Don't Let Hillary Clinton Escape the Blame for Libya's
Destruction
By Michael Brendan Dougherty
April 18, 2015 "ICH"
- "The
Week" - American military adventurism relies on a very
backward notion of causation. When evil men in the world kill their own people,
somehow America is to blame for not stopping them. When American action leads
directly to disorder, barbarism, and terror, well, that's someone else's fault.
It's our unspoken doctrine of humanitarian anarchy.In a
more innocent time, before Jordan Spieth could legally drive, American bombs
began to fall on Libya. President Obama offered
the following rationale: It was to stop the oncoming violence and slaughter.
[I]f we waited one more day, Benghazi, a city nearly the
size of Charlotte, could suffer a massacre that would have reverberated
across the region and stained the conscience of the world.
It was not in our national interest to let that happen. I
refused to let that happen. And so nine days ago, after consulting the
bipartisan leadership of Congress, I authorized military action to stop the
killing... [White
House]
In the singularly uninsightful book Hard Choices, the
following words on the Libyan intervention are attributed to Hillary Clinton's
authorship:
All of this — the defiant dictator, the attacks on
civilians, the perilous position of the rebels — led me to consider what
many of my foreign counterparts were debating: Was it time for the
international community to go beyond humanitarian aid and sanctions and take
decisive action to stop the violence in Libya? [Hard
Choices]
Death and civil war in Libya were unacceptable outcomes for
America when Moammar Gadhafi was alive. But death and civil war continue
unabated, the difference being that the Islamic State is now one of the players
— and somehow it's not in the American interest to stop it or to help Libyans
establish some kind of law and order. The lessons of Iraq have been
internalized: Once you create a total power vacuum that will attract terror
gangs and radical Islamic fundamentalists, it's best to not have any boots on
the ground to stop them.
Clinton's chapter on Libya ends on exactly this note,
disavowing any responsibility for death and destruction from here on out:
I was worried that the challenges ahead would prove
overwhelming for even the most well-meaning transitional leaders. If the new
government could consolidate its authority, provide security, use oil
revenues to rebuild, disarm the militias, and keep extremists out, then
Libya would have a fighting chance at building a stable democracy. If not,
then the country would face very difficult challenges translating the hopes
of a revolution into a free, secure, and prosperous future. And, as we soon
learned, not only Libyans would suffer if they failed. [Hard
Choices]
That's a long comedown from her peace sign–waving braggadocio.
(As Clinton had put it, "We
came, we saw, he died.") But notice the causality in the above passage.
Hillary strikes an appropriately "worried" tone. But if there was a failure that
caused Libyan suffering, that belongs to the "well-meaning transitional
leaders."
Libya
now has multiple "governments" that draw massive amounts of the nation's
resource wealth to themselves, creating an endless amount of make-work and
no-show jobs to secure the loyalties of their clients. Libya is essentially
functioning as a Mediterranean gas station, the purpose of which is to provide
enough revenue to perpetuate a civil war to determine the gas station's
ownership.
As per usual in this region, Sunni radicals are moving in to
the power vacuum. Libya now has clerical thugs like Grand Mufti Sadiq al-Ghariani
issuing fatwas against women's rights. Perceived agents of "foreign" influence,
many of them workers brought in by the Gadhafi regime, are being expelled or
oppressed in popular uprisings. All in all, civil war tends to be a loser for
minorities, women, and children.
Juan Cole argued last month
that Libya is "messy" but has an "open
future." One upside of the Libyan war is that it has revealed that formerly
sharp critics of George W. Bush's foreign policy, like Cole, can be
just as glib as the people they hated a decade ago. Yes, Libya's future is
wide open, just as a mass grave is.
Meanwhile, back home, one of the prime architects of this
chaos gets the flattery of being chased by the national press, in a van that's
been named after a 1970s cartoon. There are no consequences for the woman who
could be the next leader of the free world. Those are reserved for well-meaning
transitional leaders and their constituents.