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Anti-Iraq War Bush-Haters Squirm to Justify Libya (Larry Elder)

Posted by admin | Posted in Finance | Posted on 24-03-2011

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Creators Syndicate – “The President does not have power under the Constitution to unilaterally authorize a military attack in a situation that does not involve stopping an actual or imminent threat to the nation,” then-presidential candidate Barack Obama said in December 2007.

What a difference a change of job title makes.

“Let’s just call a spade a spade. A no-fly zone begins with an attack on Libya,” said Defense Secretary Robert Gates three weeks before President Obama ordered a no-fly zone over — and other military action against — Libya.

Like many anti-Iraq War/Bush-is-a-warmonger critics, former House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., supports the Libyan action. Bush-hater Rachel Maddow of MSNBC rationalized that unlike the bloodthirsty President George W. Bush, you see, Obama ordered the military into action under a different “narrative” — that is, reluctantly and without zeal. Understand?

The non-unilateralist Nobel Peace Prize laureate Obama, unlike Bush, sought no congressional war resolution. Obama, therefore, ordered military action against Libya “unilaterally” — without the congressional approval that he once argued the Constitution demanded.

As Obama further explained in his December 2007 statement, “In instances of self-defense, the President would be within his constitutional authority to act before advising Congress or seeking its consent.” So a president, according to Obama, does not need congressional authority — provided the action involves “self-defense” or “stopping an actual or imminent threat to the nation.”

What is the “actual or imminent threat” to America posed by Libya?

Libya’s Moammar Gadhafi, spooked bleep-less after our invasion of Iraq, surrendered his WMD. The dictator admitted Libya’s complicity in the bombing of the Pan Am plane over Lockerbie and paid financial settlements — after which the U.S. removed Libya from the list of terror-sponsoring states. The U.S. imports less than 1 percent of its oil from that country. What threat to national security?

Fast-forward to March 2011. Rebels threaten to topple Gadhafi’s brutal regime. But the dictator fights back, and unless stopped by outsiders, his military appears poised to put down and slaughter the rebels. Enter Obama. “We cannot stand idly by,” he said, “when a tyrant tells his people there will be no mercy.”

Obama thus approves this act of war — for humanitarian purposes.

But Iraq’s Saddam Hussein created a far greater humanitarian nightmare. “The Butcher of Baghdad” slaughtered, at minimum, hundreds of thousands of Iraqis — far more people than were killed in Bosnia and Kosovo, where President Clinton ordered military force for humanitarian reasons. Yet, when weapons hunters found no stockpiles of WMD in Iraq, the dwindling number of pro-war Democrats turned against the war — never mind the sickening sight of thousands of Iraqis found in shallow graves.

If U.S. foreign policy dictates intervention during humanitarian crises, why stop with Libya? Why start with Libya?

The list of brutal thug leaders is long. Nearly 40 percent of the world’s population lives under un-free, often brutally repressive, governments, and another billion or so people have only partial freedom.

Humanitarian in-harm’s-way deployment of the military is treacherous and unpredictable. Consider Somalia (”Black Hawk Down” Battle of Mogadishu in 1993); Lebanon (241 servicemen, mostly Marines, killed when terrorists blew up their barracks in 1983); and Bosnia/Kosovo (President Clinton promised troops out by Christmas 1995).

The purpose of the military is to act on behalf of our national security. We are not the world’s hall monitor. Bush-hating Iraq War critics used to say stuff like that — along with “war is not the answer.”

Now, let’s revisit the reasons for the — as pre-President Obama called it — “stupid” war.

Obama, like virtually everyone else, assumed Saddam possessed stockpiles of WMD while actively pursing a nuclear capability. President Bush sought and obtained congressional authorization. He called Saddam’s Iraq a “grave and gathering threat” to our national security.

Ninety percent of Americans, in the dark days following Sept. 11, 2001, expected another attack within a year — except perhaps this time with chemical or biological weapons. From the “oil-for-food” program, Saddam stole money, possibly re-routing it to terrorists. He financially rewarded families of homicide bombers. We learned, following the Persian Gulf War, that he was much closer to achieving nuclear capability than previously thought. Saddam kicked out the U.N. inspectors sent in to verify the promised dismantling and destruction of the weapons.

That Saddam possessed stockpiles of WMD, having used chemical weapons on the Iranians and his own people, was not in dispute. All 16 U.S. intelligences agencies thought so “with the highest probability.” France, the United Kingdom, Russia, Egypt, Jordan, China, Israel — and even Saddam’s own generals — assumed Iraq possessed WMD. Even U.N. weapons inspector and Iraq War critic Hans Blix thought Saddam likely possessed these weapons. As Blix admitted at a 2004 University of Berkeley forum: ‘I’m not here to have gut feelings. But yes, in December 2002 (three months before the invasion) I thought Saddam had weapons of mass destruction.’”

Call Libya the Obama doctrine: non-national security, non-congressionally approved military attacks are perfectly legitimate for humanitarian reasons. Except not for Iraq under President George W. Bush — who awaits his apology.

