PROFILE
OFFICIAL NAME:
Great Socialist People's Libyan Arab Jamahiriya
Geography
Location: North Africa, bordering the
Mediterranean Sea, between Egypt, Tunisia, and
Algeria, southern border with Chad, Niger, and
Sudan.
Area: 1,759,540 million sq. km.
Cities: Tripoli (capital), Benghazi.
Terrain: Mostly barren, flat to undulating
plains, plateaus, depressions.
Climate: Mediterranean along coast; dry, extreme
desert interior.
Land use: Arable
land--1.03%; permanent
crops--0.19%; other--98.78%.
People
Nationality: Noun
and adjective--Libyan(s).
Population (July 2007 est.): 6,036,914 (includes
non-nationals, of which an estimated 500,000 or
more are sub-Saharan Africans living in Libya).
Annual growth rate (2007 est.): 2.262%. Birth
rate (2007
est.)--26.09 births/1,000 population. Death
rate (2007
est.)--3.47 deaths/1,000 population.
Ethnic groups: Berber and Arab 97%; Greeks,
Maltese, Italians, Egyptians, Pakistanis, Turks,
Indians, and Tunisians.
Religion: Sunni Muslim 97%.
Languages: Arabic is the primary language.
English, French, and Italian are understood in
major cities.
Education: Years
compulsory--9. Attendance--90%. Literacy (age
15 and over who can read and write)--total
population 82.6%; female 72% (2003 est.).
Health (2007 est.): Infant
mortality rate--22.82 deaths/1,000 live
births. Life
expectancy--total population 76.88 yrs.;
male 74.1 yrs.; female 78.58 yrs.
Work force (2006 est.): 1.787 million, an
estimated 500,000 of whom are sub-Saharan
African foreign workers.
Government
Official name: Great Socialist People's Libyan
Arab Jamahiriya.
Type: "Jamahiriya" is a term Col. Mu'ammar al-Qadhafi
coined and which he defines as a "state of the
masses" governed by the populace through local
councils. In practice, Libya is an authoritarian
state.
Independence: December 24, 1951.
Revolution: September 1, 1969.
Constitution: December 11, 1969, amended March
2, 1977--established popular congresses and
people's committees.
Administrative divisions: 31 municipalities
(singular--"shabiya", plural--"shabiyat"):
Butnan, Darnah, Gubba, Al Jabal al-Akhdar, Marj,
Green Belt, Benghazi, Ajdabiya, Wahat, Kufra,
Surt, Al Jufrah, Misurata, Murgub, Bani-waleed,
Tarhuna and Msallata, Tripoli, Jfara, Zawiya,
Subrata & Surman, An Nuqat al Khams, Gharyan,
Mezda, Nalut, Ghdames, Yefren and Jadu, Wadi
Alhaya, Ghat, Sabha, Wadi Shati, Murzuq.
Political system: Political parties are banned.
According to the political theory of Col.
Mu'ammar al-Qadhafi, multi-layered popular
assemblies (people's congresses) with executive
institutions (people's committees) are guided by
political cadres (revolutionary committees).
Suffrage: 18 years of age; universal and
compulsory.
Economy
Real GDP (2000$, 2006): $46.451 billion.
GDP per capita (PPP, 2006): $12,204.
Real GDP growth rate (2006): 5.6%.
Natural resources: Petroleum, natural gas,
gypsum.
Agriculture: Products--wheat,
barley, olives, dates, citrus, vegetables,
peanuts, soybeans; cattle; approximately 75% of
Libya's food is imported.
Industry: Types--petroleum,
food processing, textiles, handicrafts, cement.
Trade: Exports (2006
est.)--$37.02 billion f.o.b.: crude oil, refined
petroleum products. Major
markets (2005)--Italy
(38%), Germany (15.1%), Spain (9.3%), Turkey
(6.2%), France (6.2%), U.S. (5.2%). Imports (2006
est.)--$14.47 billion f.o.b.: machinery,
transport equipment, food, manufactured goods. Major
suppliers (2003)--Italy
(21.2%), Germany (10.2%), Tunisia (5.9%), Turkey
(4.8%), U.K. (4.8%), France (4.7%), South Korea
(4.6%), China (4.5%).
