GADHAFI, TROUBLED BY SERIES OF SETBACKS, ACTS TO REPAIR THE DAMAGE

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CIA-RDP05-01559R000400470001-3
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November 19, 1987
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lomatic .Arab world, i Analysto is month o-western 011 Yasser aned chairn MIA anions co ena out with Syrian- dissidents---a ing ther strains to cooling allian( nd Major rove ,rp. A ttir- rorce omcers aboard a ya n cities 11 months 'ago that Ile 30 aircraft earlier this month and pointedly refused to receive Mos. i ibya's persistently delayed cow's new, ambassador 'for. six irate roffensive to retake the months, according to diplomats, there Oasis of Fade, captured On paper, neither the badly by. lead government troops, vided PLO nor Tunisia, a small oe are'relrjtions with his Moscow state weakene ci by :tinevagaries of. erpower ally c',onsidered close, aging President Habib our oil a. nifty Alen port in the event of fresh US, But highly ., ` -"8' tar placed Pilestiniaaa y attacks, Gadhafi was so it sources insist that Gadhafi's deci~ red by the poor performance of sion to improve relations with the let-supplied air defense systems P,LO is largely motivated by his ng the US, air raid on twos Lib. mistaken conviction that Arafat is in Declassified and Approved For Release 2012/01/19: CIA-RDP05-01559R000400470001-3 Declassified and Approved For Release 2012/01/19: CIA-RDP05-01559R000400470001-3 deepening (to allowed the idamentalist league with k yan opposition; Similarly, ( that Tunisia vice--_constd( reliable on I professionals--cool( kale for him, exile, aid to fear once ser- a no transter to Chad of many Tunisian border diminished his ability to intimidate I Declassified and Approved For Release 2012/01/19: CIA-RDP05-01559R000400470` 0 ~3 'm 11~~ G , 5748 ? Shawal 25,1408 NIS 1.20 (Eilat NIS 1.05) SECOND EDITION ight profess to One of Libyan leader Muam- mar Gaddafi's woman body- guards sports high heels and a- pistol as she stands guard in Algiers. (AFP) Shamir to press Soviet FM on ties, emigration sibility for the i had clearly ar- the peace pro= hat the King's e door on what adopted at the ian state with ead Aluf Am- rday that Ara- tion in any fu- . The very fact s convened to the uprising in ented a victory been restored ab summitry by at: had been the Palestin- ignored. that although demand for a ndemned the and asserted blic servants, alities. "The ade in the 30's Committee," sinations do By WOLF BLITZER ' Jerusalem Post Correspondent NEW YORK - Prime Minister Yitzhak Shamir yesterday said he would press two issues with Soviet Foreign Minister Eduard Shevardnadze. during their meet- ing here today: the restoration of Soviet-Israeli diplomatic ties and .increased emigration to Is- rael for Soviet Jews. Shamir told a small groilp of American editors that he was anxious to discover for himself whether the Soviet Union had genuinely moderated its stance towards Israel. The prime minister acknowledged that the tone of recent Soviet state- ments had changed. What `was now important, he added, was to learn whether the substance had also irti- proved. (See Peres on Soviets, page 2.) Shevardnadze told reporters in New York that the Soviet Union was prepared to take a more active part in Arab-Israeli affairs. Shamir and Shevardnadze will meet at the UN, in the office of the president of the Security Council. Israeli officials yesterday ex- pressed the hope that the Soviets, following today's meeting, would fi- nally grant entry visas to an Israeli consular delegation to visit Moscow in the coming weeks. They said they were also seeking assurances that more Soviet Jews would be permitted to leave for Isra- el in the coming months. Israel is pressing for flights between the So- viet Union and Israel via Romania. Shamir, together with other visit- ing world leaders, attended a lun- cheon yesterday with UN Secretary- General Javier Perez de Cuellar. Israeli officials later said that the prime minister had rejected a pro- posal.from the secretary-general to have the UN extend formal guaran- tees to Israel following the achieve- ment of an Israeli-Arab peace settlement. "What is needed is not a Big Pow- er guarantee but an agreement be- tween Israel and its Arab neigh- bours," an Israeli official quoted Shamir as having told the UN lead- er. Shamir reiterated his position that only direct negotiations - and not an. international conference - could advance the peace process. Shamir also recalled Israel's "un'- fortunate experience" with external (Continued on Back Page) Dismay at Tadiran's claim to big Rabin ban U.S. order premature on visits by rabbis By JUDY.MALTZ and The press release put out by Tadir- KENNETH KAPLAN an's publicity agents gave no hint Jerusalem Post Staff that the order was still in Only a fraction of the multi-bil- contention. lion dollar U.S. Army tender award- But, said the General Dynamics ed last week to Tadir~n Ltd. and source the Tadiran-General Dy- , HAIM SHAPIRO I General Dynamics is a guaranteed namics team is in fact a "second- lem Post Reporter ,J_Aer, elves with the two.com- source producer" for the army. The Declassified and Approved For Release 2012/01/19: CIA-RDP05-01559R000400470001-3 ;e and Approved For Release 7017/01/19 ? CIA-RDPO5-0155cipnnn400470001-3 YkE C l TIAN SCIENCE MONITOR] ' [ 1111141 IL 11tilm US pressure on Libya strains ties with Western allies Qaddafi uses Western concerns for foreigners' safety to undercut unity By John Cooley .Tripoli, Libya Libya's Col. Muammar Qaddafi is wag- ing an all-out information war to deter any new United States military action against him. He is doing this by playing up US fears that American workers in Libya could be casualties and by highlighting disunity among Western allies over how to deal with Libya. Tripoli was calm and without any visi- ble defense preparations Sunday as the US Sixth Fleet was reportedly in a "hold- ing pattern" in the Mediterranean. While Vernon Walters, the US ambas- sador to the UN, traveled around Western Europe trying to convince US allies to support further US action, Colonel Qaddafi's personal campaign of deter- rence took several forms. In a statement to Western news agen- cies, Qaddafi said he had pulled Libyan troops from "15 military camps" that the US news media had named as prospective targets for American planes and war- ships. Foreign workers, including about 1,000 American oil workers, would be moved from their homes to the camps and would live there, Qaddafi said. However, Western dip- lomats representing US in- terests here said there was no sign Sunday that Qaddafi had begun mov- ing anyone. "It might just be a bluff, but you can't be sure with Col. Qaddafi," Libyans hail Oaddafi last month: Europe fears another US strike may boost his hero status efforts to locate the five, the BBC said. The others missing were identified as three priests - from the Philippines, Malta, and Poland - and an Italian nun. Government spokesmen had no comment. Libya's foreign minister called in West- ern diplomats over the weekend to pro- Tripoli was calm and without any visible defense preparations Sunday. test statements by the NATO Secretary General, Lord Carrington, and Su- preme NATO Commander Bernard Rogers, a US Army general. Lord Carrington has supported the principle of -US retribution against one longtime foreign resident here said. A serious incident heightened nervous- ness among foreigners here yesterday. The British Broadcasting Corporation re- ported Sunday that Msgr. Giovanni Martinelli, a Roman Catholic Church lead- er, and four others were arrested Thurs- day night by armed men. The incident reportedly took place in Benghazi. Italian Ambassador Giorgio Raitano is heading Libya for its alleged connection with ter- rorist incidents, including the April 2 ex- plosion aboard a TWA jetliner over Greece, and the bombing of a West Berlin nightclub on Aprils. General Rogers said there was incon- trovertible evidence of Libyan involve- ment in the West Berlin bombing. "These declarations," said JANA, the official Libyan news agency, "represent the attitude of the [Western] alliance con- cerning the aggression which the US is preparing against Libya." By threatening to use US and NATO bases in Brtian, Spain, Greece, Italy, and Turkey, other Libyan statements added, the US is dragging the Western alliance into what began as a bilateral US-Libyan confrontation. Qaddafi has repeated several times. that any such bases would be susceptible to Libyan attack. Foreign observers here say the main candidates are Sigonella Air Base in Sicily, US air and naval faculties in Spain, and Souda Bay on the large Greek island of Crete. Libyan newspapers and radio and tele- vision programs constantly warn the Eu- ropeans and -Libya's Arab neighbors not to get involved in US action. They echoed a weekend warning from Qaddafi that Libya might have to call for military aid from the Soviet Union and East bloc. Mr. Cooley, the Monitor's former Middle East reporter, is an ABC sto correspondent. Declassified and Approved For Release 2012/01/19: CIA-RDP05-01559R000400470001-3 Qaddafi slept here, bodyguard says, as bomb exploded 100 yards away during US raid Europe feeling the aftershock European foreign ministers repeated