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d-36944House OversightOther

Scientific American article speculating on Muammar Qadhafi's mental state

The passage offers only a speculative psychological analysis of a foreign dictator with no concrete leads, transactions, or actionable details. It mentions a CIA veteran as a source, but provides no e Article questions whether Qadhafi was mentally unstable during the 2011 Libyan uprising. Cites Jerrold Post, a former CIA employee, as a commentator on Qadhafi's behavior. No specific allegations, da

Date
November 11, 2025
Source
House Oversight
Reference
House Oversight #024593
Pages
1
Persons
0
Integrity
No Hash Available

Summary

The passage offers only a speculative psychological analysis of a foreign dictator with no concrete leads, transactions, or actionable details. It mentions a CIA veteran as a source, but provides no e Article questions whether Qadhafi was mentally unstable during the 2011 Libyan uprising. Cites Jerrold Post, a former CIA employee, as a commentator on Qadhafi's behavior. No specific allegations, da

Tags

muammar-qadhafimedia-commentarylibyapsychologyhouse-oversight

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Text extracted via OCR from the original document. May contain errors from the scanning process.
Article 1. Scientific American Is Muammar QOadhafi Clinicall Psychotic? John Matson August 23, 2011 -- OUT OF TOUCH: The bizarre statements Col. Muammar Qadhafi has made in the past several months may result from a self-imposed insulation from reality, rather than a delusional detachment from it. Six months after a civil uprising began in Libya, Col. Muammar Qadhafi, the nation's longtime leader, finally seems to have lost his grip on the country he ruled for more than 40 years. Did he also, at some point, lose his grip on reality? As the conflict spread across Libya, Qadhafi made a number of bizarre statements to members of the media, denying that demonstrators were angry with the government and even claiming that any conflict that might be unfolding was the result of drinks spiked with hallucinogenic drugs. More recently he has pledged to defend the capital, Tripoli, even as rebel forces swept through the city with surprising swiftness. Was Qadhafi deluded about the state of his nation or was he simply unwilling to accept that his time had come? To get some insight on the Libyan leader and other out-of-touch dictators, we spoke to Jerrold Post, a professor of psychiatry, political psychology and international affairs, and director of the Political Psychology Program at George Washington University. Post is a CIA veteran who has written psychological profiles of a number of world leaders. What is it about leaders like Qadhafi that makes them unable to see or accept their own impending downfall?

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