AP -
Libyan leader Moammar Gadhafi poured contempt on fellow
Arab leaders at a summit Saturday and warned that they might be
overthrown like former Iraqi president Saddam Hussein.
Gadhafi's rambling, off-the-cuff speech to the opening of the Arab
summit both bewildered and brought reluctant smiles to the faces
of the other leaders.
The maverick Libyan's litany of insults at Arabs and his undiplomatic
railing at the disarray of Arab regimes have become almost a tradition
at the annual gathering.
Dressed in lush purple and pink robes with a traditional Libyan
cloak and cap, Gadhafi blasted Arab countries for doing nothing
while the United States invaded Iraq in 2003 and overthrew Saddam.
"How can we accept that a foreign power comes to topple an Arab
leader while we stand watching?" he said. He said Saddam had once
been an ally of Washington, "but they sold him out."
"Your turn is next," Gadhafi told the leaders, some of whom looked
stunned while others broke into laughter at his frankness.
"Destruction will be yours."
In recent years, Gadhafi has dramatically repaired ties with the
United States — once his top enemy — by giving up his
country's weapons of mass destruction programs and paying
compensation for the 1988 Pan Am bombing. Libya is hoping
for a landmark visit by U.S. Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice,
though one is still not set, and has stepped up economic ties to the West.
Still, that hasn't stopped Gadhafi from denouncing U.S. domination
of the world and criticizing other Arab countries for their closeness
to Washington.
In his speech, Gadhafi slammed Arab disunity and inaction
on the region's multiple crises.
"Where is the Arabs' dignity, their future, their very existence?
Everything has disappeared," he said. "Our blood and our language
may be one, but there is nothing that can unite us"
"If they (Arabs) will not reorganize themselves, they will turn into
protectorates. They will be marginalized and turn into garbage
dumps," he said.
Gadhafi also mocked a plan by the Arab League to start Arab
cooperation on a joint nuclear program. "How can do we that?
We hate each other, we wish ill of each other and our intelligence
services conspire against each other. We are our own enemy."
Gadhafi repeated his frequently made proposal that the Israeli-Palestinian
conflict be settled by creating one democratic state where the two peoples
live together, to be called Isratine.
He threw a compliment-cum-backhanded insult at Palestinian President
Mahmoud Abbas, praising him as the "hero of Oslo," referring to the
1993 Oslo peace accords that created the Palestinian Authority,
now headed by Abbas, but are derided by many Arabs for failing to
bring a final peace.
Abbas scowled at the comment.
Gadhafi has angered other Arab leaders with his
sharp remarks at past summits.
Last year, he boycotted the summit in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia,
but gave a televised speech saying "Liza" — referring to Rice —
had dictated the gathering's agenda.
In 2005, he told the summit in Algeria that Palestinians and Israelis are
"stupid." A year earlier, he sat smoking cigars on the conference floor
of the Tunisia summit to show his contempt for the other leaders.
During a 2003 gathering, he traded insults with
Saudi King Abdullah in the conference hall.
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