Libya and the New Warmongering
The NATO intervention in Libya is likely to produce a more militarized and insecure world, and this will be its most enduring legacy. The military “success” in Libya has increased the possibility of new wars. There is a widespread perception that NATO has achieved an easy victory against Gadhafi, and the resulting sense of hubris augments the risk of future military actions against Iran, Syria, and other possible targets. Politicians in NATO countries surely welcome the public distraction that war provides, especially in the context of the world-wide economic slump, and this may prove an additional motivation for new military action.
And the Libyan success will generate heightened levels of military expenditure. The British military has already been using the intervention as an argument for more funding; the same situation will no doubt occur in France and the United States as well, where the intervention will bring political benefits to the military-industrial complexes of each country. Given limited funds, the relatively higher military budgets that result from this situation will probably reduce funds for education, health, environmental protection, and disease eradication, and also for aid to developing countries, which include Libya.
Another consequence of intervention is the erosion of international law, as indicated by NATO’s disregard of the UN Charter and also the U.S. War Powers Resolution, which were openly flouted in the course of the bombing campaign and the efforts at regime change. In previous eras, U.S. liberals might have criticized the unchecked use of executive power shown by the Obama administration. But such concerns are a thing of the past. With Libya, liberals have shown themselves to be perfectly comfortable with an “imperial presidency.”
In addition, the intervention constitutes a setback for international cooperation aimed at curbing nuclear proliferation: NATO’s decision to overthrow Gadhafi after he had agreed to give up his nuclear weapons development program will surely dissuade other countries such as North Korea from repeating Gadhafi’s mistake. The significance of the intervention will thus extend far beyond Libya itself, and it is this larger class of implications that constitutes the most dangerous implication of the intervention. No one likes to think about the long-term consequences of policy actions, especially where “victory” is involved; but these long-term consequences will remain, all the same, and international security will be compromised as a result.
Libya on the Ground
Let us now turn to the implications of NATO’s victory for Libya and its people. At this level, the outcome seems uncertain, as the facts on the ground are ambiguous. On the one hand, the National Transitional Council (NTC) has achieved full control of the country, and so far has avoided the Gadhafi chaos that many had feared. On the other hand, the situation remains unstable, as indicated by the frequent clashes among rival militia groups for control of Tripoli and other areas. And the NATO intervention itself may pose problems for future stability. Achieving power with external support, the new regime is thus open to criticisms that it is the product of foreign intervention. True, the NATO powers retain some popularity among at least those Libyans that supported the Gadhafi overthrow; but that support may wear thin over time, as the traditional and deeply rooted anti-colonialism of the Libyan people reasserts itself.
Overall, there is little in Libya’s past to suggest a happy ending. The country is comprised of more than one hundred self-identified clan groups, with an additional regional divide between the eastern and western parts of the country, a split that goes back to the period of Ottoman rule. There is no significant precedent for parliamentary democracy. And the only national unity the country has achieved was largely the creation of Muammar Gadhafi
No one should mourn the fall of Gadhafi, who (despite some accomplishments) remained at base an unsavory and megalomaniacal figure. The question is whether the new regime will prove any better – or worse — than what came before. There are several possible outcomes. The new regime might prove to be a relatively decent and stabilizing force that provides the Libyan people a better quality of life than they had under the Gadhafi dictatorship. Perhaps they will even achieve some form of representative democracy, with impartial rule of law and respect for individual autonomy. Any reasonable person would surely hope for this outcome. But this hardly seems likely. A more plausible scenario is that the central government will fall apart, triggering a renewed civil war between the eastern and western regions. Alternatively, there may be a generalized descent into chaos, without clear battle lines, similar to what happened in Somalia in 1991, after the fall of the Siad Barre dictatorship.
Perhaps the most likely scenario would entail a weak and corrupt Libyan central government, which would nominally rule amidst regional instability, economic deterioration, and growing social misery. In an earlier time, the Western powers might have furnished a Marshall Plan-style aid program to ensure the success of the new government. However, such programs have largely gone out of fashion and seem especially unlikely at the present moment, given the austerity-minded regimes in Europe and the United States. The NATO powers surely will congratulate themselves for having financed the bombing campaign but are unlikely to find much money for reconstructing the country. Stated simply, the most likely outcome would be a Libya that ends up in even worse shape than was the case before the fall of Gadhafi
“Humanitarian” Interventions
There is thus a real danger that the NATO intervention in Libya may end up worsening the situation for the Libyan people. Purported efforts at humanitarian intervention have certainly made things worse in the past. Consider the interventions in Iraq and Afghanistan, both of which had been governed by regimes that were even more repressive than Gadhafi’s and more repulsive in a moral sense. And so, Western interventions overthrew both regimes, and they did so with the support of many of the same intellectuals who recently supported the overthrow of Gadhafi The results were disastrous.
