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  • Gadhafi and Western intellectuals

    • 28 Feb 2011
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    • libya middle east politics
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    Robert Putnam was once called to a meeting with Gadhafi.  Here is an excerpt from his account:

    Students of Western political philosophy would categorize Col. Gadhafi as a quintessential student of Jean-Jacques Rousseau: He made clear that he deeply distrusted any political group that might stand between individual citizens and the "General Will" as interpreted by the Legislator (i.e., Col. Gadhafi himself). When I argued that freedom of association could enhance democratic stability, he vehemently dismissed the idea. That might be so in the West, he insisted, but in Libya it would simply strengthen tribalism, and he would not stand for disunity.

    Throughout, he styled our meeting as a conversation between two profound political thinkers, a trope that approached the absurd when he observed that there were international organizations for many professions nowadays, but none for philosopher-kings. "Why don't we make that happen?" he proposed with a straight face. I smiled, at a loss for words. Col. Gadhafi was a tyrant and a megalomaniac, not a philosopher-king, but our visit left me convinced that he was not a simple man.

    Was this a serious conversation or an elaborate farce? Naturally, I came away thinking—hoping—that I had managed to sway Col. Gadhafi in some small way, but my wife was skeptical. Two months later I was invited back to a public roundtable in Libya, but by then I had concluded that the whole exercise was a public-relations stunt, and I declined.

    Hat tip goes to Monkey Cage and ultimately, the fabled Daniel Lippman.  But that's not all -- Benjamin Barber also had some visits to meet with the Libyan leader, here is his account:

    Written off not long ago as an implacable despot, Gaddafi is a complex and adaptive thinker as well as an efficient, if laid-back, autocrat. Unlike almost any other Arab ruler, he has exhibited an extraordinary capacity to rethink his country's role in a changed and changing world.

    And:

    Surprisingly flexible and pragmatic, Gaddafi was once an ardent socialist who now acknowledges private property and capital as sometimes appropriate elements in developing societies. Once an opponent of representative central government, he is wrestling with the need to delegate substantial authority to competent public officials if Libya is to join the global system. Once fearful of outside media, he has permitted satellite dishes throughout his country, and he himself surfs the Internet.

    Libya under Gaddafi has embarked on a journey that could make it the first Arab state to transition peacefully and without overt Western intervention to a stable, non-autocratic government and, in time, to an indigenous mixed constitution favoring direct democracy locally and efficient government centrally.

    Here is Barber's piece on Libya from 2011.  It starts like this:

    I offer my views about Libya here not just as a democratic theorist and HuffPost regular, but as a member of the International Board of the Gaddafi International Charity and Development Foundation until this morning, when I resigned.

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  • Reader riposte: Eyes over Libya

    • 28 Feb 2011
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    Margot Carlson Delogne from DigitalGlobe responds to Prakash Mirchandani:

    I read with interest your posting about Egypt and the recent events in Libya, with the note that it 'is surprising DigitalGlobe has not released any images of Libya'. We actually give any news agency our imagery in these situations, never holding that back. We haven't to date captured much in Libya due to cloud cover and other factors.

    We believe it's critical to share insights about what is happening on the ground in dynamic situations. That's why we are the main satellite imagery provider behind the Satellite Sentinel Project. A recent story on this was published in the Denver Post and broadcast on CNN International.

    Image: DigitalGlobe.

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  • How Egypt shut down the Internet

    • 31 Jan 2011
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    All_outages_zoom2

    Perhaps very much so planned in light of the given country, which has been in a state of emergency since 1967, the government had access to the internet entirely cut off from its citizens last week. From days of allegedly denying to be behind the block of Facebook and Twitter and saying that it supported free speech, the Egyptian government pulled an astonishing move which is unprecedented and yet almost unimaginable for a state that has relatively a strong Internet economy and an equity market that is one of the most developed in the region.

    So how did the Egyptians just turn off the Internet? Does Mubarak actually have a kill switch in Abdeen Palace? Unlikely. The real assumed observed way was that someone from the top called each major network (Autonomous System) and directed them to take themselves offline. Observed here by Renesys, an Internet monitoring body, they listed the shutdown times of 5 of the 6 major networks in Egypt:

    • Telecom Egypt (AS8452), the national incumbent, starts the process at 22:12:43.
    • Raya joins in a minute later, at 22:13:26.
    • Link Egypt (AS24863) begins taking themselves down 4 minutes later, at 22:17:10.
    • Etisalat Misr (AS32992) goes two minutes later, at 22:19:02
    • Internet Egypt (AS5536) goes six minutes later, at 22:25:10.

    First impressions: this sequencing looks like people getting phone calls, one at a time, telling them to take themselves off the air. Not an automated system that takes all providers down at once; instead, the incumbent leads and other providers follow meekly one by one until Egypt is silenced.

    Essentially, the government has taken two approaches; it disabled DNS lookup of addresses that ends in .eg - which is the equivalent of as if the postal service had lost the address of everyone - and any outgoing or incoming packets with a specific address will not go though their Border Gateway Protocol. They could have just taken out the country's sole IXP but the downstream impact could have aggravated their neighbors igniting all sort of other conflicts.

    What should be of most apparent to anyone is that complete reliability and uttermost assurance of the Internet as a haven for free speech and democracy is insignificant and can be easily undermined - particularly in a country where there's a high level of governmental control - where they can just switch off access to the rest of the world.

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