Obama Plans
Massive Military Escalation and the Media Barely
Seem to Care
U.S. troops are going back into Iraq, our presence
in Libya is escalating, and Obama has widened the
war in Afghanistan—all without much of a public
debate.
By Adam Johnson
February 02, 2016 "Information
Clearing House"
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"AlterNet"
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Almost five
years after the United States and its NATO allies
launched a campaign in Libya to overthrow Col.
Muammar el-Qaddafi, the United States is on the
verge of massively escalating its military
operations in the war-torn country. According to
the New York Times, the new effort is
“expected to include airstrikes and raids by elite
American troops.” It is unclear how long this newest
effort will last.
The
announcement comes on the heels of U.S. Secretary of
Defense Ash Carter announcing combat troops were
going back to Iraq last
week. While U.S special forces have been
conducting “clandestine reconnaissance missions in
Libya to identify militant leaders and map out their
networks” over the past year, the New York Times report
marks the first time overt combat troops will be
deployed in the North African nation.
The 2011 campaign was itself something of a bait and
switch. What was originally sold as simply a no-fly
zone quickly became regime change. A few weeks after
the UN-sanctioned bombing of Libya’s infrastructure
and air capacity, the scope of the campaign pivoted
when President Obama, along with Presidents Sarkozy
and Cameron of France and the UK
respectively, announced the entirely new objective:
NATO airstrikes, in concert with ongoing CIA support
of rebels, to overthrow the Qaddafi government.
After this was quickly achieved, the pundit classes
rallied to congratulate a job well done. As Glenn
Greenwald at The Intercept noted
Wednesday:
War
advocates such as Anne-Marie
Slaughter and Nicholas
Kristof were writing columns celebrating
their prescience and mocking war opponents as
discredited, and the New York Times published a
front-page article declaring: “U.S. Tactics
in Libya May be a Model for Other Efforts.”
It was
widely expected that Hillary Clinton, one of the
leading advocates for and architects of the
bombing campaign, would be regarded as a Foreign
Policy Visionary for the grand Libya success:
“We came, we saw, he died,” Clinton sociopathically
boasted about the mob
rape and murder of Qaddafi while guffawing
on 60 Minutes.
Despite the fanfare at the “overthrow” of Qaddafi
(who suffered a brutal
death at the hands of a mob), not much has been
made of the U.S. military’s slow escalation of its
involvement in Libya over the past year. This time
the objective, much like in Iraq after the U.S.
deposed its leader, is destroying the presence of
ISIS, a process that could take, in
the words of former Defense Secretary Panetta,
“thirty years.” And it's an escalation that has
largely gone under the public's radar.
Slowly trickling wars are a common feature in U.S.
policy. The latest war in Iraq against ISIS was
originally sold as
“limited,” “humanitarian” airstrikes to save the
Yezidi trapped on a mountain from ISIS, and it has
now gone on for over a year and a half, spans two
countries, and soon will include “boots on the
ground.” All this with neither the corporate media
nor Congress, which hasn’t yet brought military
authorization to a vote, paying much attention.
This new level of indifference on the part of the
public about what is an ISIS war spiraling into a
massive global effort has even bothered the normally
hawkish Times. In the context of Libya, it
wrote:
This
significant escalation is being planned without
a meaningful debate in Congress about the merits
and risks of a military campaign that is
expected to include airstrikes and raids by
elite American troops.
That is
deeply troubling. A new military intervention in
Libya would represent a significant progression
of a war that could easily spread to other
countries on the continent. It is being planned
as the American military burrows more deeply
into battlegrounds in Syria and Iraq, where
American ground troops are being asked to play
an increasingly hands-on role in the fight.
It’s always difficult to tell if public indifference
is what leads to a media blackout or the other way
around, but the Times is correct that a
broad public discussion about the wisdom of
committing to potentially decades-long military
efforts is disturbingly absent.
When the U.S. began its anti-ISIL efforts in August
2014, ISIL was in two countries. Now, after tens of
thousands of aerial ordinances have been dropped on
two continents, ISIS now has a presence in over
20 countries. The U.S. has even expanded
its war in Afghanistan to include ISIS, the
White House announced last Thursday. None of the
major presidential candidates, including the most
progressive member of the U.S. Congress, Bernie
Sanders, outwardly opposes the U.S.' current anti-ISIL
efforts, including the once-unpopular drone
program.
Over the past two weeks, the Defense Department and
the Obama administration have been peppering the
media with their plans to massively increase the war
effort in Libya as well as Iraq, Afghanistan and
potentially elsewhere. All the evidence points to
the fact that war-makers in Washington and Brussels
are gearing up for a major effort that could very
well last a long time. The question is, will we ever
have a public debate about it?
Adam
Johnson is an associate
editor at AlterNet.
Follow him on Twitter at
@adamjohnsonnyc.
See also -
Pentagon to hike spending
request to fund fight versus Islamic State:
The fiscal year 2017 Pentagon budget will call for
more than $7 billion for the fight against Islamic
State, a roughly 35 percent increase compared with
the previous year's request to Congress
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