The result is a game of whack-a-mole
spanning multiple unstable foreign
countries. The game is potentially
endless, given that there is no shortage
of such countries. The game is even
worse than classic versions of
whack-a-mole in that the perceived
trouble spots seem to be additive rather
than a matter of one substituting for
another.
Our concern with Syria and Iraq has not
eliminated our concern about
Afghanistan. Jumping into Libya would
not eliminate our concern about Syria
and Iraq. This pattern is partly
testimony to the counterproductive side
of militarized counterterrorism, in
which antagonism against foreign forces
and the collateral damage they cause
tend to breed more extremists and add
credibility to the messaging of the
group being targeted.
The underlying problem in a place such
as post-Gaddafi Libya is a lack of good
governance or of any governance.
Inadequate governance has multiple bad
effects, including the sort of chaos
that violent extremists exploit. Libya
does not have a governance problem
because ISIS is there; ISIS is there
because Libya has a severe governance
problem.
Yet another fallacy in common thinking
about counterterrorism is that whacking
the offending group is progress. It is
not, if what is left after the whacking
is just more of the inadequate
governance that led to the group
establishing its presence there in the
first place.
The prospects for creating a sound,
strong and credible authority in Libya
any time soon remain very weak. The
spectacle of competing coalitions in the
western and eastern portions of the
country persists — and that does not
even count some of the other smaller
power centers.
The progress of the UN-sponsored
reconciliation process has been so slow
and meager that the slightest advance
gets cheered — most recently, agreement
by some but not all members of an
interim collective presidency on the
membership of a proposed unity
government.
An
anti-ISIS armed intervention in this
situation would be without effective
local coordination and probably would
introduce the moral hazard of the
competing Libyan factions feeling that
much freer to continue the quarrels
among themselves rather than doing more
against ISIS.
The whole sequence of successive armed
interventions is all the more depressing
when one thinks about how the process
not only has failed to kill the
terrorist mole but has given it life.
This was especially true, of course, of
the war of choice in Iraq, which gave
rise to the group that we now know as
ISIS.
Libya was different in that an uprising
was already taking place and the
intervention was more a
European-promoted project than an
American one. But otherwise the result
is parallel. In knocking off another
dictator whom everyone loved to loathe,
the intervention killed off a ruler who
had, through a negotiated agreement, not
only gotten out of his previous
involvement in international terrorism
but had begun to cooperate effectively
against radical Islamist terrorists.
Now look at what we have in his place.
Paul R. Pillar, in his 28 years at the
Central Intelligence Agency, rose to be
one of the agency’s top analysts. He is
now a visiting professor at Georgetown
University for security studies. (This
article first appeared as a
blog post at The National
Interest’s Web site. Reprinted with
author’s permission.)
© 2015 Consortium News
See also -
U.S. kills 40
people in Libya:
The mayor of the Libyan city of
Sabratha, Hussein al-Thwadi, told
Reuters the planes struck at 3:30
a.m. (0130 GMT), hitting a building
in the city's Qasr Talil district,
home to many foreigners. He said 41
people had been killed and six
wounded.