PEOPLE
Libya has a small population in a large land
area. Population density is about 50 persons per
sq. km. (80/sq. mi.) in the two northern regions
of Tripolitania and Cyrenaica, but falls to less
than one person per sq. km. (1.6/sq. mi.)
elsewhere. Ninety percent of the people live in
less than 10% of the area, primarily along the
coast. More than half the population is urban,
mostly concentrated in the two largest cities,
Tripoli and Benghazi. Thirty-three percent of
the population is estimated to be under age 15.
Native Libyans are primarily a mixture of Arabs
and Berbers. Small Tebou and Touareg tribal
groups in southern Libya are nomadic or
semi-nomadic. Among foreign residents, the
largest groups are citizens of other African
nations, including North Africans (primarily
Egyptians and Tunisians), West Africans and
Sub-Saharan Africans.
HISTORY
For most of their history, the peoples of Libya
have been subjected to varying degrees of
foreign control. The Phoenicians, Carthaginians,
Greeks, Romans, Vandals, and Byzantines ruled
all or parts of Libya. Although the Greeks and
Romans left impressive ruins at Cyrene, Leptis
Magna, and Sabratha, little else remains today
to testify to the presence of these ancient
cultures.
The Arabs conquered Libya in the seventh century
A.D. In the following centuries, most of the
indigenous peoples adopted Islam and the Arabic
language and culture. The Ottoman Turks
conquered the country in the mid-16th century.
Libya remained part of their empire--although at
times virtually autonomous--until Italy invaded
in 1911 and, in the face of years of resistance,
made Libya a colony.
In 1934, Italy adopted the name "Libya" (used by
the Greeks for all of North Africa, except
Egypt) as the official name of the colony, which
consisted of the Provinces of Cyrenaica,
Tripolitania, and Fezzan. King Idris I, Emir of
Cyrenaica, led Libyan resistance to Italian
occupation between the two World Wars. From 1943
to 1951, Tripolitania and Cyrenaica were under
British administration, while the French
controlled Fezzan. In 1944, Idris returned from
exile in Cairo but declined to resume permanent
residence in Cyrenaica until the removal in 1947
of some aspects of foreign control. Under the
terms of the 1947 peace treaty with the Allies,
Italy relinquished all claims to Libya.
On November 21, 1949, the UN General Assembly
passed a resolution stating that Libya should
become independent before January 1, 1952. King
Idris I represented Libya in the subsequent UN
negotiations. When Libya declared its
independence on December 24, 1951, it was the
first country to achieve independence through
the United Nations and one of the first former
European possessions in Africa to gain
independence. Libya was proclaimed a
constitutional and a hereditary monarchy under
King Idris.
The discovery of significant oil reserves in
1959 and the subsequent income from petroleum
sales enabled what had been one of the world's
poorest countries to become extremely wealthy,
as measured by per capita GDP. Although oil
drastically improved Libya's finances, popular
resentment grew as wealth was increasingly
concentrated in the hands of the elite. This
discontent continued to mount with the rise
throughout the Arab world of Nasserism and the
idea of Arab unity.
On September 1, 1969, a small group of military
officers led by then 28-year-old army officer
Mu'ammar Abu Minyar al-Qadhafi staged a coup
d'état against King Idris, who was exiled to
Egypt. The new regime, headed by the
Revolutionary Command Council (RCC), abolished
the monarchy and proclaimed the new Libyan Arab
Republic. Qadhafi emerged as leader of the RCC
and eventually as de facto chief of state, a
political role he still plays. The Libyan
government asserts that Qadhafi currently holds
no official position, although he is referred to
in government statements and the official press
as the "Brother Leader and Guide of the
Revolution."
The new RCC's motto became "freedom, socialism,
and unity." It pledged itself to remedy
"backwardness", take an active role in the
Palestinian Arab cause, promote Arab unity, and
encourage domestic policies based on social
justice, non-exploitation, and an equitable
distribution of wealth.
