The son also slaughters

Libyan leader Muammar Gaddafi was brought in from the cold as his second son positioned himself as an agent of reform.

Saif Al-Islam Gaddafi
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Saif al-Islam Gaddafi has promised “a sea of blood”. But, after positioning himself as a peaceful reformist, how much blood will be on these hands at the end of Libya’s uprising? [GALLO/GETTY]

“The enemy of yesterday is the friend of today … it was a real war, but those brothers are free men now.”

Thus spoke Saif al-Islam Gaddafi in March 2010, referring to the leaders of the Libyan Islamic Fighting Group, an armed organisation that had attempted to assassinate his father, Muammar Gaddafi, three times in the mid-1990s.

This may seem surprising. A few days ago, the very same man promised Libyans a “sea of blood” if his father’s regime was toppled. Indeed, Saif al-Islam, an elegant, soft-spoken graduate of the London School of Economics, has now become a prime suspect in massive crimes against humanity.

People like me, who study the tactics of Arab dictatorships and the causes of their persistence, are less surprised, if at all, by this turn of events. Arab authoritarian regimes, unlike others that have given way to democracy, are incapable of self-reform; they have, however, mastered the tactics needed to prolong the life spans of their aging despotisms.

Creation of a Hydra-headed security apparatus, mass-murder of opponents – both real and imagined – widespread torture, and sustained censorship and repression are some of the common tactics used by Gaddafi, former Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak, former Tunisian President Zine el-Abidine Ben Ali, Syrian President Bashar al-Assad, and other Arab autocrats.

Pariah to “reformist”

But Gaddafi’s regime became an international pariah mainly for a series of terrorist plots abroad, not for crimes against humanity committed against Libyans. Yet oil interests and the regime’s “dovish” face in recent years successfully extended its life.

Gaddafi’s dovish period coincided with the rise to prominence of his second son, Saif al-Islam, and his sister Ayesha, the latter becoming a goodwill ambassador for the United Nations. Saif cultivated a reputation for being “a reformer” – he called for a national reconciliation process with opposition groups, supposedly liberalised the media, supported charity and development initiatives – and most importantly, became a face that the West could talk to.

The two public fronts for those initiatives were Libya Tomorrow and the al-Gaddafi Foundation for Development. Behind them, however, Libyan Military Intelligence, headed by Abdullah al-Sanosi, was giving conditional support and setting the general direction for their activities.

The “reforms” proposed by Saif al-Islam included the release of some political prisoners, especially those, such as the LIFG, who declared their allegiance to Gaddafi’s regime. But concrete steps leading to government transparency and accountability, such as inquiries into oil wealth and state expenditure, or serious investigation of crimes against humanity, were all beyond his will and imagination.

Despite the cosmetic nature of the “reforms”, other regime factions – most notably those led by Saif al-Islam’s brothers Mutassim, Sa’adi and Khamis – challenged them. Behind the brothers were other security agencies: the Internal Security Forces, the Revolutionary Committees, and, to a lesser extent, the Jamahiriya Security Apparatus (Foreign Intelligence).

Defending the status quo

When I visited Tripoli in March 2010 for a “national reconciliation conference”, the conflicting statements given by Saif al-Islam and security officials surprised me. The head of Internal Security Forces, Colonel al-Tuhami Khaled, another principal suspect in the crimes currently being committed against Libyans, refused to call the process a “reconciliation”. For him, it was “repentance from heresy”.

Given the recent wave of uprisings, it is more evident than ever that any “reform” initiatives undertaken in the Arab world previously were aimed only at sustaining repressive dictatorships and escaping punishment for criminal abuse of power. The reform “debate” within these regimes boiled down to a struggle between different branches of the security-military apparatus over the best way to preserve the status quo.

Arabs, of course, have known for years that their rulers were beyond reform. That is why, in order to have a chance to catch up with the rest of the free, developed world, many of them are now risking their lives to remove those regimes. What is happening today in the Arab world is history in the making, written in the blood, sweat, and tears of the victims of decades of violent repression.

When asked by a journalist what I would like to say to Saif al-Islam if I were ever to meet him again, I replied: “I hope to see you in the International Criminal Court, beside Mubarak and Ben Ali.” Millions of Arabs of my generation and younger would probably give the same answer if asked what should become of the men who controlled their present – and sought to destroy their future.

Omar Ashour is a lecturer in Middle East politics and Director of the Middle East Graduate Studies Program at the Institute of Arab and Islamic Studies, University of Exeter. He is the author of The De-Radicalization of Jihadists: Transforming Armed Islamist Movements.

This article was first published by Project Syndicate.

The views expressed in this article are the author’s own and do not necessarily reflect Al Jazeera’s editorial policy.