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There were other blinding flashes of fear: diplomats cut down on fashionable European streets, mines strewn in the Red Sea, even the awards ceremony for Nobel Peace Prizewinner Bishop Desmond Tutu disrupted by a bomb threat. From the elegant Libyan embassy on a leafy London square, a mad spray of gunfire aimed at marching dissidents killed a young British policewoman. Muammar Gaddafi's murderous schemes embarrassed him when Egyptian authorities faked the death of a former Libyan Prime Minister marked for extinction by Tripoli. Gaddafi took responsibility for the assassination that never...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: They Also Made History | 1/7/1985 | See Source »

...President's attempt to negotiate with Libyan Leader Muammar Gaddafi for the withdrawal of Libyan troops from Chad led to a fiasco that has hurt Mitterrand's credibility in the one field where his competence had gone virtually unquestioned. After the French withdrew 3,000 paratroopers from Chad between last September and November, Mitterrand discovered that, contrary to the agreement with Gaddafi, a substantial number of Libyan troops remained. A chagrined President was forced to fly to Crete to confront Gaddafi, a move that was denounced by former Premier Maurice Couve de Murville as "the greatest humiliation that...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: France: The Season of Discontent | 12/31/1984 | See Source »

...months after a series of blunders by French Foreign Minister Claude Cheysson, rumors of his departure had been gaining momentum. He committed his most serious faux pas last month when he stated flatly that Libyan forces had withdrawn from northern Chad, only to have an embarrassed President Francois Mitterrand admit several days later that the troops were still there. The rumors were finally borne out last week when Mitterrand tersely announced Cheysson's appointment to the European Commission, the executive body of the European Community...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: France: Cheysson's Final Faux Pas | 12/17/1984 | See Source »

Gaddafi's motives are probably impossible to divine. Recently a team of editors from a major European periodical were granted a rare exclusive interview with the Libyan. The editors were ushered inside Gaddafi's baroque home at a military base outside Tripoli. The dictator was dressed in an all-white uniform and surrounded by a squad of armed bodyguards. But as the interview progressed, the journalists began to realize that their subject was not making sense. No sense at all. In fact, say the editors, the two-hour session was incoherent. Says one of the magazine...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Libya: The Doublecross and the Hit Hoax | 12/3/1984 | See Source »

With the miners slowly drifting back to work, Scargill is going to need lots of help wherever he can find it. A month ago he turned to Libyan Strongman Muammar Gaddafi for aid - although, apparently, none has yet been received - and he now appears to be seeking continued Soviet support. The Kremlin is not without sympathy for the miners' leader: last year, while visiting Moscow, Scargill noted that the threat to world peace came from that "most dangerous duo, President Ray-Gun and the plutonium blond, Margaret Thatcher." He also attacked the outlawed Polish trade union Solidarity...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Britain: The Miners' Moscow Connection | 12/3/1984 | See Source »

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