An early objective of the new government was
withdrawal of all foreign military installations
from Libya. Following negotiations, British
military installations at Tobruk and nearby El
Adem were closed in March 1970, and U.S.
facilities at Wheelus Air Force Base near
Tripoli were closed in June 1970. That July, the
Libyan Government ordered the expulsion of
several thousand Italian residents. By 1971,
libraries and cultural centers operated by
foreign governments were ordered closed.
In the 1970s, Libya claimed leadership of Arab
and African revolutionary forces and sought
active roles in international organizations.
Late in the 1970s, Libyan embassies were
redesignated as "people's bureaus," as Qadhafi
sought to portray Libyan foreign policy as an
expression of the popular will. The people's
bureaus, aided by Libyan religious, political,
educational, and business institutions overseas,
exported Qadhafi's revolutionary philosophy
abroad.
Qadhafi's confrontational foreign policies and
use of terrorism, as well as Libya's growing
friendship with the U.S.S.R., led to increased
tensions with the West in the 1980s. Following a
terrorist bombing at a discotheque in West
Berlin frequented by American military
personnel, in 1986 the U.S. retaliated
militarily against targets in Libya, and imposed
broad unilateral economic sanctions.
After Libya was implicated in the 1988 bombing
of Pan Am flight 103 over Lockerbie, Scotland,
UN sanctions were imposed in 1992. UN Security
Council resolutions (UNSCRs) passed in 1992 and
1993 obliged Libya to fulfill requirements
related to the Pan Am 103 bombing before
sanctions could be lifted. Qadhafi initially
refused to comply with these requirements,
leading to Libya's political and economic
isolation for most of the 1990s.
In 1999, Libya fulfilled one of the UNSCR
requirements by surrendering two Libyans
suspected in connection with the bombing for
trial before a Scottish court in the
Netherlands. One of these suspects, Abdel Basset
al-Megrahi, was found guilty; the other was
acquitted. Al-Megrahi's conviction was upheld on
appeal in 2002. In August 2003, Libya fulfilled
the remaining UNSCR requirements, including
acceptance of responsibility for the actions of
its officials and payment of appropriate
compensation to the victims' families. UN
sanctions were lifted on September 12, 2003.
U.S. International Emergency Economic Powers Act
(IEEPA)-based sanctions were lifted September
20, 2004.
On December 19, 2003, Libya publicly announced
its intention to rid itself of weapons of mass
destruction (WMD) and Missile Technology Control
Regime (MTCR)-class missile programs. Since that
time, it has cooperated with the U.S., the U.K.,
the International Atomic Energy Agency, and the
Organization for the Prohibition of Chemical
Weapons toward these objectives. Libya has also
signed the IAEA Additional Protocol and has
become a State Party to the Chemical Weapons
Convention. These were important steps toward
full diplomatic relations between the U.S. and
Libya.
GOVERNMENT AND POLITICAL CONDITIONS
Libya's political system is in theory based on
the political philosophy in Qadhafi's Green
Book, which combines socialist and Islamic
theories and rejects parliamentary democracy and
political parties. In reality, Qadhafi exercises
near total control over major government
decisions. For the first seven years following
the revolution, Colonel Qadhafi and 12 fellow
army officers, the Revolutionary Command
Council, began a complete overhaul of Libya's
political system, society and economy. In 1973,
he announced the start of a "cultural
revolution" in schools, businesses, industries,
and public institutions to oversee
administration of those organizations in the
public interest. On March 2, 1977, Qadhafi
convened a General People's Congress (GPC) to
proclaim the establishment of "people's power,"
change the country's name to the Socialist
People's Libyan Arab Jamahiriya, and to vest,
theoretically, primary authority in the GPC.
The GPC is the legislative forum that interacts
with the General People's Committee, whose
members are secretaries of Libyan ministries. It
serves as the intermediary between the masses
and the leadership and is composed of the
secretariats of some 600 local "basic popular
congresses." The GPC secretariat and the cabinet
secretaries are appointed by the GPC secretary
general and confirmed by the annual GPC
congress. These cabinet secretaries are
responsible for the routine operation of their
ministries, but Qadhafi exercises real authority
directly or through manipulation of the peoples
and revolutionary committees.
