2012年11月5日 星期一

Chris Stevens


Viewpoint: Libya deaths show US still faces threats


The attack on the US consulate in Benghazi, Libya, is a shock with a tragic and ironic twist, but not necessarily a surprise.
It is a grim reminder that the threat the United States and the West have been dealing with for more than a decade may be reduced, but is not gone.
There are many aspects of the attack that killed the US ambassador to Libya, Chris Stevens, as well as three other American diplomats and security personnel that we do not yet know.
Was it a spontaneous protest turned violent in response to the emergence of an obscure video on YouTube criticising Islam and the Prophet Muhammad? Was it a pre-planned attack by Salafist militants sympathetic to al-Qaeda, deliberately timed to coincide with the 11th anniversary of 9/11?
Both theories are credible. But we are likely to discover many "known knowns" in the  of this tragedy.
US diplomatic posts have long been inviting targets both for protests and political violence.
The nearly simultaneous attacks on embassies in Kenya and Tanzania in 1998 marked the emergence of al-Qaeda as a new global terrorist threat.
US flag among the rubble at the US consulate in Benghazi, LibyaThe aftermath of the Arab Spring is posing new challenges to US foreign policy
Going back to the beginning of the rebellion in Libya in early 2011, the United States feared that al-Qaeda and its affiliates might try to take advantage of the Arab Spring to re-establish its relevance as various countries moved through difficult 
Ambassador Stevens was a liaison to the National Transitional Council, the umbrella organisation based in Benghazi that led the successful uprising to overthrow Gaddafi, and to the interim government that recently yielded power following successful elections.
Few Americans did more to support the emergence of a new Libya than Chris Stevens - only to become one its early and most visible victims.
Having gone through a civil war, Libya suffers from many of the typical challenges that emerge in post-conflict societies.
It is awash with weapons. Protesters who gained access to the US embassy in Cairo carried an Islamist flag. The gang which assaulted the consulate in Benghazi carried rocket-propelled grenades.
12 September 2012 
From BBC

1.consulate 領事館
2.ironic 具有諷刺意味
3.spontaneous 自發
4.obscure 模糊
5.aftermath 後果
6.transitions 轉換
7.interim 臨時
8.awash 氾濫
9.assault 攻擊
10.propelled grenades 榴彈
11.

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