their call for US restraint in dealing with Libya; but recognition is growing that concerted allied action against terrorism is needed. Page 9 Britain In the firing line Days after US jets took off from Britain to strike targets in Libya, a spate of incidents makes it clear that the British face the same level of threat as Americans in the Middle East. Page 9 9 Interview with Weinberger On Libya strike, he says: Qaddafi himself was not targeted; Libyan reports of casualties should not be taken at face value; with allied help, sanctions could be more effective. Page 6 But Col. Qaddafi makes it clear that his messianic devotion to world revolution continues By John K. Cooley Tripoli, Libya Col. Muammar Qaddafi's escape from the American air raid Tuesday and his subsequent television broad- cast have lowered the political temperature here. Libyan radio and TV have moderated somewhat their strident anti-Western tone. People ignored or even smiled at a foreigner in Tripoli's streets Thursday, rather than muttering insults as on the previous day. Western embassies continued to discuss plans for evac- uating more than 40,000 Western citizens in this coun- try, but without the urgency of the first day of crisis. The United States and Britain, however, still face a mounting wave of terrorism and protests by the East bloc, third world, and even West Europeans. Colonel Qaddafi made it clear in his broadcast Wednesday night, from a new and apparently safer base somewhere in Libya, that his messianic devotion to world revolution continues. In his speech, Qaddafi accused President Reagan and British Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher of being "child-murderers." Qaddafi's 15-month-old adopted daughter did not survive the bombing of Qaddafi's family home. His two young sons, Saif Arab and Hamis, were-wounded and remained in hospital. At the same time, Qaddafi said he was ordering no further military retaliations against southern Europe. His only known attempt to retaliate so far came Tues- day, when two long-range missiles were fired at the small Italian island of Lampedusa. Italy said the mis- siles fell short. Declassified and Approved For Release 2012/01/19: CIA-RDP05-01559R000400470001-3 Tease see QADDAR back page Declassified and Approved For Release 2012/01/19: CIA-RDP05-01559R000400470001-3 ohtical temperature ioin Libya ry/iAA .61% K DD A 117Y Declassified and Approved "We decided to respond" to calls of "friendly coun- tries urging us not to escalate the military situation against south Europe," Qaddafi said. [The United States said Wednesday the murder of three Westerners in Lebanon bore the marks of Abu Nidal, a Palestinian guerrilla with close ties to Libya, and that Libyan involvement was also suspected in the shooting Wednesday of an American diplomat in Sudan.] Qaddafi praised France and Spain for not permitting British-based US F-111 fighter bombers to overfly their territory. Malta won his approval for "exerting sincere efforts to end Mediterranean tensions." Qaddafi urged all Arab states to sever diplomatic relations with the US. Conservative Saudi Arabia, a longtime adversary of Qaddafi, led the Arab states in protesting the US action in the UN Security Council. Earlier Wednesday, a reporters' tour of Qaddafi's bombed-out home and headquarters disclosed craters from at least eight high-explosive bombs, apparently meant to kill Qaddafi. The US denies it tried to kill him. His office and home, where from a balcony he prom- ised to continue confronting the US after his forces skirmished with the US Sixth Fleet March 24-25, were demolished. His wife, Safla, who survived, was inside that building with the Qaddafl children when it was hit. Bodyguards showed the reporters Qaddafi's Bedouin Release 2012/01/19: CIA-RDP05-01559R000400470001-3 nd missiles firing into the air. Qaddafi on TV: no more reprisals against south Europe tent, where they said he was sleeping after working late, when one bomb exploded about 100 yards away. Shortly before this, the reporters' bus had been turned away from the compound gate by apparent panic firing as a new US air raid was reported. One foreign businessman said he saw a plane high over the harbor. From the ABC News bureau in the seafront Grand Hotel, reporters were sure they could see Libyan gunboats and Late at night, the harbor below the hotel again .erupted in wild firing, apparently in a new air raid alert. Libyan Information Minister Muhammad Sharif Din Fayturi told reporters that the afternoon "raid" - denied by Washington - involved a pass by a US SR-71 Blackbird reconnaissance plane. He claimed US fighter bombers tried to "infiltrate" Libyan airspace from the direction of Tunisia to bomb several places near Tripoli, including Tarhuna, about 30 miles southeast of Tripoli. Reports from Washington, unconfirmed in Libya, claim the Libyan Air Force joined in factional fighting between pro- and anti-Qaddafi forces at Tarhuna. Some Western embassies here claimed they heard small-arms fire in Tripoli near Qaddafi's former headquarters, but could not explain it. Finally, near midnight, Qaddafi's speech relieved sus- pense here. After he ordered an end to Tripoli's three- night blackout, pro-Qaddafi demonstrators with bright lights serenaded newsmen in the Grand Hotel with shouts on loudspeakers and the beating of large drums. "One of the most spectacular days ever in the ongoing 'Qaddafi Show,' with Qaddafi himself still directing," remarked one rather cynical Western correspondent. "But what will the next act be?" There was no immediate answer as night fell April 17 over a more relaxed but still worried city. Mr. Cooley, the Monitor's former Middle East reporter, is an ABC staff correspondent. Declassified and Approved For Release 2012/01/19: CIA-RDP05-01559R000400470001-3 Declassified and Approved For Release 2012/01/19: CIA-RDP05-01559R000400470001-3Kf THURSDAY, APRIL 17~ 1986: t THE CHRISTIAN'SCIENCE MONITOR - "' TRIPOLI from preceding page INTERNATIONAL that Colonel Qaddafi is either dead or out of the -coun- try." Asked about this, Presidential spokesman Larry Speakes said, "I really wouldn't go that far. I'm not sure it's an accurate intelligence conclusion." .:. , ; " At press time, there had been no sign of the Libyan leader, who failed to appear for a promised news confer- ence. Libyan officials and state-run media insisted that he is alive, unhurt, and in control. About 70 reporters in a bus were nearing.Qaddafi's sprawling headquarters compound for the news confer- ence when small-arms fire started about 500 'feet from the vehicle. The bus then turned back. Libyan officials reacted angrily, when they heard radio reports relaying the journalists' stories. of street skirmishes. Journalists. also saw a Libyan patrol boat fire cannon rounds along the Tripoli waterfront, but it was not clear who was, firing or what their target was. After the shooting ended, the reporters again were put on a bus to Qaddafi's compound. An official said, Qaddafi "is in Libya," but refused to elaborate. The Qaddafi residence, a two-story, blue-and-white cement building, was peppered with shrapnel from a bomb that left a large crater 10 yards away. Western diplomats estimated the death toll from Tuesday's bombing at 100. Libyan officials would say only that many people were killed, and hospitals said up. to 100 people were injured in one residential area. Lihvan television broadcast a 'film clip that it said showed Qaddafi?meeting Soviet Ambassador Anatoly Anissimov after Tuesday's, bombing. A Western diplo- mat, who spoke on condition of anonymity, confirmed that the meeting took place. Meanwhile, in neighboring Sudan, a US Embassy em`- ployee was shot in the head and seriously hurt late Tuesday in the capital city of Khartoum. US officials' said they had no information directly linking the attack to Libya, but an official at the US Embassy in Khartoum said the attack occurred near the Libyan Embassy. The US Embassy in Khartoum was closed Wednesday after it had been ordered to a "a high state of alert" for fear of trouble because of Tuesday's US bombing raids on Libya. A State Department spokesman said the victim was leaving the US Embassy in his car, when another car drove up beside him and shots were fired. The emplo , a communications technician whose identity wasp withheld because his relatives had not been notified, as flown to a hospital in Jiddah, Saudi Arabia, a State Department official in Washington said Wednesday. At*," US Secretary of State George Shultz, asked about the shooting during a satellite news conference with report- ers in Europe, said there was no' evidence Libya was behind the attack. He said, however; that there have been previous threats against US diplomats in the Sudan.. Meanwhile, in England, a British politician said. that some US jets returned to their bases with bombs still aboard. According to Sir Eldon Griffiths, a Conservative parliamentarian who supports the US action and who was briefed by senior US officers, Libyan ground defenses forced some planes to abandon their mission. - Declassified and Approved For Release 2012/01/19: CIA-RDP05-01559R000400470001-3 Declassified and Approved For Release 2012/01/19 : CIA-RDP05--01559R000400470001-3 9 moo% Conflicting reports, skirmishes fuel