The Rebels Advance Toward Tripoli: We've Heard This Story Before
As the Libyan rebels swarm Tripoli and push Muammar Qaddafi's regime to the brink of collapse, The Globe and Mail's Doug Saunders is keeping an eye on Libyan officials who have stuck with the regime since the uprising erupted in February only to break with the government at the last possible moment. And indeed, these figures--whom Saunders is calling "post-barn-door defectors" or "Jamal Come Latelys"--have been making headlines throughout the day, as they righteously express their support for the same rebel leaders (and presumably future Libyan leaders) whom they long refrained from supporting when the opposition's ability to overcome Qaddafi was in doubt. Let's take a look at some of the defectors:
Other Libyan diplomats in Algeria, Turkey, and Morocco have similarly allowed pro-rebel Libyans to take over their embassies and destroy symbols of the Qaddafi regime. But not everyone in Libya's diplomatic orbit is peeling away from Qaddafi. In the Bosnia, a group of Libyan protesters briefly seized Libya's embassy in Sarajevo and demanded that the ambassador resign before police removed them from the building. Amira Berma, a former embassy employee who was among the protesters, told the AP that the ambassador, Salem A. A. Finnir, was a stalwart Qaddafi supporter who informed Tripoli about any disloyalty among his staff.
Libyan officials, moreover, aren't the only ones expressing solidarity for the rebels at the eleventh hour. On Monday, Egypt formally formally recognized the rebels' National Transitional Council. Egyptian diplomats told Ahram Online had previously refrained from recognizing the rebels because Egypt "did not want to give Qaddafi an excuse to punish migrant Egyptian workers."
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Uri Friedman
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