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Politics & Power Quote by Muammar al-Gaddafi

"Nations whose nationalism is destroyed are subject to ruin"

About this Quote

In Gaddafi's hands, "nationalism" isn't just pride in a flag; it's political armor. The line reads like a warning, but it functions as a governing doctrine: dismantle the emotional glue that binds a people, and the state becomes available for capture - by foreign powers, internal rivals, or economic dependency. Coming from a leader who styled himself as the embodiment of Libya, the claim carries an implied corollary: weaken me, and you weaken the nation.

The phrasing is bluntly causal, almost fatalistic. "Destroyed" suggests sabotage, not erosion; it invites suspicion of outside actors and justifies preemptive control at home. It's an argument that turns dissent into treason by definition: if unity is survival, then pluralism looks like a luxury the country can't afford. That subtext is familiar in postcolonial politics, where borders often predate consensus and where "nationalism" can be a real bulwark against extraction - but also a convenient instrument for suppressing competing identities, parties, and institutions.

Context sharpens the stakes. Libya's modern state was stitched together from regions and tribes under the pressure of colonialism and monarchy, then rebranded under Gaddafi's revolutionary rule as anti-imperialist and pan-Arab (and later pan-African). When he warns of "ruin", he's speaking to a history of foreign intervention and to a future he feared: a Libya whose social fabric could be pulled apart faster than any army could conquer it. In retrospect, the line reads less like prophecy than like a playbook for legitimizing permanent emergency.

Quote Details

TopicFreedom
Source
Verified source: The Green Book (Part III: The Social Basis of the Third U... (Muammar al-Gaddafi, 1976)
Text match: 100.00%   Provider: Cross-Reference
Evidence:
Nations whose nationalism is destroyed are subject to ruin. (Part III, opening section (before “THE FAMILY”); page number varies by edition). This sentence appears in Part III of Muammar al-Gaddafi’s The Green Book, in the section titled “THE SOCIAL BASIS OF THE THIRD UNIVERSAL THEORY,” immediately followed by: “Minorities, which are one of the main political problems in the world, are the outcome.” The marxists.org page is a reproduction of the text (useful for exact wording), but it is not itself the primary publication. The earliest publication year I can substantiate from a mainstream bibliographic summary is that The Green Book was first published in Arabic in 1975, with an English publication/translation appearing in 1976. Exact page numbering depends on the specific print edition (there are multiple).
Other candidates (1)
Upright Truth, Downright Lies (Grant Hood, 2024) compilation95.0%
... Nations whose nationalism is destroyed are subject to ruin . ” – Muammar al - Gaddafi . This is from Kalergi's Au...
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Citation Formats

APA Style (7th ed.)
al-Gaddafi, Muammar. (2026, March 1). Nations whose nationalism is destroyed are subject to ruin. FixQuotes. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/nations-whose-nationalism-is-destroyed-are-125215/

Chicago Style
al-Gaddafi, Muammar. "Nations whose nationalism is destroyed are subject to ruin." FixQuotes. March 1, 2026. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/nations-whose-nationalism-is-destroyed-are-125215/.

MLA Style (9th ed.)
"Nations whose nationalism is destroyed are subject to ruin." FixQuotes, 1 Mar. 2026, https://fixquotes.com/quotes/nations-whose-nationalism-is-destroyed-are-125215/. Accessed 5 Mar. 2026.

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Nations whose nationalism is destroyed are subject to ruin
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About the Author

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Muammar al-Gaddafi (June 7, 1942 - October 20, 2011) was a Leader from Libya.

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