tension in Tripoli Qaddafi's failure to show up at news conference sparks rumors TdpoN, Libya The atmosphere in the Libyan capital remained tense Wednesday, amid conflicting reports about alleged re- newed United States attacks and uncertainty about Col. Muammar Qaddafl's whereabouts and condition. Libyan officials claimed that anti-aircraft fire that broke out for a half-hour in Tripoli yesterday was aimed at a US reconnaissance plane. Libyan radio also claimed that US jets raided, but failed to hit, Japan has tightened re- targets in two areas 40 curity for next month's miles outside Tripoli. summit because of the In Washington, a Pen- tagon spokesman denied US attack on Libya. Jap- the Libyan claim, saying, anese terrorists have "There is no US military ties with Libya. P. 11. activity in Libya." Other Pentagon sources, speaking on condition of anonymity, said efforts have been made to survey Libyan targets using satellites and reconnaisance planes. Journalists in Tripoli heard small-arms and mortar fire and saw apparent street skirmishes near Colonel Qaddafl's headquarters. These incidents led to reports such as one aired at noon yesterday by ABC television. The report said, "American intelligence sources believe - Please see TRIPOU next page Declassified and Approved For Release 2012/01/19 : CIA-RDP05-01559R000400470001-3 6 Declassified and A roved For Release 2012/01/19 m CIA-RDP05-01559800nAnnA7nnn1-3 US picks ? at the puzzle ot terrorism Qaddafi grip on Libya seems cure despite jolt of air raid By George D. Moffett III Staff writer of The Christian Science Monitor Washington Col. Muammar Qaddafi's grip on Libya remains firm, say some experts. The hope of American offi- cials that the April 15 bombing raid by United States warplanes would help topple the Libyan leader seems unlikely to be fulfilled. There are factions in Libya itching for a coup. But the opposition to Qaddafi's 16-year rule is weak and fragmented. Besides, any successor to Qaddafi might be more pro-Soviet than the US would like. If Qaddafi were to go, "you could have a more independent leader ousted in favor of a more compli- ant leader," says Clement Miller, an analyst at Whar- ton Econometric Forecasting Associates. Reagan administration officials were buoyed last ~ek by reports of sporadic fighting between rival yan factions, indicating what Secretary of State George.Shultz described on Thursday as "consider- able dissidence" within the Libyan armed forces. US officials say one purpose of last Tuesday's raid was to help topple Qaddafi by strengthening the hand of opposition forces inside the country. The US has tried for years to abet the process of political change in Libya, working to undermine Please see PUZZLE back page His elite guard quells discontent Related stories ? Tories assess political damage resulting from British role Page 9 ? US evacuation from Sudan overshadows vote Page 12 ? West Berlin on high alert as anti- US protests continue Page ?. Declassified and Approved For Release 2012/01/19: CIA-RDP05-01559R000400470001-3 32 Declassified and Approved For Release 2012/01/19: CIA-RDP05-01559R000400470001-3 3 I HE UHHIS I IAN SUIENUE MONITOR IS PUZZLE from front page Qaddafl's power through measures ranging from eco- nomic sanctions to clandestine contacts with members of the Qaddafi opposition. While US officials insist that Qaddafi was not a "direct" target-of last week's raid over Libya, the Libyan leader's residence and headquarters were targets of the bomb attack. "I think the world would be a great deal' better off if Libya were in different hands," said Defense Secretary Casper W. Weinberger in a recent Monitor interview. Experts outside the government say the US raid may have hurt Qaddafi somewhat, giving disaffected ele- ments within the military a chance to feed on any popular discontent with the Libyan leader. But so far an effective surveillance system, which relies on the pene- tration of army units by members of Qaddafi's elite revolutionary guard, has been sufficient to quell discon- tent, they say. One reason for Qaddafi's ability to maintain control has been the decentralization of political power and patronage through numerous "people's committees," councils in various towns and regions, loyal to Qaddafi, that monopolize local judicial, legislative, and executive authority. There is thus no obvious alternative locus of national power in Libya outside the army and the elite, 2,000-man revolutionary guard. "Qaddafi has deinstitutionalized government in Libya. If he disappears, what do you rely on next?" asks William Louis, professor of political science at George Washington University. Leaders of various exile groups, such as the London-based National Front for the Salva- tion of Libya, appear to have little appreciable political support inside Libya. As a result, says Professor Louis, Qaddafi's departure could lead to low-level chaos as in Lebanon or outright civil war, as in Chad, between various tribal and regional groups. In either case, the presence of 6,000 Eastern Bloc advisors in Libya could provide opportunities the Soviets could exploit. In the case of a military coup, agaist Qaddafi, the alternative for the US could be little better. The most likely successors - including Qaddafi's heir-apparent and head of the revolutionary guard, Maj. Abdul Sallam MONDAY, APRIL 21, 1986 Jalloud - may prove more pro-Soviet than Qaddafi. Despite. the sizeable East bloc commitment to Libya, Qaddafi has refused to grant base rights to the Soviet Union in Libya. Major Jalloud, who warned Friday that the matter of the bases was being reopened following last week's raid, is believed to favor extending such rights, highly prized by the Soviets because of Libya's strategic location. While Qaddafi still appears in firm control in Libya, analysts describe factors that could weaken the Libyan leader's 16-year regime. One. is the impact of collapsing world oil prices. Libyan oil revenues have dropped from $22 billion to less than $9 billion in just six years with no bottom in sight. Experts say that's likely to tear at domestic unity by sharpening competition for scarce budgetary resources among consumers, the army, and local government councils. More serious is resentment within the army over privileges extended by Qaddafi to the revolutionary guard. He has drawn many of the guards from his own tribe in Libya's Serte region, in the process exacerbating old tribal animosities. 1 Declassified and Approved For Release 2012/01/19: CIA-RDP05-01559R000400470001-3 Declassified and Approved For Release 2012/01/19: CIA-RDP05-01559R000400470001-3 yach11 teen llei m n Hi Army Libyan Leader's Ruling lactic: Keep Power Centers off Balance By Christopher Dickey Washington Post Foreign Service TRIPOLI, Libya, Jan. 13-On the night of Nov. 23, Col. Khassan Ishqal was taken to Enas Hospital in the Libyan capital with six bullet wounds in his body, according to diplomats here citing hospital sources. fie died shortly afterward. Ishqal was "an extremely pow- erful man," as one European diplo- mat put it. I e was part of Libyan leader Col. (~~Muammar Qad dafi own Qaddafodam clan from Surt, where Ishqal served as military governor. He also played a major role in the country's oil industry and held senior intelligence posts, according to various diplomats. "A lot of people hated him," said one source who looked closely into lshqal's background. He reportedly had imprisoned some officials for corruption. His oil dealings brought him frequently into contact with westerners, and, as a result, he was considered to be pro-West. Ishqal was "one who dared to tell Qaddafi a lot of the truth-about economic policy, for instance," said the dip- lomat. Ishgal is believed to have quar- reled frequently with Maj. Abdul ? U.S. settles down to at twtr of nerves with Libya. Paige A 11, Salaam Jalloud, Qaddafi's closest aide and now the head of the rev- olutionary committees, a confron- tation of the sort that Qaddafi is widely believed to have nurtured as a way of keeping competing centers of power off balance. Ishqal was believed by diplomats to represent those Army officers who favor improving economic con- ditions before pushing ahead with the revolution, while Jalloud prefers increasingly radical revolutionary measures. In Qaddafi's dream of the world, there is no army, and Qaddafi is a man determined at whatever cost to make his dream a reality. He has See LIBYA, A11, Col. 1 Declassified and Approved For Release 2012/01/19: CIA-RDP05-01559R000400470001-3 Declassified and Approved For Release 2012/01/19: CIA-RDP05-01559R000400470001-3 yautwi peen iveepni -rmy. In 'ne.m. used the rather loosely defined rev- olutionary committees as a way of controlling various elements of Lib- yan society, including the Army. fie has used this network of ideolog- ically indoctrinated groups to sus- tain intelligence inside the walls of the Army's compounds, organizing the committees or imposing them in virtually every barracks, according. to diplomats and Libyan officials. They are a,parallel and often hostile authority within the Army itself, these sources said. Qaddafi "has tried to organize.dis- organization to keep himself alive, so nobody could oppose him," said one diplomat. But in the process,. the Libyan leader may have created'more dan- gers for himself. Several European diplomats interviewed this week contend that Qaddafi has turned the institution that he used to gain pow- er 16 years ago into the institution most able and likely to bring him down.. Even as he faced the possibility of a U.S..' or Israeli air strike during the past three weeks, he continued to speak bluntly about wanting to. abolish the traditional armed forces and officer corps.