Advertisement

Some of the Key Events in Moammar Kadafi’s Rule

STRONGMAN: Moammar Kadafi, who came to power in a coup, has ruled Libya since 1969. Critics say the United States lets him crack down on opponents.
STRONGMAN: Moammar Kadafi, who came to power in a coup, has ruled Libya since 1969. Critics say the United States lets him crack down on opponents.
(Pascal Le Segretain / Getty Images)
Share

1969: Lt. Col. Moammar Kadafi comes to power at age 27, when he leads a coup against Libya’s pro-Western monarchy.

1979: The Carter administration places Libya on a list of state sponsors of terrorism, where it remains.

1981: The U.S. closes down the Libyan Embassy in Washington and expels its diplomats. American F-14s shoot down Libyan fighters over the Gulf of Sidra.

Advertisement

1986: The Reagan administration accuses Libyan agents of placing a bomb in a Berlin disco that kills three people, including two American soldiers. In response, American planes bomb targets in Libya, killing dozens of civilians, including Kadafi’s infant adopted daughter.

1988: Libya comes under suspicion in the bombing of Pan Am Flight 103 over Lockerbie, Scotland, which kills 270 people.

1992: The United Nations imposes sanctions after Libya refuses to hand over two suspects in the Lockerbie bombing.

1998: Libya becomes the first country to issue an international arrest warrant for Osama bin Laden.

1999: Kadafi surrenders the two suspects in the Pan Am attack, and the U.N. suspends economic sanctions.

2001: A court convicts Abdel Basset Ali Megrahi of murder in the Lockerbie case. The second Libyan defendant is acquitted. Kadafi strongly condemns the Sept. 11 attacks, urging Libyans to donate blood for the victims.

Advertisement

2003: The U.N. lifts its weapons and travel embargoes against Libya after the government accepts responsibility for the 1988 airliner bombing.

2003: Libya renounces its nuclear program and hands over documents that help the CIA and European authorities unmask suspects in a nuclear black market.

2004: President Bush lifts most U.S. trade sanctions against the country.

Compiled by Julie Sheer and John Jackson; sources: Times research, Associated Press

Advertisement