Qadhafi remained the de facto chief of state and
secretary general of the GPC until 1980, when he
gave up his office. Although he holds no formal
office, Qadhafi exercises power with the
assistance of a small group of trusted advisers,
who include relatives from his home base in the
Sirte region, which lies between the traditional
commercial and political power centers in
Benghazi and Tripoli.
In the 1980s, competition grew between the
official Libyan Government and military
hierarchies and the revolutionary committees. An
abortive coup attempt in May 1984, apparently
mounted by Libyan exiles with internal support,
led to a short-lived reign of terror in which
thousands were imprisoned and interrogated. An
unknown number were executed. Qadhafi used the
revolutionary committees to search out alleged
internal opponents following the coup attempt,
thereby accelerating the rise of more radical
elements inside the Libyan power hierarchy.
In 1988, faced with rising public
dissatisfaction with shortages in consumer goods
and setbacks in Libya's war with Chad, Qadhafi
began to curb the power of the revolutionary
committees and to institute some domestic
reforms. The regime released many political
prisoners and eased restrictions on foreign
travel by Libyans. Private businesses were again
permitted to operate.
In the late 1980s, Qadhafi began to pursue an
anti-Islamic fundamentalist policy domestically,
viewing fundamentalism as a potential rallying
point for opponents of the regime. Qadhafi's
security forces launched a pre-emptive strike at
alleged coup plotters in the military and among
the Warfallah tribe in October 1993. Widespread
arrests and government reshufflings followed,
accompanied by public "confessions" from regime
opponents and allegations of torture and
executions. The military, once Qadhafi's
strongest supporters, became a potential threat
in the 1990s. In 1993, following a failed coup
attempt that implicated senior military
officers, Qadhafi began to purge the military
periodically, eliminating potential rivals and
inserting his own loyal followers in their
place.
The Libyan court system consists of three
levels: the courts of first instance; the courts
of appeals; and the Supreme Court, which is the
final appellate level. The GPC appoints justices
to the Supreme Court. Special "revolutionary
courts" and military courts operate outside the
court system to try political offenses and
crimes against the state. "People's courts,"
another example of extrajudicial authority, were
abolished in January 2005. Libya's justice
system is nominally based on Sharia law.
Principal Government Officials
De facto Head of State--Mu'ammar Abu Minyar
al-Qadhafi ("the Brotherly Leader and Guide of
the Revolution")
Secretary General of the General People's
Committee (Prime Minister)--Dr. Al-Baghdadi Ali
al-Mahmudi
Secretary of the General People's Committee for
Foreign Liaison and International Cooperation
(Foreign Minister)--Abd al-Rahman Shalgham
Charge d'Affaires, Libyan Embassy, Washington,
DC--Ambassador Ali Aujali
The Libyan Embassy is located at 2600 Virginia
Avenue NW, Suite 705, Washington DC 20037 (tel.
202-944-9601, fax 202-944-9060).
ECONOMY
The government dominates Libya's
socialist-oriented economy through complete
control of the country's oil resources, which
account for approximately 97% of export
earnings, 75% of government receipts, and 54% of
the gross domestic product. Oil revenues
constitute the principal source of foreign
exchange. Much of the country's income has been
lost to waste, corruption, conventional
armaments purchases, and attempts to develop
weapons of mass destruction, as well as to large
donations made to developing countries in
attempts to increase Qadhafi's influence in
Africa and elsewhere. Although oil revenues and
a small population give Libya one of the highest
per capita GDPs in Africa, the government's
mismanagement of the economy has led to high
inflation and increased import prices. These
factors resulted in a decline in the standard of
living from the late 1990s through 2003.
Despite efforts to diversify the economy and
encourage private sector participation,
extensive controls of prices, credit, trade, and
foreign exchange constrain growth. Import
restrictions and inefficient resource
allocations have caused periodic shortages of
basic goods and foodstuffs.
Although agriculture is the second-largest
sector in the economy, Libya imports most foods.
Climatic conditions and poor soils severely
limit output, while higher incomes and a growing
population have caused food consumption to rise.
Domestic food production meets about 25% of
demand.