- "The masses must replace the Army," the Libyan leader told re- porters on - Friday. "The regular Army will disappear, and armed cit- izens will replace it." Asked if this would create resent- ments and problems with the reg- ular armed forces, Qaddafi said,. "Obviously, because they would like to have power, and when we dis- mantle it and give the people' pow- er, they can no longer do so." But Qaddafi said, "It would be dif- ficult to have a coup because the au- thority is in the hands of the people, and they would refuse. No one will obey." . i StateDepartment Dispatches Whitehead To Urge Sanctions Associated Press Deputy Secretary of State John Whitehead is to visit nine North Atlantic Treaty Organization allies starting'Wednesday in hopes of per- suading them to reduce their ties with Libya, the State Department announced yesterday. Whitehead plans to begin consul- tations in Canada and also plans stops' in ' . West ' Germany, France, Turkey, Italy, the Netherlands, Greece, Belgium and Great Britain. The Reagan administration, ac- cusing the government of Muam- mar Qaddafi of engaging in state- spgnsored terrorism, last week im- posed an embargo on all trade with Libya and froze Libyan assets in the United States. The administration also asked Europeans to apply sanctions against Tripoli but has received only limited support. State Department spokesman Bernard Kalb reiterated yesterday the U.S. view that Libya is the lead- ing supporter of Palestinian militant Abu Nidal and that Qaddafi has backed other recent attacks such as the hijacking of an Egyptair airliner last fall. Declassified and Approved For Since he has acquired" billions of- dollars' worth of- 'sophisticated weapons systems from the Soviets and other countries, moreover, his undermining of the professional mil- itary establishment may have wors- ened problems of maintenance and training and made Qaddafi even more dependent on foreign advis- ers-particularly the Soviets, Czechoslovaks and East Germans- to keep his arsenal functioning. "This-is the limit of [Qaddafi'sl system," said one- diplomat. "It is fine to have people .be self-sufficient and able to do everything, up to a point. But when you have things like' tanks and planes, you cannot improvise." U.S. presidential "findings" for covert action against Libya last fall suggested that Washington hopes in' part to lure Qaddafi into a foreign adventure or terrorist exploit that would give what the Central Intel- ligence Agency considered a grow- ing number of Qaddafi's opponents in the Libyan military a chance to seize power. Three times since August, Qad- dafi has faced military buildups on .his borders that may have increased tension among the leaders of his armed forces. In early September, after Qaddafi expelled thousands of Tunisian and Egyptian workers, Algeria took Tu- nisia's part and moved troops to the Libyan frontier. After the Nov. 23 hijacking of an Egyptair flight ended in Malta with at least 60 persons killed, Egypt blamed Palestinian terrorists backed by Libya. No clear proof was presented to establish the charge, but for several days Egypt rein- forced air bases near Libya's east- ern border and maintained its troops on a high state of alert. In the aftermath of the Dec. 27 Palestinian attacks on airports in Rome and Vienna that resulted in 19 deaths, the United States and Is- rael once again accused Qaddafi of backing the terrorists, and both countries hinted at reprisals. In addition to these acute prob- lems, diplomats cite several chronic sources of discontent, in. the armed forces. "This, is not an Army isolated . from the people. It.reflects all the problems in the general popula- tion," said one senior diplomat. -"if . there are tribal problems in the ci- vilian population, there are tribal problems in the Army." Economic cutbacks have caused ,perquisites for Army officers to be curtailed or eliminated and salaries are low. Other diplomats cite Qaddafi's military adventures in Chad and in Uganda in 1979 as causes, for irri- tation among the officers. But Qaddafi is no stranger to plots, including attempts on his life, and he has proved a resilient sur- vivor. ' In March or early April 1985, ac- cording to reports based on U.S. in- telligence sources, Army officers eliminate Libya's leader. As many as 25 officers were believed to have been executed when their efforts failed. Since then, the power of the rev- olutionary committees inside the barracks has increased further, and diplomats say they believe the com- mittees control most or all of the Qaddafi often seems to be playing the revolutionary committees and the Army against each another. In November, for instance, the mili- tary chief of staff appeared prom- inently and frequently in the press, and the Army found itself once again in a favorable public light. But at the end of the month, lshqal's mysterious killing raised fresh questions about the loyalty even of the officers closest to Qaddafi. Despite some dramatic published reports of Ishqal's death, however, including one where he allegedly tried to kill Qaddafi, and another in which Qaddafi was said to have shot him,, most of the usually' well-in- formed European diplomats here in- sist that they have no idea of the ac- tual circumstances. They point out that if Ishgal had been killed under what they call "the usual circumstances" for Qad- dafi's opponents here, Ishgal never would have been taken to a hospital staffed by foreign personnel, who subsequently revealed his death and its cause. The official version was first that Ishgal died in a car accident, but government spokesmen faced with reports of his bullet wounds now say that he committed suicide. Whatever the true circum- stances, Ishqal's death may have opened up still more problems for Qaddafi. In a country where. infor- mation is tightly controlled and ru- mor quickly takes on the aspect of truth, "the suspicion is that Jalloud felt threatened by Ishgal and per- suaded Qaddafi to kill him," said one European diplomat. "Not all the of- ficers are happy with this solution. But the worst thing is that Khassan [Ishgal) came from Qaddafi's tribe." "Of course, the vendetta principle is still alive in Libya at the tribal level," said one diplomat, so "now Qaddafi really has to watch out for his own tribe, which, before, he could blindly trust." Norway Accepts U.S. Appeal for Curbs on Libya United Press International OSLO, Jan. 13-The Norwegian government announced today its backing of President Reagan's ap- peal for international sanctions against Libya, offering the strong- est endorsement of the sanctions from any European nation. Government spokesman Nils Morten Udgaard stressed that Nor- way had so far made a decision only in principle. The government still is studying what kind of concrete measures should be taken and has set no timetable for applying the sanctions. Udgaard, who works in the office of conservative Prime Minister Kare Willoch, said the Norwegian government considered Reagan's call for concerted action against international terrorism "fully jus- tified." "It is an established fact that Libya is actively supporting terrorists," he said, adding that Libya must share responsibility for the airport attacks in Rome and Vienna last month. Observers noted that Norway has only minimal trade with Libya and available ammunition. few investments or personnel in Some ' diplomats suggest that that country. Release 2012/01/19: CIA-RDP05-01559R000400470001-3 Declassified and Approved For Release 2012/01/19 CIA-RDP05-01559R000400470001-3 (Lib-vt LJay Will-Prepare Arabs For Terror Missions By Christopher Dickey / : Washington Post Foreign Service TRIPO Libya, Jan. 1 Lib- yan lead euammar ad ' step- ping up hi allengeto the Reagan administration, declared publicly tonight that he will train and equip Arab guerrillas for "terrorist and suicide missions." Libya, he said, is "a base for the liberation of Palestine," and, he added, if Israel or the United States attacked it, he would "use all forms of violence in self-defense." Although Qaddafi spoke mainly of the "unconventional" weapons at his disposal, his remarks came a day aftek Soviet warships arrived in Tripoli harbor. A fleet of U.S. war- ships, meanwhile, is deploying off the Libyan coast. Appearing tonight for two hours in the hall of the National People's Congress before a crowd of about 2,000 madly cheering, olive-uni- formed high school and college stu- dents and a handful of radical Arab figures including dissident Palestin- ian leader Abu Musa, Qaddafi aban- doned completely the conciliatory tone toward the United States that he had used in interviews with western reporters during the past week. In the face of repeated charges by the Reagan administration that Qaddafi already is training and sup- plying terrorists, including the group headed by Palestinian radical Abu Nidal