Larry Elder is a radio talk show host and best-selling author. His latest book, “What’s Race Got to Do with It?”, is available now. To find out more about Larry Elder, visit his Web page at www.LarryElder.com. To read features by other Creators Syndicate writers and cartoonists, visit the Creators Syndicate Web page at www.creators.com.

COPYRIGHT 2011 LAURENCE A. ELDER

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Could the West’s anti-Gadhafi coalition fall apart? (The Week)

Posted by admin | Posted in Finance | Posted on 24-03-2011

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New York – Tensions are flaring as the U.S. and its allies debate who should take charge of the military mission in Libya

Allied planes and warships continued to pummel Moammar Gadhafi’s forces with bombs and missiles on Thursday, but the coalition is showing signs of splintering. With President Obama under mounting pressure at home to hand off control of the military campaign, the U.S. and its European partners have stumbled over the question of who will take command. Germany withdrew its contribution, two frigates, out of fear that they could be dragged into a long conflict if NATO takes over. Arab support is faltering. Is the coalition unraveling?

Yes, the bickering could sink the coalition: “The unity of the first hours of the operation seems to have vanished,” says Financial Times Deutschland, as quoted in Der Spiegel. The cruise missiles continue to rain down on Gadhafi’s army, but allied leaders seem to have “nothing better to do than to argue publicly” about the ultimate goal and who should be in charge. “The political squabbles threaten to jeopardize the operation and undermine its legitimacy.”
“Gadhafi is facing a coalition of the unwilling”

No, NATO just needs to step up: “This is a time for the military coalition to come together, not to splinter,” says The New York Times in an editorial. It’s a shame that the command responsibilities weren’t better spelled out back when French President Nicolas Sarkozy was pushing for an intervention. But Sarkozy’s attempt to continue calling the shots after the shooting started has “needlessly strained relations with other participating countries.” It’s time for Sarkozy to devote his energies to getting NATO to “take the lead.”
“Discord among allies”

The U.S. should bail out: “Everybody’s going all wobbly over Libya,” says Thomas E. Ricks at Foreign Policy, but the U.S. should stick to its plan. “We should now say, OK, we have created the conditions, time for you all to have the courage of your convictions.” The French and Italians should “park the good ships Charles de Gaulle and Garibaldi off the Libyan coast” and enforce the no-fly zone. And maybe the Arab states could help keep peace in their own back yard. “Step right up, fellas.”
“Libya: You want clarity? Here it is”

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  • Opinion Brief: Libya: Can Gadhafi survive?
  • Opinion Brief: Is Libya on the brink of civil war?
  • Opinion Brief: Violence in Libya: Should the world intervene?

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It really is about regime change in Libya (The Week)

Posted by admin | Posted in Finance | Posted on 24-03-2011

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New York – Ignore the president’s hysterical critics. Obama’s aim is to topple Gadhafi — and he knows the stakes are high

The commentary on the president’s course in Libya has been instinctively adversarial. Much of the press may be compensating for its cheerleading or supine acquiescence in the fraud of the Iraq War. So reporters chase administration officials around briefing rooms and TV studios pressing questions that can’t be answered at all (about operational details), or can’t be answered candidly — for example, about the targeting of Moammar Gadhafi. On both sides, partisans join in — some Democrats apparently against any conflict anywhere — and Republicans who never questioned Bush, Cheney, or Rumsfeld, but somehow would scorn Obama even if he got Iran to surrender its nuclear weapons.

Having forged a genuine multilateralism on Libya and pulled off the miracle of no Chinese or Russian veto in the Security Council, the administration now has to speak diplomatically while wielding big missiles. But through the white noise of the media and political scrum, some truths ought to be clear even if Obama and company can’t clearly say them.

First, why did Obama dither?

He didn’t. He was waiting until conditions were right and perhaps hoping, at least at first, that the rebels would win on their own. The president did lean forward, announcing that Gadhafi had to go. John Kerry wrote an early op-ed advocating a no-fly zone.

Imagine if Obama had gone to Congress this time. In the Senate, Rand Paul would have filibustered while Benghazi burned.

Too much of the internal debate — and credit-claiming from insiders — ended up on the front pages. But all along Obama kept all options on the table. At about the time any prospect for unaided regime change was being rendered forlorn, the Arab League took the unprecedented step of asking for outside intervention. Now Obama could exercise the option of force without risking America’s standing — and vital interests — in the Middle East. Would that George W. Bush had dithered instead of dissembling America into a war where the first casualty was truth, and the toll is measured not only in lives and dollars, but in diminution of our moral authority and global influence.

Second, why engage in yet another conflict in a Muslim country — and can we afford it? This line of questioning is both superficial and hypocritical. Superficial because one bad war in Iraq and one badly fought war in Afghanistan don’t constitute a reason to reject action when and if it’s right in Libya. Hypocritical because complaining about the relatively modest cost of that action comes with ill grace from those in Congress who over the past decade didn’t care about spending a trillion dollars (and the total’s still climbing) on the wrong war, in the wrong place, at the wrong time.