On September 20, 2004, President George W. Bush
signed an Executive Order ending economic
sanctions imposed under the authority of the
International Emergency Economic Powers Act
(IEEPA). U.S. persons are no longer prohibited
from working in Libya, and many American
companies are actively seeking investment
opportunities in Libya. The government has
announced ambitious plans to increase foreign
investment in the oil and gas sectors to
significantly boost production capacity. The
government is also pursuing a number of
infrastructure projects such as highways,
railways, telecommunications backbones, and
irrigation.
FOREIGN RELATIONS
Since 1969, Qadhafi has determined Libya's
foreign policy. His principal foreign policy
goals have been Arab unity, elimination of
Israel, advancement of Islam, support for
Palestinians, elimination of
outside--particularly Western--influence in the
Middle East and Africa, and support for a range
of "revolutionary" causes.
After the 1969 coup, Qadhafi closed American and
British bases on Libyan territory and partially
nationalized all foreign oil and commercial
interests in Libya. He also played a key role in
promoting the use of oil embargoes as a
political weapon for challenging the West,
hoping that an oil price rise and embargo in
1973 would persuade the West--especially the
United States--to end support for Israel.
Qadhafi rejected both Soviet communism and
Western capitalism, and claimed he was charting
a middle course.
Libya's relationship with the former Soviet
Union involved massive Libyan arms purchases
from the Soviet bloc and the presence of
thousands of east bloc advisers. Libya's
use--and heavy loss--of Soviet-supplied weaponry
in its war with Chad was a notable breach of an
apparent Soviet-Libyan understanding not to use
the weapons for activities inconsistent with
Soviet objectives. As a result, Soviet-Libyan
relations reached a nadir in mid-1987.
After the fall of the Warsaw Pact and the Soviet
Union, Libya concentrated on expanding
diplomatic ties with Third World countries and
increasing its commercial links with Europe and
East Asia. Following the imposition of UN
sanctions in 1992, these ties significantly
diminished. Following a 1998 Arab League meeting
in which fellow Arab states decided not to
challenge UN sanctions, Qadhafi announced that
he was turning his back on pan-Arab ideas, which
had been one of the fundamental tenets of his
philosophy.
Instead, Libya pursued closer bilateral ties,
particularly with North African neighbors Egypt,
Tunisia, and Morocco. It has also sought to
develop its relations with Sub-Saharan Africa,
leading to Libyan involvement in several
internal African disputes in the Democratic
Republic of Congo, Sudan, Somalia, Central
African Republic, Eritrea and Ethiopia. Libya
has also sought to expand its influence in
Africa through financial assistance, ranging
from aid donations to impoverished neighbors
such as Niger to oil subsidies to Zimbabwe, and
through participation in the African Union.
Qadhafi has proposed a borderless "United States
of Africa" to transform the continent into a
single nation-state ruled by a single
government. This plan has been greeted with
skepticism. Libya has played a helpful role in
facilitating the provision of humanitarian
assistance to Darfur refugees in Chad.
One of the longest-standing issues in Libya's
relationship with the European Union and the
international community was resolved in July
2007 with the release of five Bulgarian nurses
and a Palestinian doctor who had been convicted
in 1999 of deliberately infecting over 400
children in a Benghazi hospital with the HIV
virus. The six medics were sentenced to death in
2004, a sentence that was upheld by the Libyan
Supreme Court but commuted in July 2007 by the
Higher Judicial Council to life in prison. Under
a previous agreement with the Bulgarian
Government on the repatriation of prisoners, the
medics were allowed to return to Bulgaria to
finish their sentence, where upon arrival the
Bulgarian president pardoned all six. The
Benghazi International Fund, established by the
United States and its European allies, raised
$460 million to distribute to the families of
the children infected with HIV, each of whom
received $1 million.
Terrorism
Libya has taken significant steps to mend its
international image and formally renounced
terrorism in a letter to the UN Security Council
in August 2003. In 1999, the Libyan government
surrendered two Libyans suspected of involvement
in the Pan Am 103 bombing, leading to the
suspension of UN sanctions. On January 31, 2001,
a Scottish court seated in the Netherlands found
one of the suspects, Abdel Basset al-Megrahi,
guilty of murder in connection with the bombing,
and acquitted the second suspect, Al-Amin
Khalifa Fhima. Megrahi's conviction was upheld
on March 14, 2002, but an appeals hearing was
granted in June 2007 by the Scottish High Court.