At the time of the 2003 Iraq invasion, Juan Cole offered the following endorsement: “I remain convinced that, for all the concerns one might have about the aftermath, the removal of Saddam Hussein and the murderous Baath regime from power will be worth the sacrifices that are about to be made on all sides.” It is painful to read this type of rubbish now, almost a decade later, and it must raise questions about Cole’s judgment. This past endorsement of the Iraq war is also worth recalling in light of Cole’s recent writings on Libya, which once again endorsed intervention.
In general, there is a tendency to assume that interventions termed “humanitarian” must always have positive outcomes. This is indeed a widely held assumption, popularized by Samantha Power’s influential (though poorly researched) book A Problem from Hell. But there is little in the historical record to support this assumption. In fact, military interventions typically make humanitarian situations worse than before, not better, a point dramatically illustrated by the hundreds of thousands of deaths that resulted from interventions in Iraq and Afghanistan. And despite myths to the contrary, past interventions in Bosnia and Kosovo worsened the humanitarian crises in those areas, a point that is well documented even if little known.
First Do No Harm
In medicine, doctors must assume a stance of restraint before taking action; “first do no harm” is the operative principal. We cannot solve all problems, after all, and we should at least not make a bad situation worse by reckless or ill-considered interventions. This principle is well recognized with regard to medical interventions, so why should it not apply as well to military interventions, including those labeled “humanitarian”?
And finally, we must assess the implications of the Libya intervention for the liberal left. This intervention demonstrates liberals’ abandonment of their traditional peace position. Since the end of the Cold War, many liberals have become enamored of military force, in a way that is indistinguishable from the most retrograde and jingoistic elements of the right. Let us be frank and call things by their correct names: The movement for humanitarian intervention – with regard to Libya, Darfur, Iraq, and the Balkans – has always been a pro-war movement, for war is what we are really talking about here.
With regard to matters of tone, the liberal interventionists embody much of the ugliness that has been associated with militarist movements throughout history, including their stance of moral self-righteousness, their tendency to vilify dissent, and their reckless disregard for the risks of military action. There is also a remarkable confidence in the good intentions of military, government, and corporate officials in the intervening powers, combined with a refusal to consider the self-interested motives that these figures have for undertaking intervention. Today, warmongering is no longer confined to political conservatives. Liberals can also enjoy the thrill and moral uplift of advocating for war – but with no sense of accountability for the consequences of their advocacy.
Reprinted with permission courtesy of Foreign Policy in Focus.
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Michael
January 13th, 2012 at 5:20 am
This is an accurate piece on many levels, sadly. Prior to the "intervention" in Libya I was involved in numerous exchanges with a spectrum of people on the left about the nature of this conflict. It was truly depressing. My robust defence of basic anit-war principles enshrined in international law and devised, partly, to hinder military adventures by the powerful against the weak, to make war harder, were regarded with something close to contempt. My views represented, "An old-fashioned concept of the sanctity of the nation state and sovereignty." Furthermore, the national interest, national self-defence, and sovereignty could now be expanded exponentially to encompass invading countries that didn't directly threaten us, but "threatened" our universal values, even if they found themselves under attack on the other side of the world.
I was an apologist for tyranny, dictators, genocide, mass rapes, massacres of unarmed civilians and all manner of crimes, merely for questioning the veracity of the numerous claims about the horrors being unleashed by the Gadaffi regime on its own people, and wanting to know if there were any neutral, or independent sources for the horror stories that weren't sourced from the belligerent parties or the rebels. Many on the liberal left seem to have an incredible faith, for that's what it is, in the "truth" told to them by the media and the political class, and this is after Iraq and the non-existant weapons of mass destruction. This time, I was lectured, things are different, and, anyway, the media had learned their lesson, and the politicians too, they wouldn't dare lead us to war again so quickly based on a pack of lies. When I pointed out the circularity of this argument, I was ridiculed.
