As all eyes are riveted on the Israeli efforts to discredit
and humiliate Hamas, Libya, Walter Russell Mead explains, is imploding.
One recalls that the Obama administration partnered with
NATO to overthrow the dictatorship of Muammar Gaddafi in 2011. At the time we
believed in the Arab Spring. Idealists in the Obama administration believed
that democracy would burst forth in the region.
It was not alone in holding this belief. Hadn’t the Bush
administration initiated the freedom agenda?
The impetus for leading behind in Libya came from the French
government through the aegis of a philosopher named Bernard-Henri Levy. The
tyrant Gaddafi needed to be deposed. NATO intervened on the side of the rebels.
We did not know who they were, but we believed in rebels.
At the time, people who understood Libya did not think it
was a very good idea. George Friedman of Statfor was pessimistic about the prospects
for a democratic Libya.
Now, the situation in Tripoli is so bad that we have just had to evacuate the American embassy. We did what Hillary Clinton did not do in
Benghazi in 2012.
Mead quotes the State Department description of the
situation at length:
The
security situation in Libya remains unpredictable and unstable. The
Libyan government has not been able to adequately build its military and police
forces and improve security following the 2011 revolution. Many
military-grade weapons remain in the hands of private
individuals, including antiaircraft weapons that may be used against
civilian aviation. Crime levels remain high in many parts of the
country. In addition to the threat of crime, various groups have called
for attacks against U.S. citizens and U.S. interests in Libya. Extremist
groups in Libya have made several specific threats this year against U.S.
government officials, citizens, and interests in Libya. Because of the
presumption that foreigners, especially U.S. citizens, in Libya may be
associated with the U.S. government or U.S. NGOs, travelers should be aware
that they may be targeted for kidnapping, violent attacks, or death. U.S.
citizens currently in Libya should exercise extreme caution and depart
immediately.
Sporadic
episodes of civil unrest have occurred throughout the country and attacks by
armed groups can occur in many different areas; hotels frequented by westerners
have been caught in the crossfire. Armed clashes have occurred in the
areas near Tripoli International Airport, Airport Road, and Swani Road.
Checkpoints controlled by militias are common outside of Tripoli, and at times
inside the capital. Closures or threats of closures of international airports
occur regularly, whether for maintenance, labor, or security-related
incidents. Along with airports, seaports and roads can close with little
or no warning. U.S. citizens should closely monitor news and check with
airlines to try to travel out of Libya as quickly and safely as possible.
The
status of the country’s interim government remains uncertain. The newly
elected Council of Representatives is scheduled to convene by August 4,
but political jockeying continues over where and when to seat the parliament.
Heavy clashes between rival factions erupted in May 2014 in Benghazi and
other eastern cities. In Tripoli, armed groups have contested territory
near Tripoli International Airport since July 13, rendering the airport
non-operational. State security institutions lack basic capabilities to
prevent conflict, and there remains a possibility of further escalation.
Clearly, NATO and American policies have failed in Libya.
It seems almost redundant to ask the question, but Mead asks
it anyway: what would the media coverage of the evacuation of the Libyan
embassy look like if a Republican had been in charge.
He answers:
If
Republicans had done this, the media would be on the
administration non-stop, perhaps comparing Samantha Power to Paul
Wolfowitz—a well-meaning humanitarian way over her head who wrecked a country
out of misguided ideology. There might also be some pointed questions for
future presidential candidates who supported this fiasco. But since both
Hillary Clinton and Barack Obama have their fingerprints all over Libya, there
isn’t a lot of press hunger for a detailed, unsparing autopsy into this
stinking corpse of policy flub.
If
Obama were a Republican, the press and the weekly news shows would be ringing
with hyperbolic, apocalyptic denunciations of the clueless incumbent who had
failed to learn the most basic lessons of Iraq….
Why,
the ever-admirable tribunes of a free and unbiased press would be asking
non-stop, didn’t this poor excuse for a President learn from what happened in
Iraq? When you upend an insane and murderous dictator who has crushed his
people for decades under an incompetent and quirky regime, you’d better realize
that there is no effective state or civil society under the hard shell of
dictatorial rule. Remove the dictator and you get chaos and anarchy. Wasn’t
this President paying attention during the last ten years?
It’s the media double standard. The press protects the
reputations and good names of anyone on the left and mercilessly trashes those
of anyone on the right.
Mead is right to be upset about it, but it has been going on
for so long and has become so endemic to the media that one sees little
prospect for anything to change.
So
instead, as Libya writhes in agony, reputations and careers move on. The news
is so bad, and the President’s foreign policy is collapsing on so many fronts,
that it is impossible to keep the story off the front pages. “Smart diplomacy”
has become a punch line, and the dream Team Obama had of making Democrats the
go-to national security party is as dead as the passenger pigeon. But what the
press can do for the White House it still, with some honorable exceptions,
labors to accomplish: it will, when it must, report the dots. But it will try
not to connect them, and it will do what it can to let all the people involved
in the Libya debacle move on to the next and higher stage of their careers.
As the world spins out of control, the media tells us that
the world is always spinning out of control and that Obama could not have done
anything about it anyway.
Do you really believe that if Bush were president and his
Libya policy had just imploded, the media would be saying the same thing?
The answer is so obvious that one almost feels a need to
apologize for asking it.
3 comments:
If the criticism as to why the Iraq War failed was there wasn't enough troops on the ground, how was Libya going to succeed with NO troops on the ground at all?
I think all this democracy stuff was just a ruse. The engineers of the coup and the lynching of Gaddafi just wanted to see Muslims slaughter Muslims.
And by removing Gaddafi, a lot of dirty secrets about western leaders died with him.
Gaddafi funneled 64 million dollars to Sarkozy.
Sarkozy took the money but stabbed his 'friend' in the back.
"NATO intervened on the side of the rebels. We did not know who they were, but we believed in rebels."
This ties in with your observations about the current "being on the side of History" fad. People in the West now have a sloppy, sentimental conviction that any sort of popular grassroots uprising is simply fated to succeed. The People are rising up! The popular will can never be defeated! With this mindset, there's no risk involved in supporting "rebels", because they're simply bound to win.
We once thought the Red Army was this inexorable force of History, destined to win every contest. Until they failed in Afghanistan, and we realized that they were only human after all.
There's a powerful longing to hand life, with all its complications and compromises, over to some unstoppable, infallible Force, that will just take over and do everything without troubling us to think or decide anything.
"The answer is so obvious that one almost feels a need to apologize for asking it." Empathy running away with you? I say, say it loud and say it proud: "Why are you the Dem's Fifth Column?"
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