UN sanctions were lifted on September 12, 2003
following Libyan compliance with its remaining
UNSCR requirements on Pan Am 103, including
acceptance of responsibility for the actions of
its officials and payment of appropriate
compensation. Libya paid compensation in 1999
for the death of British policewoman Yvonne
Fletcher, a move that preceded the reopening of
the British Embassy in Tripoli, and paid damages
to the families of the victims in the bombing of
UTA Flight 772. With the lifting of UN sanctions
in September 2003, each of the families of the
victims of Pan Am 103 received $4 million of a
maximum $10 million in compensation. After the
lifting of U.S. IEEPA-based sanctions on
September 20, 2004, the families received a
further $4 million.
On November 13, 2001, a German court found four
persons, including a former employee of the
Libyan embassy in East Berlin, guilty in
connection with the 1986 La Belle disco bombing,
in which two U.S. servicemen were killed. The
court also established a connection to the
Libyan government. The German Government
demanded that Libya accept responsibility for
the La Belle bombing and pay appropriate
compensation. A compensation deal for non-U.S.
victims was agreed to in August 2004. U.S.
victims continue to pursue their claims in
federal court.
By 2003, Libya appeared to have curtailed its
support for international terrorism, although it
may have retained residual contacts with some of
its former terrorist clients. In August 2004,
the Department of Justice entered into a plea
agreement with Abdulrahman Alamoudi, in which he
stated that he had been part of a 2003 plot to
assassinate Saudi Crown Prince Abdallah (now
King Abdallah) at the behest of Libyan
government officials.
In 2005, the Saudi Government pardoned the
individuals accused in the assassination plot.
During the 2005 UN General Assembly session,
Foreign Minister Shalgam issued a statement that
reaffirmed Libya's commitment to the statements
made in its letter addressed to the Security
Council on August 15, 2003, renouncing terrorism
in all its forms and pledging that Libya will
not support acts of international terrorism or
other acts of violence targeting civilians,
whatever their political views or positions.
Libya also expressed its commitment to continue
cooperating in the international fight against
terrorism. On June 30, 2006, the U.S. rescinded
Libya's designation as a state sponsor of
terrorism.
U.S.-LIBYAN RELATIONS
The United States supported the UN resolution
providing for Libyan independence in 1951 and
raised the status of its office at Tripoli from
a consulate general to a legation. Libya opened
a legation in Washington, DC, in 1954. Both
countries subsequently raised their missions to
embassy level.
After Qadhafi's 1969 coup, U.S.-Libyan relations
became increasingly strained because of Libya's
foreign policies supporting international
terrorism and subversion against moderate Arab
and African governments. In 1972, the United
States withdrew its ambassador. Export controls
on military equipment and civil aircraft were
imposed during the 1970s, and U.S. embassy staff
members were withdrawn from Tripoli after a mob
attacked and set fire to the embassy in December
1979. The U.S. Government designated Libya a
"state sponsor of terrorism" on December 29,
1979.
In May 1981, the U.S. Government closed the
Libyan "people's bureau" (embassy) in
Washington, DC, and expelled the Libyan staff in
response to a general pattern of conduct by the
people's bureau contrary to internationally
accepted standards of diplomatic behavior.
In August 1981, two Libyan jets fired on U.S.
aircraft participating in a routine naval
exercise over international waters of the
Mediterranean claimed by Libya. The U.S. planes
returned fire and shot down the attacking Libyan
aircraft. In December 1981, the State Department
invalidated U.S. passports for travel to Libya
and, for purposes of safety, advised all U.S.
citizens in Libya to leave. In March 1982, the
U.S. Government prohibited imports of Libyan
crude oil into the United States and expanded
the controls on U.S.-origin goods intended for
export to Libya. Licenses were required for all
transactions, except food and medicine. In March
1984, U.S. export controls were expanded to
prohibit future exports to the Ras Lanuf
petrochemical complex. In April 1985, all
Export-Import Bank financing was prohibited.
