On the 13th anniversary of “Dawn of the Odyssey”.. “Russia Today” exposes the secret goals of Sarkozy and Clinton to plunder Libya’s wealth
“Russia Today” channel published a set of secret documents and correspondence on the 13th anniversary of the “Dawn of Odyssey” Crusader operation in Libya, which proves that former French President Nicolas Sarkozy and former US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton were planning to plunder Libya’s wealth, not save civilians as they claimed.
The Russian channel explained that Sarkozy took advantage of “Odyssey Dawn” to return his country to NATO’s military leadership, as Clinton stated in a leaked secret email that France saw in the operation an opportunity to reassert itself as a military power.
Clinton’s correspondence also revealed that Sarkozy used French foreign intelligence and their spies in order to achieve their project in Libya by supporting a number of rebel leaders in Benghazi and promising to recognize them as a new government, hoping that this government would “give preference to French companies and national interests, especially with regard to the oil industry in Libya,” according to one letter to Clinton.
Clinton’s correspondence also revealed that during that period, Sarkozy also sent a number of directors of the French company Total and French construction and aviation companies on land trips to Benghazi, which were organized under the guard of armed officers from French foreign intelligence.
Another correspondence with Clinton, one month before the announcement of the death of the martyred leader, Colonel Muammar Gaddafi, showed that Sarkozy informed the Libyans with specific numbers about what he expected of the Libyans’ wealth after the war, as he clearly asked them to transfer 35% of the Libyan oil industry to major French companies.
The Russian channel concluded its report by saying, “This operation plunged Libya into complete chaos and division from which it is still ineffective to emerge. France’s dreams in Libya also did not come true, as the country’s capabilities were destroyed and its stability was destabilized, and Libyan oil remained out of the reach of Paris.”