Jason Pack

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Jason Pack, researcher of Middle Eastern and World History, writes extensively on Libya

Jason Pack is a researcher of Middle Eastern and World History based in the UK and since 2008 has worked in Tripoli, London, and Washington promoting academic, commercial, and diplomatic exchanges between Libya and the West. He runs the website www.libya-analysis.com.

Pack has addressed the House of Commons on the pressing danger Libya’s militias pose to the country’s stability and constitutional transition. He has advised NATO and its member states on the need to formulate unified multilateral policies towards Libya focused on capacity building in the security, governance, and economic sectors. He believes the Libyan government must stop the spiral of “appeasement” that it has been mired in since the fall of Muammar Gaddafi.[1]

Background

Currently a doctoral student and researcher at Cambridge University, Jason Pack holds an MSc in Global and Imperial history from St Antony’s College, Oxford. His doctoral research focuses on the strategic, diplomatic, and institutional factors that shaped the British Military Administration of Libya from 1942 to 1951. He has lived seven years in Middle Eastern countries including: Egypt, Iraq, Libya, Morocco, Lebanon, Oman and Syria (where he was a Fulbright Fellow from 2004-5). He reads and speaks Arabic and French.

Media

Jason Pack's articles have appeared in the New York Times, Wall Street Journal, Foreign Policy, The Atlantic, and The Guardian. He is also a frequent commentator on the BBC and Al Jazeera English.[2]

Lockerbie investigators going to Libya: an absurdity

Interviewed by Isobel Fraser on Good Morning Scotland on 17 October 2015, and asked how exactly could foreign investigators gain access to the two Lockerbie bombing suspects Abdullah al-Senussi and Abu Agila Mas'ud identified by filmmaker Ken Dornstein, who are in jail in Libya, Jason Pack replied:

Well there really is no way because there is no sovereign government in Libya. There are two competing parliaments – neither has legitimacy. The UN has proposed a third government that doesn’t have a signed agreement behind it. There is no authority in Libya which can say ‘You know what we’ll give you access to such a prisoner’. In fact things are very much the opposite. Many of the important prisoners who are wanted by international tribunals, such as the International Crime Court (sic), and Saif al-Islam Gaddafi is being held by the Zintan militia. So even though the Libyan government, as it were, would like to turn him over, they have no way to effect that happening because the militia in question doesn’t want to. So it seems particularly ill-timed and naïve that American and Scottish authorities would put forward these demands now. Because they have a negative impact on the things we’re supposed to be doing in Libya. Which is building institutions and a government, and trying to fight the jihadis, and help the Libyan people who want capacity building assistance and things of this nature.

IF (21’30’’): So when our prosecution service tells us that the letters have gone to Libya via the Foreign Office we’ve got to assume they are going to the authorities in Tripoli…

JP (21’41’’): Incorrect. Of course not, they go to the authorities in Tobruk. We don’t recognise the Tripoli government, so that doesn’t make any sense. We don’t conduct formal official business with the “Tripoli government”. So of course they are going to Tobruk and Beida, where at least for the next five days the internationally-recognised government sits. I believe that it has no sovereignty or legitimacy, and that will become clear for all to see within five days.

IF (22’07’’): So let’s just say for instance that that government does give permission for the FBI and Scottish investigators to go to Libya to question these two men, how likely would that be? I mean, what have they got to gain by letting in foreign investigators?

JP (22’25’’): One, they won’t do that. Two, they have no authority over the regions in which these individuals are. The Tobruk government barely controls two tiny pockets in the East of the country. Now we’re talking about individuals who are exclusively based in Tripoli where that government, which might issue those letters, has no control. And the idea that Scottish or FBI investigators going to Libya is an absurdity. They’d be kidnapped by jihadis within two instants. No investigators are going to Libya. The fact that Ken Dornstein was able to conduct this documentary is that the political situation two years ago, when he was there, was entirely dissimilar. I could go to Libya at ease a year ago. But I’m not going traipsing around now because I don’t want to get kidnapped.

IF (23’16’’): Is it that simple, that foreigners can’t go to Libya without fear of kidnap or death?

JP (23’21’’): Particularly government officials of course. I mean we have a civil war in Libya which was complex and becoming more complex than the one in Syria. It’s less brutal: there are no barrelbombs, there’s no Assad government. It’s you know a pinprick – multilateral militias killing each other – there’s total chaos in the country. The situation is far more anarchic than in Syria. Why – and it really boggles my mind because there are very intelligent people working on the Libya issue – why it is they would allow these letters or demands to even be made, when we have so many other pressing issues like the growth of the Islamic State in Sirte, the way which Libya is a springboard for illegal migrants and then the key issue is the creation of a Government of National Accord, the GNA, and we’re not investing the energy we need in doing those things? And we’re trying potentially to investigate these two Libyan suspects. I could have told them ten years ago the names of these two suspects. This is not news.[3]

References