Honestly, I kind of just word vomited below, but if you want, the TLDR:
The book was good. I wouldn't say it was excellent, but it's a good read if you want to learn more about Libya and Gadaffi before the Arab Spring.
Gadaffi was chaotic. I still think his death was excessively gruesome but I also didn't live under his governance, so I can't really judge.
------ Brief summary -----
In "Libya," Pargeter, a MENA expert, explores Libya's history, including the rise and fall of its infamous dictator, Gaddafi, during the Arab Spring.
Gaddafi was quite eccentric, peculiar, and unpredictable. He was of Bedouin descent, belonging to a traditional nomadic Arab tribe in the MENA region. Born in 1942 in Libya, which was still under Italian colonization, Gaddafi's early years were marked by encounters with imperialism and anti-Western rhetoric from a young age.
Gaddafi served in the Libyan military, eventually rising to become a colonel. Dissatisfied with King Idris I, Gadaffi and others staged a military coup in 1969, overthrowing King Idris I, which marked the beginning of Gadaffi's 42-year rule of Libya (from 1969 to 2011).
--------------- Extra tidbits/things that I liked or found interesting ------------
Pargeter effectively portrays Gadaffi's chaotic rule.
Domestically, Gaddafi mismanaged Libya's oil wealth, leading to job shortages, inadequate infrastructure, and a lack of privatization. 8 years after Gadaffi assumed power, he turned Libya into a socialist state known as "Jamahiriya," which translates to "state of the masses." The Jamahiriya was Gaddafi's attempt to eliminate traditional government structures to avoid political corruption (quite ironic) and give people power. In addition to socialist ideologies, Gaddafi was also a champion of Pan-Arabism nationalism, aiming to unite all Arab nations to fight against the West and Zionism. Gaddafi also greatly admired the former President of Egypt, Gamal Abdel Nasser, for his Pan-Arabism ideologies.
Internationally, Gaddafi supported rebels and militants in West Africa (Chad, Nigeria, Sierra Leone, and Liberia) and endorsed state-sponsored terrorism, notably the Lockerbie bombing in Scotland, which claimed 290 civilian lives in a plane bombing. As a result, Gaddafi's reckless actions isolated Libya from the global community, worsening economic problems and fueling resentment among the Libyan people, which led to the Arab Spring in 2011.
The most interesting thing I learned from the book was Gaddafi's "Third Universal Theory." This theory, detailed in his famous Green Book, is an alternative framework to capitalism and socialism. It is divided into three parts: economics, social, and political. In this theory, Gaddafi emphasizes the significance of Pan-Arabism, socialism, Islam, decentralized political power, and anti-imperialism/anti-colonialism.
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That said, I think the book was good (not excellent, but good), especially if you want to learn more about Libya's history leading up to the Arab Spring.