Third, didn’t Obama violate the constitution by not going to Congress for a resolution or a declaration of war? I have three words for the critics here: Grenada, Noriega, Balkans. Ronald Reagan, the first Bush, and Bill Clinton didn’t wait on legislative approval before invading two countries and bombing Belgrade when they decided the issues were urgent and the cause was just. Indeed, the last Declarations of War came against the Axis powers. Since Korea, presidents have acted again and again without either a formal declaration and often without any form of explicit legislative approval. Imagine if Obama had gone to Congress this time. In the Senate, Rand Paul would have filibustered while Benghazi burned. And perhaps the unserious Dennis Kucinich would have insisted on establishing his Department of Peace as Gadhafi slaughtered thousands. Enough said.

Fourth, why intervene in Libya, but not Yemen or Bahrain? The question reflects a simplistic equivalence that ignores a fundamental reality: Despite the rhetoric of universalist democracy, effective foreign policy demands a balance between our interests and our ideals. In Bahrain, a longtime ally at a strategically important location on the Arabian Peninsula, the conflict is at least as sectarian as it is political. It would be a disaster to have one free election there where Shiites sympathetic to Ahmadinejad and the Ayatollahs prevail and then close the process down, allying or ultimately even merging with Iran, which covets Bahrain as just another Iranian province. This wouldn’t be democratic in any true and lasting sense. That’s something else Obama can’t say, so he urges a process of peaceful consultation while Saudi Arabia dispatches troops to restore order. Maybe, just maybe, there will be some incremental progress toward wider political participation. But Bahrain isn’t Libya — and the pursuit of American values can’t be a heedless exercise that vitiates American interests.

To accept a balance between interest and ideals isn’t comfortable, but the world is complicated. In the 1980s, William F. Buckley, Jr. once asked me why we liberals wanted to be so tough on human rights with nations like El Salvador, but not equally confrontational with the Soviet Union. I answered that on El Salvador, we should do it because we could. The small difficulty we had to take into account when dealing with the Soviets was that they had nuclear bombs — and we could only push so hard without creating an existential threat. Each situation has to be judged circumstantially; today, a 180-degree turn in Bahrain, followed by the destabilization of Saudi Arabia, would be a catastrophe on all counts — for the global economy, for US security, and even for any prospect of peace in the Middle East.

Fifth, what’s our vital interest in Libya? And why not just let Gadhafi impose his reign of terror? This is a case where morality and realpolitik coincide. The president, like France’s Nicolas Sarkozy and Britain’s David Cameron, had said it was time for Gadhafi to go. (Actually at least five American presidents have said that.) Firmly back in power — and he was on the brink of that on the eve of the West’s bombing campaign — Gadhafi would be a mortal enemy, an incubator of terrorism, an unpredictable madman who would hate the United States, the West, and his Arab neighbors — and harm them and us in any way he could.

So the intervention is not merely about saving Libyans, although that’s a worthy purpose, but about our own national security. Simultaneously, it enhances our credibility and our long since shattered popularity in the Arab world. Who ever thought we would see the day when an American pilot shot down over an Arab country would be rescued and cheered by local villagers hailing the United States not as an adversary, but as a last, best hope.

Finally, will this work, and how? Why has Obama ceded leadership to the French and British without clear lines of authority? Is the no-fly zone enough? Are we willing to let Gadhafi stay in power — or is he a target? There are plain answers to all of these questions — but they can’t come from the administration — at least not yet.

The United States is a driving force here, but it’s better for us that we not be seen as such. Multilateralism can be messy, but the details of the command structures will be resolved. By the way, ask Gadhafi’s forces if they sense no clear lines of authority as the cruise missiles rain down.

They also know all too well that this intervention involves not only a no-fly zone, but an assault on their troops and tanks on the ground. When Bill Clinton launched an air campaign in the Balkans, we were warned that air power alone wasn’t enough — that it would never dislodge the genocidal Slobodan Milosevic. It did, and he was being tried for war crimes in the Hague when he died.

As for Gadhafi, our objective — the only acceptable outcome — has to be regime change. The president can’t say that either, because the U.N. resolution doesn’t; that was the price of diplomacy. But surely this can’t constrain the final outcome. And of course, Gadhafi ought to be a target even if a U.S. general says he isn’t — and that we simply bombed his fortress to knock out military communications, not to get him. Why is the killer-in-chief off limits if a 19-year-old conscripted into his brutal army has to face the bombs and missiles of March?

Given all this white noise, it’s no surprise that a Gallup poll reported this week that Americans support the military action in Libya by a relatively narrow margin of 47 percent to 37 percent. But curiously, the interventions that have commanded that lesser level of support — in Grenada, in Haiti, in Kosovo and the Balkans — have been far more successful than Iraq and Afghanistan, which registered approval levels between 76 and 90 percent.

In the end, the nitpicking and point scoring of the moment won’t matter. The stakes are high, and Obama has to know it. America will be strengthened, and so will he, if the enterprise succeeds — and he will be blamed if the mission isn’t actually accomplished. For the president and for the country, as well as for the people of Libya, there is no substitute for regime change there. Otherwise, we will face a higher likelihood of regime change here.

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