Due to Libya's continuing support for terrorism,
the United States adopted additional economic
sanctions against Libya in January 1986,
including a total ban on direct import and
export trade, commercial contracts, and
travel-related activities. In addition, Libyan
Government assets in the United States were
frozen. When evidence of Libyan complicity was
discovered in the Berlin discotheque terrorist
bombing that killed two American servicemen, the
United States responded by launching an aerial
bombing attack against targets near Tripoli and
Benghazi in April 1986. Subsequently, the United
States maintained its trade and travel embargoes
and brought diplomatic and economic pressure to
bear against Libya. This pressure helped to
bring about the Lockerbie settlement and Libya's
renunciation of WMD and MTCR-class missiles.
In 1991, two Libyan intelligence agents were
indicted by federal prosecutors in the U.S. and
Scotland for their involvement in the December
1988 bombing of Pan Am flight 103. In January
1992, the UN Security Council approved
Resolution 731 demanding that Libya surrender
the suspects, cooperate with the Pan Am 103 and
UTA 772 investigations, pay compensation to the
victims' families, and cease all support for
terrorism. Libya's refusal to comply led to the
approval of UNSC Resolution 748 on March 31,
1992, imposing sanctions designed to bring about
Libyan compliance. Continued Libyan defiance led
to passage of UNSC Resolution 883--a limited
assets freeze and an embargo on selected oil
equipment--in November 1993. UN sanctions were
lifted on September 12, 2003, after Libya
fulfilled all remaining UNSCR requirements,
including renunciation of terrorism, acceptance
of responsibility for the actions of its
officials, and payment of appropriate
compensation to the victims' families.
On December 19, 2003, Libya announced its
intention to rid itself of WMD and MTCR-class
missile programs. Since that time, it has
cooperated with the U.S., the U.K., the
International Atomic Energy Agency, and the
Organization for the Prohibition of Chemical
Weapons toward these objectives. Libya has also
signed the IAEA Additional Protocol and has
become a State Party to the Chemical Weapons
Convention.
In recognition of these actions, the U.S. began
the process of normalizing relations with Libya.
The U.S. terminated the applicability of the
Iran-Libya Sanctions Act to Libya and the
President signed an Executive Order on September
20, 2004 terminating the national emergency with
respect to Libya and ending IEEPA-based economic
sanctions. This action had the effect of
unblocking assets blocked under the Executive
Order sanctions. Restrictions on cargo aviation
and third-party code-sharing have been lifted,
as have restrictions on passenger aviation.
Certain export controls remain in place.
U.S. diplomatic personnel reopened the U.S.
Interest Section in Tripoli on February 8, 2004.
The mission was upgraded to a U.S. Liaison
Office on June 28, 2004, and to a full embassy
on May 31, 2006. The establishment in 2005 of an
American School in Tripoli demonstrates the
increased presence of Americans in Libya, and
the continuing normalization of bilateral
relations. Libya re-established its diplomatic
presence in Washington with the opening of an
Interest Section on July 8, 2004, which was
subsequently upgraded to a Liaison Office in
December 2004 and to a full embassy on May 31,
2006.
On May 15, 2006, the State Department announced
its intention to rescind Libya's designation as
a state sponsor of terrorism in recognition of
the fact that Libya had met the statutory
requirements for such a move: it had not
provided any support for acts of international
terrorism in the preceding six-month period, and
had provided assurances that it would not do so
in the future. On June 30, 2006, the U.S.
rescinded Libya's designation as a state sponsor
of terrorism. In July 2007, Mr. Gene Cretz was
nominated by President Bush as ambassador to
Libya.
Principal U.S. Officials
Charge d'Affaires--Ambassador William Milam
(ret.)
Deputy Principal Officer--John Christopher
Stevens
The U.S.
Embassy in
Libya is temporarily located at the Corinthia
Bab Africa Hotel, Souk al-Thulatha, Al-Gadim,
Tripoli (tel. 218-21-335-1848, fax
218-21-335-1847).
The U.S. consular representative's office is
also located at the in the Corinthia Bab Africa
Hotel (tel. 218-91-220-0125, fax
218-21-335-1838, email consulartripoli@yahoo.com).
Limited services are available for U.S.
citizens.