Transcript
Page 1: US/ AZ BELLWORK 1.What is the United Nations? 2.Why would powerful countries want to control weaker nations? (imperialism) 3.What is a totalitarian government?

US/ AZ BELLWORK1. What is the United Nations?

2. Why would powerful countries want to control weaker nations? (imperialism)

3. What is a totalitarian government?

4. If citizens are unhappy with their totalitarian government, what could they do to change it?

5. THINKER: If the dictator of one country is implementing harsh laws, do you think the U.S. should step in and help? Explain!

Page 2: US/ AZ BELLWORK 1.What is the United Nations? 2.Why would powerful countries want to control weaker nations? (imperialism) 3.What is a totalitarian government?

World BELLWORK1. What is the United Nations?

2. Why would powerful countries want to control weaker nations? (imperialism)

3. What is a dictatorship?

4. If citizens are unhappy with their dictator, what could they do to change it?

5. THINKER: If the dictator of one country is implementing harsh laws, do you think the U.S. should step in and help? Explain!

Page 3: US/ AZ BELLWORK 1.What is the United Nations? 2.Why would powerful countries want to control weaker nations? (imperialism) 3.What is a totalitarian government?
Page 4: US/ AZ BELLWORK 1.What is the United Nations? 2.Why would powerful countries want to control weaker nations? (imperialism) 3.What is a totalitarian government?

Gaddafi comes to power• Gaddafi joined the Libyan

military in 1961 • September 1, 1969 – a small

group of junior military officers led by Gaddafi staged a bloodless coup against King Idris of Libya

• Next, they abolished the monarchy and created the new Libyan Arab Republic

• This republic was immediately deemed a “rogue state” by the U.S. President Gamal Abdal Nasser of Egypt

(right) with the Leader of the Libyan Revolution, Muammar al-Gaddafi, 1969

Page 5: US/ AZ BELLWORK 1.What is the United Nations? 2.Why would powerful countries want to control weaker nations? (imperialism) 3.What is a totalitarian government?

Rogue State• Rogue State – a country whose conduct is

considered to be out of line with international norms of behavior

• threatening to world peace• This means meeting certain criteria, such as

being ruled by a dictator, restricting human rights, sponsoring terrorism, and increasing weapons of mass destruction

• Usually, rogue states are not supported by democratic powers or the UN.

• What countries do you think the U.S. considers rogue states?

Page 6: US/ AZ BELLWORK 1.What is the United Nations? 2.Why would powerful countries want to control weaker nations? (imperialism) 3.What is a totalitarian government?
Page 7: US/ AZ BELLWORK 1.What is the United Nations? 2.Why would powerful countries want to control weaker nations? (imperialism) 3.What is a totalitarian government?

Libya under Gaddafi control• Gaddafi arrested members of the government and

named himself leader, prime minister, and defense minister.

• Libya was now ruled as a single party police state• Gaddafi soon expelled minority groups (Italians,

Jews) from the country and confiscated their property• He practiced Pan-Arabism, a belief in Arab

nationalism which said all Arabic countries should join together and form political, economic & military alliances. – Pan-Arabism strongly opposes Western involvement in the

Arab world

Page 8: US/ AZ BELLWORK 1.What is the United Nations? 2.Why would powerful countries want to control weaker nations? (imperialism) 3.What is a totalitarian government?

Territories of the Arab League

Page 9: US/ AZ BELLWORK 1.What is the United Nations? 2.Why would powerful countries want to control weaker nations? (imperialism) 3.What is a totalitarian government?

Libya under Gaddafi control• In 1975, Gaddafi published The Green Book

– “required reading for all Libyans”– Rejected democracy, free press, and capitalism

• Dissent is illegal - surveillance takes place in government, factories, and education.

• Political conversations with foreigners is a crime punishable by three years of prison.

• Gaddafi removed foreign languages from school curriculum.

• Prisons are run with little or no documentation of the inmate population or basic data as prisoner's crime and sentence.

• The regime has often executed dissenters publicly and the executions are repeated in state television channels.

• According to the Freedom of the Press Index, Libya is the most censored country in the Middle East and North Africa.

Page 10: US/ AZ BELLWORK 1.What is the United Nations? 2.Why would powerful countries want to control weaker nations? (imperialism) 3.What is a totalitarian government?

Libya under Gaddafi control• Gaddafi's used “revolutionary committees” to

repress any political opposition or dissent– 10 to 20 percent of Libyans work in surveillance for

these committees

• By 1979, the committees assumed control of all elections.

