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Editorial: Libya's Pirates Need Lesson In Gratitude


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Tripoli-Pirates-In-Libya-Again-.htm
Investors Business Daily:

Leadership: So the U.S. just spent $1 billion to liberate Libya from terrorist rule only to have Libya's new rulers thumb their noses at extraditing the Lockerbie bomber? Explain to us again what we've been doing in Libya.

Presumably, President Obama's slapped-together NATO mission to aid Libya's rebels was to rid that country of its mad-dog dictator, who was a one-man nexus for global terrorism.

From Africa to the Philippines to Colombia, Moammar Gadhafi was the go-to man for global terror, handing out cash, training and safe haven since the 1970s.

But his biggest atrocity was his own: killing 270 innocent people, many of them Americans, in the 1988 bombing of Pan-Am Flight 103 over Lockerbie, Scotland.

Gadhafi's on the run now, but his key man on Lockerbie, Abdel Baset al-Megrahi, remains in a wealthy Tripoli neighborhood, incredibly enough because Libya's new rulers have declared they won't extradite him abroad to face justice.

"Extradition is what Gadhafi did," the National Transition Council's Justice Minister Mohammed al-Alagi said. "We will not give any Libyan citizen to the West."

That's some chutzpah coming from someone who'd be just another dead body in the street or a prisoner dangling from a meat hook had NATO not intervened on his behalf with airstrikes, training and aid since March.

It's even more ungrateful because these rebels have made it clear they expect more military and humanitarian aid from the West.

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Libya's National Transitional Council chair Mustafa Abdul Jalil urged NATO at a meeting Monday in Qatar to continue its air campaign against Gadhafi's forces.snip
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