Things are bad when a president who says he wants out of Iraq and claims American soldiers will soon start to withdraw from Afghanistan succumbs to international and domestic pressure to do the heavy lifting in yet another civil war—this time in Libya. It’s as if there is a “buy two wars and get the third war for half price” special. What a deal!
The allied intervention in Libya is so absurdly half-baked that (ad hoc) coalition aircraft are supposedly bombing only when civilians are in danger, but not when Gadhafi’s forces are beating up the opposition. That’s because the United Nations resolution did not authorize helping rebel forces or throwing Gadhafi out of power. But it is unclear how bombing a building on Gadhafi’s compound fits under the category of saving civilians. Reporters who inspected the rubble said that it had been used by Gadhafi to receive dignitaries—including previously some of the reporters—but appeared to have no command or communications equipment. Furthermore, theoretically, if Gadhafi’s forces fought only rebels and scrupulously avoided hitting civilians, then the coalition could sure save some ammo while patrolling Libya’s skies.
The vain hope seems to be that if the coalition attacks Libya from the air—since President Barack Obama has said no U.S. ground forces will be sent—the Libyan military will find it in their interest to throw out Gadhafi in a coup. Of course, coalition air attacks would have to terrify the Libyan military enough to do that. Instead, reporters who have interviewed high-level Libyan officials say that they appear quite sanguine about their prospects for riding out allied attacks.
And Gadhafi and his minions have many grounds for optimism. Coalition forces can hammer Gadhafi’s ground forces on open terrain—for example, that on the outskirts of Benghazi—but Gadhafi’s military, at the very least, could take refuge in and build up defenses in the large cities. This would significantly reduce the effect of coalition air attacks, because they would have to be curtailed in metropolitan areas. After all, it would look really bad to slaughter Libyans en masse—civilians for which the United Nations approved those very attacks to protect. In addition, it would be very difficult for the untrained, rag-tag opposition forces to take built-up cities held by trained Libyan soldiers.
So without inserting coalition ground forces, a military stalemate may result, with Gadhafi controlling most cities and the rebels holding a few, including Benghazi. (The coalition will look even worse if Gadhafi’s continuing offensive against rebel holdouts succeeds even in the presence of the allied no-fly zone.) One can foresee an unsuccessful no-fly zone that lasts years, as it did in Saddam Hussein’s Iraq, with similar pressure building for the United States to invade and take out the demonized Gadhafi.
The demonization of Gadhafi started back during the Reagan administration. Once a foreign dictator is demonized by the formidable U.S. government’s public relations juggernaut, pressure builds to oust him in any way possible after sanctions and a no-fly zone have failed to do so. So look out for a long U.S. entanglement in Libya and maybe a future American land war there.
Gadhafi’s human rights record is certainly nothing to write home about, but it is about the same as that of U.S. ally Saudi Arabia and not much worse than that of the Israelis in occupied Palestine, according to Freedom House. Besides, the U.S. has not used military forces to protect civilians being abused to an even greater extent than in Libya—in Rwanda, Sudan, the Congo, etc. And the Constitution says that the U.S. taxpayer is on the hook only to provide for a “common defense,” not to stop violence many countries around the world commit against their own people or neighboring nations.
The bipartisan interventionist American foreign policy elites are in supreme denial, starting a third war when the U.S. Empire is already slogging along in two quagmires. With more than a trillion dollar annual budget deficit and a $14 trillion national debt, the empire is overextended. Overextension by unneeded wars and interventions sank the British, French, Soviet, and many other empires’ economies throughout history. Those empires, too, thought it couldn’t happen to them, as the U.S. does now.
To preserve the republic and its influence in the world, presidents have to push back against the overwhelming pressures for military intervention coming from the foreign policy elites and the vested interests that back them. Obama, analytical and seemingly a reluctant warrior by nature, has utterly capitulated to such interests. This outcome gives little hope that future presidents will be able to reverse the tide, run a more restrained and sensible foreign policy, and lead the world by example instead of extreme measures.
