor