One thing you can say about the now-deceased Libyan leader Muammar al-Qaddafi: he never met a photo op he didn't like. Qaddafi reveled on the global stage, mixing it up with like-minded pan-African and socialist leaders in his early days as a young revolutionary and with Western heads of state during the thaw in the later years of his rule. In these remarkable never-before-seen photographs found in Qaddafi's homes and compounds by Peter Bouckaert, emergencies director of Human Rights Watch, and re-photographed by freelance photojournalist Michael Brown, we're privy to a unique glimpse into Qaddafi's travels abroad and high-level meetings at home -- when he was still on top of his game. Foreign Policy invites readers to help us identify some of the individuals in these photographs; please leave comments below.
Above, Qaddafi holds hands with Soviet Union's Leonid Brezhnev.
© 2011 Michael Christopher Brown
Qaddafi with Egypt's Gamal Abdel Nasser and Sudan's Gaafar Nimeiry, soon after the Libyan revolution.
© 2011 Michael Christopher Brown

Qaddafi stands next to former Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak, his wife Suzanne, and his two sons, Gamal and Alaa, probably in the mid 1980's.
© 2011 Michael Christopher Brown
Qaddafi in Czechoslovakia , probably in the mid-1970s.
© 2011 Michael Christopher Brown
Qaddafi with Egypt's Nasser. Photos of Qaddafi and Nasser together can be dated with a fair amount of accuracy because the Libyan revolution took place in 1969, and Nasser died in 1970, so they are all from that brief period. These pictures with Nasser became iconic for the Qaddafi regime and could be seen all over Libya.
© 2011 Michael Christopher Brown
Qaddafi with two unidentitified men and PLO leader Yasser Arafat.
Qaddafi with Nimeiry, the former president of Sudan, who was also greatly influenced by Egypt's Nasser. This picture is probably from the period between 1969 and 1971, when Qaddafi would have been 29 or 30 years old.
© 2011 Michael Christopher Brown
Qaddafi, apparently visiting the U.S.S.R., sometime in the mid-1970s.
2011 Michael Christopher Brown
Qaddafi poses for a picture at a meeting with Brezhnev.
Qaddafi, resplendent in a cape and double-breasted suit, shaking hands with Brezhnev.
Qaddafi's son, Saif al-Islam, with former Iraqi leader Saddam Hussein.
© 2011 Michael Christopher Brown
Qaddafi on a trip to Eastern Europe.
On a trip to Eastern Europe, Qaddafi signs a document.
© 2011 Michael Christopher Brown
Qaddafi meets Nikolai Podgorny of Russia, probably in the mid- to late-1970s.
© 2011 Michael Christopher Brown
With an unidentified leader in the early 1970s.
© 2011 Michael Christopher Brown
Qaddafi with Habib Bourguiba, the former president of Tunisia who was deposed in 1987. This picture was taken on the island of Djerba, where they signed a unification agreement. Bourguiba was basically senile by then, and the two wrote the agreement on the back of an envelope that was displayed in Tripoli.
© 2011 Michael Christopher Brown
Qaddafi embraces Yasser Arafat.
© 2011 Michael Christopher Brown
Qaddafi rides in a car with Sudan's Nimeiry.
© 2011 Michael Christopher Brown
Qaddafi with Tunisia's Bourguiba. The man at far left is most likely Tunisia's foreign minister at that time, Hedi Nouria .
© 2011 Michael Christopher Brown
Tweep @almuraisy let us know that Qaddafi is pictured here with Qatar's Khalifa Ibn Hamad al Thani.
© 2011 Michael Christopher Brown
Qaddafi greets the crowd during an unidentified trip, probably in the early 1970s.
© 2011 Michael Christopher Brown
Qaddafi presents a gift to Nasser.
© 2011 Michael Christopher Brown
With Hafez al-Assad of Syria, probably in the mid 1970s. Bashar al-Assad, the current leader of Syria, is his son.
© 2011 Michael Christopher Brown
Qaddafi meets an unidentified man.
© 2011 Michael Christopher Brown
Qaddafi with an unidentified man on a trip abroad.
© 2011 Michael Christopher Brown
Nasser and Qaddafi. The interiors indicate this meeting took place in Cairo, not Tripoli.
© 2011 Michael Christopher Brown
Libya and the Brother Leader went through a long period of isolation in the West, espcially after the 1988 Lockerbie boming, which killed 270 people and was believed to have been planned from Libya. However, despite a bizarre speech in front of the UN in 2009, world leaders began engaging with Libya in the mid- 2000's. The U.S. restored full diplamtic relations with the country in 2006.
U.S. President Barack Obama met Qaddafi at a Group of 8 meetting in Italy in 2009.