Read more by Ivan Eland
- The US Should Leave NATO, Not Shore It Up – May 22nd, 2012
- The Already Forgotten Iraq War – May 15th, 2012
- What’s Behind the Second Underwear Bombing Attempt? – May 8th, 2012
- American Foreign Policy: Have Gun, Will Travel – May 1st, 2012
- Proliferation Intelligence or Proliferation of Intelligence? – April 24th, 2012





andy
March 22nd, 2011 at 9:16 pm
WHY can't America just mind its own business? It would be a lot better off.
John_Muhammad
March 22nd, 2011 at 11:11 pm
Obama just wants to be a 'War President' like everyone else- you're not a *real* President unless you've personally ordered in the troops on some foreign shore and caused an appropriate amount of damage.
When will it be the title of 'Peace President' that is sought for as vigorously as wars are sought today? When will an American President be proud to be able to claim, truthfully, that during his term of office no US service member died in a foreign war or police action or intervention?
I am an American, born in Texas and the son of a line of Americans that stretches back to 1720 when we immigrated from Europe- and I am truly baffled at what this country has become just in my own lifetime.
liberal
March 23rd, 2011 at 5:27 am
Good piece.
On this, though:
"…but it is about the same as that of U.S. ally Saudi Arabia …"
I'm not so sure. In Saudi Arabia half the population is essentially enslaved.
Not that I think that means we should bomb them. :-)
MoT
March 23rd, 2011 at 8:59 am
Baffled? I'm with you. When I heard they were authorizing this no-fly zone I shook my head. Just what in the hell is going on! Especially when Kriminal Komrade Klinton burbles about civilians, blah, blah, blah. That's a hoot coming from her!
marko
March 23rd, 2011 at 10:36 am
Air power has never EVER terrified any enemy into submission at any time in any war beginning with the first time it was used in WWI, (remember even when they dropped the A-bomb on Hiroshima Japan was already beaten). All it's ever done is to effectively piss the other side off and make them more determined to hold out and win. Nevertheless, regardless of all empirical evidence, the Boys with Death Toys insist on using air "power" to kill the defenseless. Wow. Real point of pride there. Military intelligence at it's finest.
marko
March 23rd, 2011 at 10:42 am
Dude, unfortunately, when you look at the history books, every single American president that's been considered "great" by historians has been a mass killer of one kind or another. The presidents who have kept the US out of wars have been considered mediocre at best. It really starts to look like a cultural problem from that perspective. I would say "male" problem, but frankly I can't imagine Hillary keeping the US from any sort of mass killing adventure if she were to get half a chance as president. And truly, I agree shit has gone weird in the last ten or so years, but you know it stretches waaay back.
andy
March 23rd, 2011 at 11:54 am
Its a cheap, quick and easy way for America to fight. And I would even say cowardly too.
Terrance&Philip
March 23rd, 2011 at 1:21 pm
"Especially when Kriminal Komrade Klinton burbles about civilians, blah, blah, blah. That's a hoot coming from her!"
The woman makes Lady Macbeth look like Mother Theresa. Hillzilla would advocate blowing up those same civilians were she ever to calcuate that doing so would work to her political advantage.
gary
March 23rd, 2011 at 5:44 pm
come on guys….who wouldn't like to push a button and watch 20 foot long,million dollar phallic symbol roar into the nightime sky and go through kadafi's window 600 miles away…..that is serious fun….always remember…we don't need friends,we need enemies.
eric siverson
March 25th, 2011 at 7:41 pm
I wouldn't say its so cheap, ninteen box cutters or a suicide belt are just as effective and considerabley cheaper . The republican congress should take the money away from this war against Libyians . We don't know who we are fighting for . Gaddaffi says he is fighting AlQaida , if he's right we should not be bombing for AlQaida again . We already done that in Yugoslavia before 9 11 . They seem to forget real guick that we helped them .