that is blamed for the Dec. 27 attacks on the airports in Rome and Vienna, Qaddafi had ta- ken pains until now to deny direct complicity with these groups or their actions. But for much of this month, Arab People's Congresses have been meeting here. These groups of rad- ical Tunisians, Egyptians and Pat- estinians, among others, passed resolutions vowing to form suicide squads and do whatever is neces- sary to free Palestine from what is called Israel's "Zionist" occupation. Last night Qaddafi had chided Declassified and Approved For Release 2012/01/19 :5 CIA-RDP05-01559R000400470001-3 Declassified and Approved For Release 2012/01/19: CIA-RDP05-01559R000400470001-3 TIIE WASIIINGTON POST Muammar Qaddafi, right, embraces dissident Palestinian leader Abu Farras as another dissident, Abu Musa, looks on. A group of Libyan soldiers trains with submachine guns at the Women's Military Academy in Tripoli on Tuesday. U.S. Makes New Bid for Sanctions By Lou Cannon Washington Past Shelf Writer Deputy Secretary of State John Whitehead met yesterday with resident Reagan, then departed or Canada and Europe on a trip timed at persuading U.S. allies that ibya was involved in terrorist at- acks at airports in Rome and Vi- Deputy White House press sec- 'etary Edward Djerejian said White- ad is taking with him "incontro- rertible evidence" of Libyan in- Ivement in the Dec. 27 incidents, which 19 persons were killed, eluding five Americans in Rome. le declined to be specific, saying be information came partially from telligence sources. Whitehead's 10-day trip is an ef- fort to gain European nations' par- ticipation in U.S. economic sanc- tions against Libya. The allies have remained largely unconvinced about Libyan involvement, U.S. officials acknowledge, although Canada has joined the United States in banning export of oil-drilling equipment to Libya. Norway has backed the United States in principle, and Italy, Lib- ya's largest trading partner, has said it will ban sale of some weap- ons. Otherwise, the U.S. appeal for sanctions has been rejected. Secretary of State George P. Shultz, in a news conference beamed to Western Europe, said Whitehead is carrying Reagan's "re- ally strong conviction that interna- tional terrorism is a major problem" and "evidence of Libyan involve- ment in terrorism." Shultz said "concrete evidence" exists that the airport terrorists,. members of the breakaway Abu Nidal faction of the Palestine Lib- eration Organization, used Libyan passports. A senior administration official said information to be conveyed by Whitehead goes beyond use of the passports and is much more de tailed than anything, the United States has made public. But a State Department official, questioning Djerejian's use of the word "incontrovertible," said that "in intelligence, the rules of evi- dence aren't the same as in a court of law." these groups, openly wondering whether they would act on their motion. Tonight he took the occasion of the anniversary of the birth of his idol, Egyptian president Gamal Abdel Nasser, to declare that "these Arab congresses should be in permanent session" here. "I accept all their resolutions," Qaddafi said. "I announce that they will be trained for terrorist and sui- cide missions. We shall allocate trainers to train them and place all weapons needed to perform these missions at their disposal." Qaddafi said he would offer, to the best of his ability, personal pro- tection "to these volunteers, with the Palestinians at their vanguard," because "Libya is a base for the lib- eration of Palestine." He told Western European dip- lomats and a group of reporters last week that he would encourage Pal- estinian guerrilla groups to confine their attacks to Israel and the oc- cupied territories. But one of Abu Musa's top aides in the audience tonight said that the Palestinians here had rejected this advice. "Qaddafi can say what he thinks, but the Palestinians will do what they like," he said. Palestinians present inclpded mainly guerrilla leaders opposed to Palestine Liberation Organization Chairman Yasser Arafat. In addition to Abu Musa and his aide, Abu Ali, who led a 1983 rebellion within Arafat's Fatah faction, there was also Abu Farras, of the dissident Popular Front for the Liberation of' Palestinq-General Command. Abu Nidal apparently was not there. Tonight Qaddafi said, in an ev- ident reference to Israel's Oct. 1 raid on PLO headquarters in Tuni- sia, "If the Israelis pursue the Pal- estinians outside of Palestine, it is the right of the Palestinians to pur- sue the Israelis anywhere in the world. The Rome and Vienna at- tacks targeted the Israeli airline counters." "America's fleet, its threats and economic warfare-neither this nor that will make us give up our sup- port for the Palestinian cause or keep us from supporting it with ev- erything at our disposal, because the Palestinians are fighting for a holy cause," Qaddafi said. His remarks came as more U.S. and Soviet warships were gathering in the Mediterranean. Pentagon officials said a U.S. task force-the aircraft carrier Saratoga, a guided- missile cruiser, a destroyer and. an,. ammunition ship-were steaming' through the Suez Canal for the,. Mediterranean, where another car- ,. rier group headed by the USS Coral Sea is already deployed. A Soviet guided-missile cruiser and frigate passed through the Bos- porus strait early today and they will bring to 28 the number of $q; viet vessels in the Mediterranean; The Soviets have stationed the flag-; ship of their Mediterranean fleet,, i , submarine tender packed with elect= tronic gear, in Tripoli harbor. Qaddafi, readying his country for a possible vi6lent U.S. or Israeli reaction, repeated a call for volun- teer soldiers from all over the Arab' world to join his armed forces. "Libya is a base for confrontation expressing the pride and the nation=alism of the Arabs," he said. But he appeared to put his main hope for defense in unconventional forms of warfare, acknowledging that his regular armed forces would be a poor match for the full might of the United States. Qaddafi cited the plot of "Fitth~ Horseman," a 1981 novel about him- by Larry Collins and Dominique LaPierre, as a "symbol" of the pow- er represented by the guerrillas.he supports. In the novel, Qaddafi pro- vides Palestinian terrorists with- a nuclear device that they nearly suc- ceed in exploding in New York City. , Qaddafi dismissed as impossible the nuclear aspects of the plot but he said it represented the fear America has of the kinds of fighters he uses. -- Declassified and Approved For Release 2012/01/19: CIA-RDP05-01559R000400470001-3 Declassified and Approved For Release 2012/01/19: CIA-RDP05-01559R000400470001-3 Soviet leader that he would not ance that useful neg and in allied capi was discarding th crucial. Ever achev had virtually said ashington without assur- ons were in sight. Breaching have been assumed in Moscow, well, as meaning that the US the ce the Re ce in Washin by Caspar Wein control process. administration took of- n, the "hawk wing," led rger and Richard Perle. at the Departed crusaded passion away from all and go ahead buil ants to build. A moment of decision on this question arrived at, the White House of what to do when the Nevada is co being fitted out at New London, Conn., any weapons it y controversial er the question her sea trials in May. She is to be co d will begin ioned in nuclear missiles. SALT II sets a limit of 1,200 on the number d q~IH -Syria V/(F,7 triangle: marriage of convenience US-Libya tension gives Iran chance to criticize Arabs, US By Claude van England Special to The Christian Science Monitor Tehran, Iran A new wave of anti-American feeling has swept Iran, sparked by last week's American air strike against Libya. Before the traditional Friday public prayers last week, hundreds of thousands of worshippers - including many schoolchildren - marched through the streets of several Iranian cities. They chanted slogans in support of the Libyan people and condemned the "barbaric US aggres- sion" against Libyan civilians. On the official side, Iranian leaders have clearly voiced their support for Libya, which, AP along with Syria, has been Iran's staunchest ally since the Islamic revolution in 1979. For several years, Syrian President Hafez Assad and Libyan leader Muammar Qaddafi'have sold So- viet-made weapons to Iran. The three countries' foreign ministers meet often to coordinate policies. Iran, Syria, and Libya oppose any concessions to Israel on the Pales- tinian homeland issue and have vowed to combat US influence in the Middle East. But Iran's alliances with these two pro-Soviet nations are mar- riages of convenience rather than love matches, analysts say. West- ern observers here note that Iranian leaders and editorialists have refrained from praising Colonel Qaddafi specifically. A highly placed Iranian offi- cial says privately that Iranian leaders have reservations about Qaddafi's policies. Iran is sincere in its condemnation of US policy toward Libya and supports Libya's claim to sovereignty over the Gulf of Sidra, the official says. However, "Qaddafi's regime is not really Islamic," he continues. "He is often surrounded by a swarm of young, unveiled female bodyguards and we know that many Libyan Muslims disap- prove of his socialist