MICHAEL GOTTSCHALK/AFP/Getty Images
Then-British Prime Minister Tony Blair flew to Libya in 2007 for talks about a major energy deal with the oil-rich nation.
Leon Neal/AFP/Getty Images
Former Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice met the dictator in 2008 in Tripoli. Qaddafi wasquite taken with Rice, calling her his "darling black African woman" and even having a song commissioned in her honor.
MAHMUD TURKIA/AFP/Getty Images



(19)
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GASSAN NAMIQ
1:18 AM ET
October 21, 2011
Photo No. 24
The unidentified man in photo 24 is President Ahmad Hassan Albakr of Iraq 1968-1979.
HAKANS
4:47 PM ET
November 2, 2011
Its really interesting, cause
Its really interesting, cause ,hypothetically,if pro-qaddafi forces take away personal belongings from a houseowner,may be focefully in a time when they were power.
Hakan Selvi from varolmak ...
GUIDOLANG
10:40 AM ET
November 8, 2011
Re
Thanks for this information. News on Youtube .
NKALKHALIFA
3:25 AM ET
October 21, 2011
Photo No. 20
In photo no. 20, the unidentified leader is the former emir of qatar, Khalifa bin Hamad Al-Thani.
KRUDY15
8:38 AM ET
October 21, 2011
Photo no. 25
The unidentified man is Dzemal Bijedic from the former Yugoslavia, and judging by the architecture in the background the picture was taken somewhere in Yugoslavia as well.
HARUNK
9:24 AM ET
October 22, 2011
person in photo
hi,
the person in this photo is ?zemal Bijedic, a high ranking Yugoslav communist official. the city is Mostar, Bosnia and Herzegovina, probably in the 1970s.
SEBASTIAN81
5:00 PM ET
October 22, 2011
Photo No.15
Félix Malloum President and Prime Minister of Chad in one person from 1975-79
BLACKEYEDWRITER
8:42 AM ET
October 23, 2011
I wonder what Human Rights
I wonder what Human Rights Watch is doing at the Qaddafi compound? Do they have mandate to take or should I say 'loot' goods from a post conflict zone which used to belong to a dictator? Its really interesting, cause ,hypothetically,if pro-qaddafi forces take away personal belongings from a houseowner,may be focefully in a time when they were power, perhaps the HRW would condemned it as violation of human rights.Having said that,I must say thanks for opening up Qaddafi's life:)
5THDRAGON
9:40 PM ET
October 23, 2011
I appreciate seeing these pictures...........
But it seems these pictures should belong to his relatives and not the world.
LANDSHARK
1:26 PM ET
October 25, 2011
Identified a subject
Looks like Paul Michael Glaser to me. Also, Is he holding hands with Brezhnev??
RAPH852
11:12 PM ET
October 26, 2011
learn to spell
i love FP, and i read it religiously, but it's ridiculous how many grammar and spelling mistakes are allowed to remain on your site. Does anybody at all edit and proof-read? P26
BESTDEFENSEFAN
10:05 PM ET
November 2, 2011
Photo 15
Fairly certain the unidentified leader in Photo 15 is Hamani Diori, the first President of Niger.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hamani_Diori
DELPIA
5:10 AM ET
November 10, 2011
Wow
Greast Information Thankkindle black friday
black friday kindle
JACKOY
11:25 AM ET
November 6, 2011
Great photo by the
Great photo by the way.
Ringling Brothers
KESHAB
10:16 AM ET
November 8, 2011
thankx
I think Time magazine and Foreign Policy are doing a grate jobs, news should be open and clear to the readers like we are.. and I must say photo's value appreciate as well.
regards
Keshab
KESHAB
10:19 AM ET
November 8, 2011
thankx
I think Time magazine and Foreign Policy are doing a grate jobs, news should be open and clear to the readers like we are.. and I must say photo's value appreciate as well.
regards
Keshab
YARINSIZ
4:02 PM ET
November 16, 2011
Do they have mandate to take
Do they have mandate to take or should I say 'loot' goods from a post conflict zone which used to belong to a dictator? Its really interesting, cause ,hypothetically,if pro-qaddafi forces take away seslichat personal belongings from a houseowner,may be focefully in a time when they were power, perhaps the HRW would condemned it as violation of human rights.
ACRO
1:22 PM ET
November 18, 2011
It's Amazing
I don't believe Gaddifi started out power hungry. But it is amazing what power can do to an individual. Which through time can destroy a nation and alienate its people. Sad but true.
Tall Floor Vases
CARTHAGIAN
2:37 PM ET
November 19, 2011
Well, I have to agree that he
Well, I have to agree that he is one photogenic build my rank dictator.