Hailed as a Model for
Successful Intervention, Libya Proves to
be the Exact Opposite
By Glenn Greenwald
February 16, 2015 "ICH"
- "The
Intercept" -
When Saddam Hussein was captured in 2003
by U.S. forces, Iraq War advocates
boastfully celebrated the event as proof
that they were right and used it to mock
war opponents (Joe Lieberman and John
Kerry, for instance, gleefully
exploited the event to
demand that Howard Dean admit his
war opposition was wrong). When Muammar
Gaddafi was forced by NATO bombing in
August, 2011 to flee Tripoli, advocates
of U.S. intervention played the same
game (ThinkProgress
gleefully exploited the occasion to
try to shame those who objected to the
illegality of Obama’s waging the war
even after
Congress voted against its authorization:
as though Gadaffi’s fleeing could render
legal Obama’s plainly illegal
intervention).
Once Gadaffi was brutally killed by a
mob, advocates of intervention threw a
giddy party for themselves, celebrating
their own rightness and righteousness
and declaring Libya a model for future
western interventions. Upon Gadaffi’s
fleeing, The New York Times,
which
editorially supported the war,
published
a front-page article declaring:
“U.S. Tactics in Libya May be a Model
for Other Efforts.” While acknowledging
that “it would be premature to call the
war in Libya a complete success for
United States interests,” the paper
noted that events had given “Obama’s
senior advisers a chance to claim a key
victory for an Obama doctrine for the
Middle East that had been roundly
criticized in recent months as leading
from behind.”
Leading
war advocates such as
Anne-Marie Slaughter and
Nick Kristof celebrated themselves
as humanitarian visionaries and chided
war opponents for being blinkered and
overly cynical about the virtues of
American force. British and French
leaders descended upon Libya to
strut around like some sort of
conquering heroes, while American and
Canadian officials held
pompous war victory ceremonies.
Hillary Clinton was downright
sociopathic,
gloating and cackling in an
interview when told about Gadaffi’s
death by mob: “We came, we saw, he
died.” Democratic partisans were
drowning in similar bravado (“Unlike
the all-hat-no-cattle types we are
increasingly seeing over there,
[Obama] may take his time, but he does
seem to get his man”).
From the start, it was
glaringly obvious that all of this was,
at best, wildly premature. As I
wrote the day after Gadaffi fled,
the Democratic claims of
vindication were redolent in all sorts
of ways of war hawk boasting after
Saddam was captured, and was just as
irrational: “the real toll of this war
(including the number of civilian deaths
that have occurred and will occur) is
still almost entirely unknown, and none
of the arguments against the war (least
of all the legal ones) are remotely
resolved by yesterday’s events.”
Since 2011, Libya has
rapidly unraveled in much the way
Iraq did following that
invasion: swamped by militia rule,
factional warfare, economic devastation,
and complete lawlessness. And to their
eternal shame, most self-proclaimed
“humanitarians” who advocated the Libya
intervention
completely ignored the country once
the fun parts – the war victory dances
and mocking of war opponents – were
over. The feel-good “humanitarianism” of
war advocates, as usual, extended only
to the cheering from a safe distance as
bombs dropped.
The
unraveling of Libya is now close to
absolute. Yesterday, the
same New York Times editorial
page that supported the intervention
quoted the U.N.’s Libya envoy Bernardino
León as observing: “Libya is falling
apart. Politically, financially, the
economic situation is disastrous.” The
NYT editors forgot to mention
that they supported the intervention,
but did note that “Libya’s unraveling
has received comparatively little
attention over the past few months.” In
other words, the very same
NATO countries that dropped bombs on
Libya in order to remove its government
collectively ignored the aftermath once
their self-celebrations were over.
Into the
void of Libya’s predictable
disintegration has stepped ISIS, among
other groups. ISIS yesterday
released a new video showing the
beheading of 21 Egyptian Coptic
Christians, which they carried out in
Libya. This, in turn, led to all sorts
of dire warnings about how close ISIS
now is to Europe – it “established a
direct affiliate less than 500 miles
(800 kilometers) from the southern tip
of Italy,”
warned AP – which in turn has
produced calls for re-intervention in
Libya.
Yesterday, the
U.S.-supported Egyptian regime
bombed targets in Libya.
Meanwhile, “Italy warned that ISIS
is at Europe’s doorstep as France and
Egypt called for the United Nations
Security Council to meet over the
spiraling crisis in Libya.” It’s only a
matter of time before another western
“intervention” in Libya becomes
conventional wisdom, with those opposed
being accused of harboring sympathy for
ISIS (just as opponents of Libya
intervention the first time around were
accused of being
indifferent to Gadaffi’s repression).
What we see here is
what we’ve seen over and over: the
west’s wars creating and empowering an
endless supply of enemies, which in turn
justify endless war by the west. It was
the invasion of Iraq that ushered in “Al
Qaeda in Iraq” and ultimately ISIS. It
has been the
brutal, civilian-slaughtering drone
bombing of Yemen
which spawned Al Qaeda in the
Arabian Peninsula
in that country. As Hillary Clinton
herself acknowledged, the U.S.
helped create Al Qaeda itself by arming,
recruiting and funding foreign
“Mujahideen” to fight the Soviet
invasion of Afghanistan (“the people we
are fighting today, we funded 20 years
ago”). And now it is the NATO
intervention in Libya which has laid the
groundwork for further intervention.
That the U.S. would
end up intervening in Libya again as a
result of the first intervention was
painfully obvious. A primary argument
of intervention opponents was that the
same destruction sown in Iraq from
“regime change” would be sown in Libya,
and that the U.S. would end up
empowering factions that it would later
claim it was “obligated” to fight. In
October, 2012, as Libya was
disintegrating, I
wrote:
Rather obviously,
this was yet another example of the
“Mission Accomplished” banner being
waved quite prematurely. How many
times does it need be proven that
merely killing a dictator does not
remotely guarantee an improvement
from either the perspective of US
interests or the people in the
country being invaded? And how many
more examples do we need where the
US funds and arms a fighting force
to do its bidding, only to turn
around and find that it now must
fight that same force?
One can debate whether
all of this is done by design or by
“accident”: if you realize that
U.S. actions create further pretexts for
war, then those who do this for a living
must realize it, too (their
own studies say this); and how many
times does something have to happen
before “accident” is no longer a viable
explanation (as in: oops, our bombing
policies
keep killing large numbers of civilians,
but we keep doing it anyway, and
keep claiming it’s all just a terrible
“accident”)? But whatever else is true
about motive, there is no question that
U.S. militarism constantly strengthens
exactly that which it is pitched as
trying to prevent, and ensures that the
U.S. government never loses its supply
of reasons to continue its endless war.
Far from serving as a
model, this Libya intervention should
severely discredit the core selling
point of so-called “humanitarian wars.”
Some non-governmental advocates of
“humanitarian war” may be motivated by
the noble aims they invoke, but
humanitarianism is simply not why
governments fight wars; that is just the
pretty wrapping used to sell them.
Finally, Democrats
(with validity) love to demand that Iraq
War advocates acknowledge their errors
and be discredited for their position
(unless those advocates happen to be
Obama’s Vice President, his two
Secretaries of State, his Pentagon
chiefs, etc.). We are rapidly
approaching the point, if we are not
there already, where advocates of
“intervention” in Libya should do the
same.
Email the author:
glenn.greenwald@theintercept.com