ideas." Iranian officials believe Qaddafi has made political mis- takes in recent months,. a well- informed Iranian journalist says. "Qaddafi has allowed Pales- tinian leaders to announce in Tripoli that they would hijack American and Israeli airplanes and that they would attack Khomeini has reservations about ... ... Oaddafi's support for terrorism ... SVEN SIMON ... and is at odds with Assad over Lebanon American civilian targets," the journalist says. "The Iranian government believes such acts tarnish the image of Islam." In the past, he says, the Iranian government has reluc- tantly been dragged into hijackings by Arab Islamic groups. "But nowadays, Iran is trying to convince its allies throughout the world to renounce blind violence," he says. "In other words our government tells its friends that the bombing in 1983 of the American Marines headquarters in Beirut was a victory for Islam but that the hijacking of the TWA aircraft in June 1985 was a mistake." (Iran is alleged to have close links with extremist Shiite Muslim groups in Lebanon that have claimed responsibil- ity for the kidnapping and murder of several Westerners in the past 18 months.) Tease see TRIANGLE next page Declassified and Approved For Release 2012/01/19: CIA-RDP05-01559R000400470001-3 nt of Defense, has ly for the US to break control agreements F~ AP(TRIPOLI Declassified and Approved For Release 2012/01/19 : CIA-RDP05-01559R000400470001-3 Libyans with portrait f 'newly buoyant and bellicose Qaddafi' Money, Moscow s support: two hurdles in Qaddafi's bid to export revolution 06A By John Cooley Special to The Christian Science Monitor Tripoli, Libya Col. Muammar Qaddafi's recent clash with the United States has brightened his image among world radicals planning new "liberation" struggles and anti-US action, especially in Latin America. But, although last week's showdown is depicted here as a victory for Libya, analysts say two major questions over- shadow the blueprint for Qaddafi-style world revolution: First, world oil prices are still weakening. Libya's oil income fell from $22 billion in 1980 to $8 billion last year. Oil industry experts estimate it could plunge below $6 billion in 1986. Can Qaddafi afford to continue financing global revolutionary violence? Second, will Moscow stand by Colonel Qaddafi? US ac- counts say Libyan or Soviet-manned batteries fired six ex: pensive Soviet-made SA-5 missiles at US planes over the Gulf of Sidra March 24. In the US version, none hit its target, though Qaddafi says three US jets were shot down. This is not a good advertisement for Soviet military hard- ware or expertise, foreign military observers here say. Western diplomats in Tripoli predict that any major new terrorist act in the West, whether traceable to Qaddafi or not, may bring US bombing of the fortified compound outside Tripoli where Qaddafi lives and works. Please see MONEY back page Declassified and Approved For Release 2012/01/19 CIA-RDP05-01559R000400470001-3 ? Declassified and Approved For Release 2012/01/19: CIA-RDP05-01559R000400470001-3 1W CHRISTIAN SCIENCE MONITOR MONEY from front page , A skilled internal security force including East Ger- man "advisers" and Qaddafi's loyal tribal bodyguards shield him from assassination. But there are doubts as to whether Moscow would commit Soviet forces to defend Libyan air space or coastlines. The Libyan leader's angry and exultant March 28 speech, as the US Sixth Fleet withdrew, and his March 25 appearance at. the Tripoli trade fair - after US missiles had sunk at least two French-made Libyan missile boats -. showed a newly buoyant, bellicose Qaddafi. He looked younger and in far better health and spirits than during two previous, but bloodless, face- downs with the US Navy - when Libyan jets buzzed a US plane in the area last winter. Qaddafi promised to show on Libyan television frag- ments of the three US jets he claimed were shot down. He also said he would give to the Soviets an unexploded US missile that was fired at the town of Sirte. Only a week earlier, Qaddafi had devoted more rhe- toric to anti-US struggles in Latin America than any foreign observers here can remember him ever doing. These comments came at the "Second International Conference for Combatting Imperialism, Zionism, and Racism," which opened March 15. Several hundred dele- gates attended. They belonged to leftist political parties, liberation movements, and guerrilla groups from the Philippines to Nicaragua, Africa, and the Middle East. Louis Farrakhan, the American Black Muslim leader who has welcomed Qaddafi's financial help but publicly rejected offers of arms for black Americans, attacked President Reagan's ban on travel to Libya by US citizens. Mr. Farrakhan, who stayed on 'through last week's events, accused "US imperialism" of "trying to isolate" Libya from world liberation movements and "remove it from the struggle," the Libyan news agency JANA said. During a conference speech, Qaddafi referred to im- pending US aggression against Libya. He said the 1983 US actions in Grenada were "a lesson for small nations fighting for freedom." He eulogized as a "glorious hero" Alvaro Fayed, leader of Colombia's M-19 guerrilla group, who was recently reported slain. Qaddafi also accused "American pilots" with dual US and Israeli nationality of bombing and "pursuing" Palestinian Arabs in Israeli raids on Syria, Lebanon, and Tunisia since 1967. Since previous similar conferences on world "resis- tance" here in 1981 and 1982, Qaddafi said, "many new forces have joined the collective struggle." He singled out several for praise and promises of support: indepen- dence and separatist movements in the French colonies and territories of Reunion, Martinique, Guadeloupe,. and New Caledonia; American Indians; European "green" parties; and Kurds in Iraq. (Qaddafi has sent military help, including missiles, to Iraq's Persian Gulf war ad- w MONDAY, MARCH 31, 1986 versary Iran.) Qaddafi especially praised Cuban leader Fidel Castro and Nicaraguan President Daniel Ortega Saavedra as "deserving help against US agression." Qaddafi reassured Spain and Italy that he had sus- pended earlier threats to attack their territory since US and NATO bases there, he said, were not involved in the US "aggression." Italy stopped military aid to Libya after last December's terrorist attacks at Rome and Vien- na airports. The Italian government reportedly asked the US not to use bases in Italy for anti-Libyan operations. Italian diplomats in Tripoli say Libya then gave them private assurances it would not attack Italian targets. However, Qaddafi said the conference was taking "tangible measures ... to carry out a collective strug- gle." He added, "There are secret and international revolutionary committees ... throughout the world re- lated to this meeting and they are an extension of it." Earlier this year, Arab sources in the Mideast said that Libya, through intermediaries, was trying to form dummy American firms to bring equipment and person- nel into the US, in an apparent attempt to carry out Qad- dafi's threat to "bring terrorism into the heart of Amer- ica." There has been no public confirmation, but Libyan emigres in Europe, who are opposed to Qaddafi, say the US authorities should take these threats seriously. Mr. Cooley, former Monitor correspondent in the Mideast and author of "Libyan Sandstorms," is an ABC News correspondent based in London. Declassified and Approved For Release 2012/01/19: CIA-RDP05-01559R000400470001-3 Declassified and Approved For Release 2012/01/19 CIA-RDP05-01559R0000400470001-3 ~v Z v ~'\tA~C~f~ \R o ~lJ ~P~ JOHN HUGHES Qaddafi's record ST. James's Square is one of those London oases of mellow tranquillity, rich in history and tradition. In the heart of the West End, it is nevertheless quiet, and usually unruffled. Grand old mansions line its four sides. Today they mainly house clubs and scholarly institutions and big trading companies, which proclaim their occupancy by discreet brass nameplates, or sometimes not at all. In one of these mansions, now the East India Club, the Prince Regent was brought the news of the victory at Waterloo in 1815, reading Wellington's dispatch in the library. Now, each August, the club serves its members spe- cial mulberry pie, the fruit being picked from the pri- vate gardens guarded by tall railings in the center of the square. In that square today, a little memorial marked by flowers is a remembrance of an April day in 1984 when the square was far from peaceful. One of its his- toric buildings was then occupied by the Libyan Peo- ple's Bureau, the equivalent of a Libyan embassy. In a fracas of a kind unheard of in London, Libyan "diplo- mats" fired from their building on anti-Qaddafi dem- onstrators, killing a British policewoman. Eleven oth- ers were wounded by their gunfire. After some drama, the Libyans were tossed out and their embassy closed down, and in it the police found weapons and spent shell casings and paraphernlia not standard issue in the conduct of diplomacy. It should have come as no surprise. Western intelli- gence experts have long known that Libyan embassies are storehouses for arms and explosives used in var- ious terrorist activities originated, orchestrated, or sanctioned by Col. Muammar Qaddafi. A lot of this activity has been directed against anti- Qaddafi exiles. Libyan diplomats have been caught red-handed in plots to kill dissidents. Libyan businessmen, students, former diplomats, and lawyers who have turned against Qaddafi have been found strangled, or shot, or with their throats slit in a string of cities from Athens to Rome to Bonn. One of the most dramatic Qaddafi assassination at- tempts was against former Libyan Prime Minister Abdul-Hamid Bal ush)who had sought sanctuary in Egypt. An elaborate Egyptian "sting" operation, com- plete with pictures of the "murdered" Mr. Bakkush, fooled the Libyans into thinking they had succeeded. Mr. Bakkush was then produced, in good health, by the Egyptians. Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak is a prime tar- get of Colonel Qaddafi, as are a number of other Arab leaders whose moderation enrages the Libyan leader. The United States and Israel, however, are the principal demons Qaddafi sees besetting him as he strives to reshape not only Libya, but the world. In pursuit of his goals, he sees himself as the spokesman for, and manipulator of, radical forces. He supports and encourages subversive groups. Terror- ism is one of his primary instruments. Thus Qaddafi's fingerprints are found in murder and terrorism at the Rome and Vienna airports, and in dozens of other capitals. He has a cozy relationship with the Abu Nidal Palestinian terrorist group. He has meddled in the Sudan and Tunisia; he invaded and annexed part of Chad. He has sent money and weap- ons to Nicaragua, where several dozen Libyan mili- 'tary personnel are assigned. He has aided insurgents in Guatemala, El Salvador, Colombia. His "people's bureau," or embassy, in Grenada was very active un- til US intervention halted the leftward landslide of that Caribbean island. Qaddafi has aided separatists in Bangladesh, Thai- land, the Philippines, and New Caledonia. His record of international thuggery is beyond question. It may be true that his recent confrontation with the US Sixth Fleet may puff him up temporarily. But a greater mistake would be to allow his campaign of in- ternational terrorism to go unbridled, unchallenged, unpunished------------------ _ Declassified and Approved For Release 2012/01/19 : CIA-RDP05-01559R000400470001-3 Declassified and Approved For Release 2012/01/19: CIA-RDP05-01559R000400470001-3 A18 SATURDAY, JAN ARY 11, 1986 ... R THE WASH Qaddafi Talks Of Heroes And Hopes Libyan Surprised ee g n Is Popular By Kate Dourian Reuter author Colin Wilson that he said is his favorite book. Other books he read "The Outsider," a study of alienation in literature by British It may have been then that he Tripoli and later had a brief course at Wilton Park in Beaconsfield, near London, in 1966. But he said he hated England because he felt he did not belong. He learned English, at school in about the fives, backgrounds. and religion of Americans. ries about the peculiarities of life in the United States. He wanted to know more about Las Vegas and Qaddafi laughed heartily at sto- fication, Giuseppe Garibaldi and Giuseppe Mazzini. 19th century leaders of Italy's uni- mires are Egypt's Gamal Abdel Nasser, India's Mohandas K. Gan- Other past world leaders he ad- his heroes include two former U.S. presidents, George Washington and Abraham Lincoln. most personal antipathy toward Reagan, whom he has called "an aging third-rate actor," Qaddafi said While he appears to have an q1- was loved by many Americans. "But he did many crises In the world," dafi asked when told that Reagan "They do? They love him?" Qad- was surprised to hear that Presi- dent Reagan, who this week slapped punitive economic sanctions on Libya, is a popular man. He has not traveled much and seem supercilious at times, Qaddafi spoke in halting English. He re- vealed an almost childlike quality that is a far cry from his image abroad as a man to be feared. tilt of the head that makes him Tall, thick-set, with a backward the masses free, how to make man happy. After that, things started to get clearer," said Qaddafi, a son of the desert who was born in Med- iterranean city of Sidra in 1942. "I had a general idea how to make free and happy in a Utopian society of his own making. power in 1969 was to make people He said his dream when he took night of his likes, thoughts, ideas yai%s, told five women reporters last ered by a l9ng, b pwn cloak and Dressed in a smart safari suit cov- TRIPOLI, Libya, Jan. 10- ikes, Qaddafi said, are "Uncle Tom's Cabin" by Harriet Beecher Stowe and "Roots" by Alex Haley. Libyan Foreign Minister All Treiki talks to reporters in Fez, Morocco. Islamic Conference Organization Fails to Vote Sanctions on U.S. FEZ, Morocco, Jan. 10- Libya's success in rallying anti- American support at the Islamic Conference Organization fal- tered today when Arab coun- tries declined to back up their words with economic sanctions against the United States. Libya's foreign minister, Ali Treiki, won two resolutions of support for Tripoli earlier in the week, but without any pledge of action. Treiki pushed for retaliatory economic sanctions against Washington in separate meet- ings yesterday and today with Arab foreign ministers, whose countries account for nearly half the 45 nations in the Islamic Conference Organization. He said earlier that he was seeking an Islamic boycott of American goods and would ask Arab coun- tries with investments in the United States to withdraw them. are riding horseback-he is known as an accomplished equestrian- and playing soccer. He also said he likes classical music, Beethoven in particular. Throughout the interview, Qad- dafi portrayed himself as a man able to smile and laugh. He proved a considerate host, showing discom- fort when he was unable to provide cigarettes for one of his interview- ers. Qaddafi's ideas about the role of women in society are relatively lib- eral, and he said he is campaigning to make it illegal for Libyan men to marry more than one woman. Now married to a former nurse, who rarely appears in public, he has sev- en children, six boys and one girl. Qaddafi created a sensation when, on rare travels abroad, he appeared surrounded by gun-toting women bodyguards. He is reported to have survived several attempts on his life in Libya all times. His headquarters at the sprawling Bab Aziziya barracks in Tripoli is an almost impregnable fortress, guarded by Soviet-made tanks behind green barricades painted with slogans from his "Green Book" of ideological and po- litical dogma. But inside, Qaddafi appeared re- laxed, although the reporters were asked to leave their handbags out- side the small office. He seemed to take great pains over his appear- ance. His safari suit was crisply ironed, his black boots well pol- ished. Heightened tension with the what he sees as an American attack on his country have given Qaddafi cause for joy as Arab leaders rally to his support. He told reporters last week that the American threat had made Libya "the leader of the resistance against imperialism," likening it to Egypt Declassified and Approved For Release 2012/01/19: CIA-RDP05-01559R000400470001-3 IV6tLM l Oi 'llmple, Food Short F By J'yDITH Speclaffo The New York Times TRIPOLI, Libya, Jan. 12-A banana boat from Nicaragua steamed into port here last week. Several people were in- jured in the riots that broke out at fruit and vegetable stores throughout Trip- oli, diplomats said, as people pushed and shoved one another for the prized imported fruit. There were similar riots two months ago, the envoys said, with two women killed and several people hurt when an- other banana boat arrived from Nica- ra bya is still pumping about 990,000 barrels of oil per day, but it has no ba- nanas, nor much meat, nor toilet paper, nor matches, nor detergent, nor soap. Fresh vegetables are also in short supply, as are many other prgd- ucts. The Suk el-Magamah, one of six giant Government-run food and depart- ment stores in Tripoli, has had practi- cally no fresh produce or meat of any kind for weeks, residents say. From Plenty to Scarcity Only three years ago the Libyan leader, Col. Muammar el-Qaddafi, opened the plush department store, where shelves were piled high with sub- sidized consumer goods from all dyer the world. As part of the gala ceremo- ny, reporters and the colonel's honored guest, Yasir Arafat, the head of the Palestine Liberation Organization, were treated to tea in the store's can- teen, while the colonel praised the "people's stores" as a symbol of his country's prosperity. The only food commodities in ample supply in the food section last week were 110-pound bags of Cuban sugar, boxes of tea from China, tomato paste from Greece, canned tomatoes from Cyprus, salt, damaged cans of vegeta- ble fat and insect spray. The only lux- ury item to be found was Van Houten's cocoa, which shoppers eagerly piled in their carts. The display windows of the adjoining department store were cracked and dusty, the shelves empty. Only two Items were well-stocked. The top floor of the store was full of stuffed pot-bellied teddy bears, which Russian customers eagerly snapped up. Two floors below, the shoe depart- ment boasted some 20 pairs of men's tennis shoes, all size 45, bearing in Eng- lish the word Jamahiriya. The word is Colonel Qaddafi's name in Arabic for Libya, which