What seems to have happened is that the War Party has developed a language to justify imperialism, that even the liberals and left can understand and support, or large and influential sections of the "progressive" community. And I think this is a crucial point. These wars are essentially portrayed as crusades for progress, and the concept of progress is close to the hearts of most progressives, out with the old, in with the new, even at the point of a gun.
Dieter
January 13th, 2012 at 6:07 am
In his biography of Hitler, Konrad Heiden made in essence the following prophetic statement. When a nation uses large sums of borrowed money to build up its military might the only return on the investment is a victorious war. By "victorious war" he referred to the 1870 invasion by of France for which Chancellor Bismark had borrowed wildly because the German Parliament would not give him the required funds. When Prussia won the French had to pay for all of Prussia's loans and then some more.
Our wars in Iraq and Afghanistan have not been "victorious" in the sense that Heiden meant but Libya may well pay for itself and then some more….in oil.
tomofsnj
January 13th, 2012 at 7:15 am
NATO’s disregard of the UN Charter '
The brutal attack on Libya was the death knell for the United Nations. Libya and Iraq were members of the United Nations. Bush made the motions that he got the United Nations approval but that was really at best based on clear lies of WMD and other reasons which proved to be lies. NATO aka old colonial powers did not even bother to get a real get out of jail card from the United Nations. The head of the United Nations actually was filmed cheering the attack of several members of the United Nations on the nation of Libya who was also a member of the United Nations. There is no reason for any nation to be part and fund any function of the Untied Nations. The United Nations is a fraud.
Anyone who thinks otherwise just needs to look at the past year and the aggression by the powerful on those that could not fight several countries who wanted the gold and oil of those who could not defend themselves.
Personally the loss of the United Nations is no big deal. It really aways were just a front for aggression by the west.
Jaime
January 13th, 2012 at 9:42 am
Uhm. The author says that nobosy should mourn the demise of Gadhafi, but at the same time, he states that it's more likely that Libya will be worse off. In conclusion, a basic analysis should tell us that there are reasons to mourn the dictator Gadhafi because in spite of having been a tyrant, the final balance was positive. Besides, I do not trust the west's fawning corporate media. They lie like crazy, and they are the western versions of Tass and Pravda except that rather than doing it for ideology, they do it for money.
Kbh99
January 13th, 2012 at 11:10 am
I think this is a decent summary of events in Libya. I have read many reports about Libya and it seems that there are many ideas of what the truth is.To be honest,I think that Afghanistan,Iraq,Egypt,Libya and all other countries that have had Western interference are worse off. Some are unmitigated disasters on an inconceivable scale,but mainstream press and tv tout them as victories.Victories for proper gander is all I can conclude,because the cost in lives,destruction and sheer lunacy for some kind of ideology can never be worth it.Amongst the excuses for these genocides are
Humanitarian,which translated means we will stop the killing by killing more,your bombs kill,ours don`t .
Democracy,we have "democracy" so you will have it even if we have to kill you all.
Dictatorship,we will rid you of your dictator and replace him with our puppet government or dictator.
WMD is popular,worked in Iraq,will probably work in Iran if we can fill the news with lies and half truths.
Sanity,dialogue and getting round a table are out because the table is usually rigged.
Bianca
January 13th, 2012 at 1:01 pm
Disguisting article. Mixing the antiwar/anti-interventionist sentiment, the author is CLEARLY peddling intervention. Libya WAS better off before, and not in one hundred years will it achieve what it was. The reluctance of the media to talk FACTS AND FIGURES about Libya, its economy, standard of living, health care, education, infrastructure — indicates the basic inability to be HONEST. With such mush, give me INTERVENTIONISTS any time. At least, they are clear about their greedy intentions. The wishy-washy articles like this are not helping.
rick
January 13th, 2012 at 4:37 pm
I quit reading at the start of the 2nd paragraph . "And the Libyan success…."
niki
January 13th, 2012 at 4:53 pm
At least one have understood. Libya's people is regreting very hard Gadafi as he was not a dictator as yr president who spend all the money from taxpayer for doing wars on false flag and build concentration camps with a lot of cuffins for his people. Gadafi was giving the money of petrol to all the libyan who else does it ? People were happy under Gadafi no one was begging for money he was saying that not one libyan would work for an other libyan so you see. This war has killed a better world than in America all that for taking gold and petrol. Disgusting!