• 95% of Libya’s economy is from oil production.• Gaddafi passed laws for government control of

all oil fields (no private ownership), businesses, and banks.

• By 1982, 100,000 Libyans had fled the country.

Page 11: US/ AZ BELLWORK 1.What is the United Nations? 2.Why would powerful countries want to control weaker nations? (imperialism) 3.What is a totalitarian government?

Gaddafi’s intervention in Africa• In 1972, Gaddafi created the Islamic Legion to

unify the region under Arab control (priorities were Chad and Sudan)

• 1973-1994: Libya invades Chad for control of Aozou Strip.

• 1977: Libyan-Egyptian War• In 1972, Libya tried to buy a nuclear bomb from

China– Inspectors from the Chemical Weapons Convention

(CWC) verified in 2004 that Libya owned a stockpile of 23 metric tons of mustard gas and more than 1,300 metric tons of chemical weapons

Page 12: US/ AZ BELLWORK 1.What is the United Nations? 2.Why would powerful countries want to control weaker nations? (imperialism) 3.What is a totalitarian government?

Gaddafi’s intervention in Africa

• 1978 – war with Tanzania

• Gaddafi supported the inhumane Sierra Leone diamond trade

• In 2001, Gaddafi invaded the Central African Republic

Page 13: US/ AZ BELLWORK 1.What is the United Nations? 2.Why would powerful countries want to control weaker nations? (imperialism) 3.What is a totalitarian government?

Libya and International Terrorism

• 1971 – Gaddafi threatens France with military intervention • 1973 – Irish Navy confiscated ships carrying Libyan

weapons• 1976 – supported Irish bombing of England• 1981 – conflicts between Gaddafi and Reagan (U.S.

prohibited travel to Libya, cut off oil shipments)• 1986 – Gaddafi started training Libyan suicide squads to

attack the U.S. and Europe• 1986 – bombing of Berlin (starts U.S. bombing of Libya)• 1987 – broke off relations with Australia• 1988 – Gaddafi ordered the bombing of London Pan Am

flight 103, killing 250 people• In the late 1980’s Gaddafi supported Islamic terrorist

groups in Philippines, Austria, Indonesia, and New Zealand

Page 14: US/ AZ BELLWORK 1.What is the United Nations? 2.Why would powerful countries want to control weaker nations? (imperialism) 3.What is a totalitarian government?

UN Sanctions• After the bombing of the Pan Am flight, the United

Nations implemented sanctions, or penalties, on Libya.

• These sanctions basically cut Libya off from the rest of the world until 2003

• The sanctions included:– cut airline connections with the outer world

– reduced diplomatic representation

– prohibited the sale of military equipment.

– froze Libya's foreign assets

– banned the sale to Libya of refinery or pipeline equipment

– $2.7 billion to the families effected by the flight

Page 15: US/ AZ BELLWORK 1.What is the United Nations? 2.Why would powerful countries want to control weaker nations? (imperialism) 3.What is a totalitarian government?

2011 Libyan Uprising• On February 15, 2011 protests spread across the

country calling for new leadership and elections.• Gaddafi responded with military force, censorship

and blocking of communications• The uprising escalated into armed conflict, with

rebels establishing a coalition named the Transitional National Council based in Benghazi.

• The International Criminal Court warned Gaddafi that he and members of his government may have committed crimes against humanity

• In early March, Gaddafi's forces rallied, push eastwards and re-took several coastal cities before attacking Benghazi

Page 16: US/ AZ BELLWORK 1.What is the United Nations? 2.Why would powerful countries want to control weaker nations? (imperialism) 3.What is a totalitarian government?

UN Involvement• On March 17, The United Nations Security council

declared the following:– no-fly zone over Libya, to prevent the use of military

aircraft against civilians– freeze the assets of Gaddafi and ten members of his

inner circle and restrict their travel– referred the actions of the regime to the International

Criminal Court for investigation• UN Security Council is made up of 15 members

with 5 holding the power of veto (China, France, Russia, Britain, U.S.)

• The Gaddafi government then announced a ceasefire, but failed to uphold it

• On March 19, France, U.S., and England sent planes to control the area and prevent attacks

Page 17: US/ AZ BELLWORK 1.What is the United Nations? 2.Why would powerful countries want to control weaker nations? (imperialism) 3.What is a totalitarian government?

Cities controlled by pro-Gaddafi forces

Cities controlled by anti-Gaddafi forces (supported by coalition forces)

Ongoing fighting/unclear situation


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