is roughly translated as "gathering of the masses." Both the teddy bears and tennis shoes were made in South Korea. In an interview Thursday, Colonel th his wife, Safiya, and four of their seven children at news conference Saturday in a tent In the Babel-Azzlziya military barracks in Tripoli, Libya. Qaddafi asserted that the shortages were deliberate. "Sometimes we make items disappear to force people to work harder and produce them," the colonel said. Most diplomats and economists, however, attribute the chronic short- ages here to the dramatic plunge in oil revenues, Libya's only major source of income. The country's annual oil in- come has fallen from a peak of $22 bil- lion in 1980 to about $8 billion or $9 bil- lion in 1985, they said. As the country has only slightly over three million people, Libya is still rela- tively prosperous, especially since just 30 years ago it had one of the world's lowest per capita incomes and its only source of hard currency was the sale of scrap metal from World War II battle- fields. Families with incomes of less than $500 a month still get free housing, schooling and medical treatment. But the problem Libya faces.involves the drop in its reserves of hard foreign cur- rency, -foreign economists say. Western diplomats in Tripoli esti- mate the country's currency reserves at no more than $2.7 billion, down from $3.6 billion at the end of 1984. Because the Government has decided that $2.5 billion is the minimum reserve cur- rency level it will tolerate, Libya has drastically slashed spending and i~p- ports, which totaled $5 billion in 1985. Western business executives in Trip- oli say President Reagan's economic sanctions could hurt the Libyan econ- omy, at least temporarily, because many critical functions in the oil sector are now being performed by Amer- icans, American companies or Euro- pean subsidiaries of American compa- nies. "The Americans are heavily in- volved in maintaining the production side of oil," said one Western business- man. "If maintenance falls, production falls, and that's bad news for Libya." Foreign Workers Driven Away The drop in foreign currency re- serves has also prompted Libya to eject thousands of foreign workers, among them about 40,000 Tunisians. Their departure last August crippled much of the consumer sector of the economy. The Tunisians ran restaurants and hotels, and were Tripoli's barbers and bread makers, as well as foreign em- bassy drivers and translators. The Libyan Government has tried to replace some of them with workers from Morocco, with which Tripoli has signed a unity agreement. Tripoli's luxury Grand Hotel, for example, has hired 200 Moroccans to replace its Tunisian staff, but overall service has suffered badly. "The Tunisians were very resource- ful and had been here for a long time," one diplomat said. "It's tough to re- place them." Not all Libyans feel the shortages. As in most countries, the elite does not have to endure the endless lines for food and goods that plague the average Libyan. Despite Colonel Qaddafi's insistence that class, race and tribe distinctions have been eliminated in Libya, those who work closely with the colonel and the revolutionary committees, a spe- cial cadre of young workers who per- form propaganda and intelligence functions for the revolution, benefit in kind. Villa of. the 'Exploiters' At a luncheon given by a politically well-connected family last week, hearty portions of meat, vegetables and fruit were served to the guests. The villa, in what was one of the American compounds in Tripoli before the revolu- tion, was richly furnished in the finest Arabic style. The house, once occupied by an American family described as "exploiters" by the hostess, was under- going renovation. The low-slung velvet sectional sofa was new, as were the velvet and brass dining room -chairs, and the oriental carpet on the living room floor. . The hostess was especially proud of a crystal vase and glasses decorated with revolutionary slogans from the Green Books, the three slender, vol- umes in which Colonel Qaddafi outlines his vision of an Islamic utopia. . On her mantelpiece were four cher- ished items: an Arabic lantern, a brass statue of a camel, a gold-leaf Koran, and a framed picture of Colonel Qadda- Declassified and Approved For Release 2012/01/19: CIA-RDP05-01559R000400470001-3 ,,,Evidence r )) 3 n MI, By writeror ports, the organization - a dissident Trie Christian Science Monitor faction of the Palestine Liberation Orgam- washington zation - is headed by a Palestinian ter- Was Libya the invisible hand behind rorist with alleged Libyan connections last weekend's tragic hijacking of an named Sabri Banna. Since breaking with Egyptian airliner? the PLO in 1972, the organization has Egypt is insisting it was. Mideast ex- been implicated in numerous terrorist perts in the United States say the circum- attacks. stantial evidence points in that direction. Reports say the group has been ar- "It's quite plausible there's a Libyan dently opposed to Egypt's close associ- connection," says Ray SHIRLEYHORN -STAFF ation with the US and to re- Cline, a terrorism specialist lations with Israel at the Georgetown Center developed during the Camp for Strategic and Interna- David peace process. tional Studies. "Qaddafi is More _ recently, ' Sabri bitterly hostile toward the Banna, also known as Abu Egyptians. It's clear he Nid l id a , was sa to be would like to embarrass outraged b a recent state- y and if possible to destroy ment by PLO leader Yasser ? Declassified and Approved For Release 2012/01/19: CIA-RDP05-01559R000400470001-3 111ts to Libyan connection with 1Vlaita ni jac Vr-Pr ru-aiai renouncing au rt" Euerrilla activity nutsidA Ts- - you tend to expect." v --r ` -- ---- '' In a statement issued Speculation regarding a possible Lib- Monday, the Libyan government denied yan role comes as officials assess the toll any involvement in the Egyptair incident, from last Sunday's attack by Egyptian saying permission to land the plane on commandoes on a hijacked Egyptian air- Libyan territory would have been denied liner in Malta. The assault left 60 people if requested by the hijackers. dead, including all but one of the esti- Egyptian sources, noting that it was mated five hijackers. the Libyan ambassador to Malta who g o po n an accusing finger Responsibility for the hijacking was made the first attempt to negotiate with at Tripoli is to provide a base of popular originally claimed by a group known as the hijackers, insist on a Libyan connec- support for a show of Egyptian military 'Egypt's Revolution, an obscure terrorist tion. In a statement Tuesday, Cairo ac- force against Libya. Sunday, Mubarak organization which last August claimed cused a government of Muammar ---placed Egyptian military forces along the ., jesponsibility for the killing of an Israeli _ Qaddafi f providing the "fund-raising Libyan border on alert. diplomat in Cairo. r. lartdincitement" behind the hijacking. But domestic political factors may be The hijacking now appears to be linked "The Libyans have been implicted in' at work as well. Experts say blaming \to another shadowy Egyptian-based ter- so many terrorist threats against Egypt," Libya may be one way for Mubarak to de- ~rorist group known as the Egypt Liber- concurs a US State Department official. fleet criticism for the handling of the ration Organization. According to news re- "Rest assured, we have many reasons to Achille Lauro affair last month. Com- believe the Libyans are involved in the Egyptair incident as well." "So far, neither the Egyptians nor any- one else has confirmed the Libyan connec- tion," says a European-based Middle East specialist. Despite Qaddafi's fre- quent involvement in terrorism, he says, this would be the first time Qaddafi has been linked to a hijacking. "But Libya's involvement still seems plausible," possibly reflecting Qaddafi's weakened political position at home and growing diplomatic isolation in the Arab world. "Also, it was a chance to deliver a very hard blow to Mubarak, to all the Arab moderates." says this source. Egyptian relations with Libya turned sour a decade ago when the two nations broke relations over Egyptian participa- tion in the Camp David peace process. In 1977, they fought a brief border war and more recently have competed for influ- ence in Sudan following the coup last April that toppled the government of Sudanese President Jaafar Nimeiry. The enmity between the two nations has been compounded by a series of recent Libyan terrorist operations inside Egypt. Experts here say one reason Cairo has been so ea er t i t (. addafi - bigger than life - in Tripoli bined with Mubarak's recent embrace of PLO leader Arafat, the move is also seen here as a way of making inroads on the growing opposition to the Mubarak gov- ernment from Egypt's Islamic fundamen- talists and Nasserite leftists. "It's consistent with Egyptian policy to blame the Libyans," says Middle East . expert Raymond Baker of Williams Col- lege. "Within Egypt, such opposition de- flects attention from the larger, more im- portant issue - the groundswell of opposition to Camp David, the Middle East peace process, and Egypt's Ameri- can connection in general. Declassified and Approved For Release 2012/01/19: CIA-RDP05-01559R000400470001-3