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Gaddafi’s End

Tripoli has fallen to the rebellion. Muammar Gaddafi’s whereabouts are unknown, but in any case he is no longer ruling Libya. A few thoughts:

1. Good riddance to bad rubbish.

2. This may well have happened months ago if President Obama had not spent several weeks in February and March dithering. (I was quite critical of this at the time; after calling for a no-fly zone on February 21st, I was much more ambivalent about the idea by the time it was authorized by the UN Security Council on March 17.)

3. Gaddafi didn’t hang on as long as I’d feared he might, but dragging out the conflict had real costs. Besides the human cost in Libya, I strongly suspect (though of course I cannot prove a counterfactual) that it had an effect on Syria, which is strategically more important. About 2000 civilian protestors have been killed in Syria while the fighting dragged on in Libya. Had Gaddafi been quickly dispatched soon after turning the guns on his own people, it may have made Bashar Assad think twice about following the same course. And if dispatching Gaddafi quickly did not change Assad’s behavior, it likely would have changed the international response to his behavior. The situation in Libya bred reluctance to deal with Assad, both in the Obama administration and abroad. I don’t think it’s a coincidence that calls for Assad to step down, and movement in Europe toward an oil embargo, came only last week, just as it began to look like the rebels were close to victory.

4. The delay was in part a function of a fixation on international approval for US military action. It is unlikely that the UN Security Council would have authorized intervention in Libya any earlier than it did — at the last possible moment before Gaddafi’s forces overran Benghazi, which would have turned into a slaughterhouse. (I am aware that some commentators, including on this website, have asserted that Gaddafi did not in fact intend to order war crimes against the civilian population of Benghazi. Suffice it to say that I don’t buy it.) Undo deference to the UN and other international institutions is a serious flaw in this administration’s worldview.

5. Indeed, Obama was more interested in making a case for intervention in Libya to the UN than he was in making a case to the American people or to Congress. There’s a case to be made that it was legal and constitutional for the executive to intervene in Libya, but it certainly wasn’t the nonsensical case that the administration made, which held that the War Powers Resolution is constitutional but somehow didn’t count in this case because the word “hostilities” does not mean what it plainly does mean. Anyway, whether or not this was a legitimate exercise of executive power, the hubristic refusal to even try to get a retroactive stamp of approval from Congress (which surely would have been forthcoming in March or April) was rather unseemly.

6. This is not necessarily the end of civil war in Libya. The rebels had a common foe in Gaddafi, but they are ideologically quite divided, and there are militias (including Islamist militias) that are not fully under the control of the National Transitional Council. We hope, of course, that everyone agrees to settle their differences through a democratic process, but the factions may well turn their guns on each other. And that’s not even getting to the question of what happens to those who fought on Gaddafi’s side.

7. If the fighting isn’t over, that’s a problem for Europe, which would bear the brunt of a refugee crisis. It is not a problem for the United States — at least, not a big enough problem to justify a further commitment. President Sarkozy should consider sending in groud troops for peacekeeping and stabilization. President Obama absolutely should not.

View all comments (12) |

Alan Brooks| 8.21.11 @ 7:31PM

This is a great day because the transvestite sadist in Tripoli is overthrown, and because such might help Obama get re-elcted so one of YOUR ditherers is not elected next year.

Arizona Bob| 8.21.11 @ 8:13PM

Now, now, be polite, sir. The president may well be seen, with the advantages of hindsight, to have acted prudently in this affair, letting the Anglo-French take the lead while accepting that we, again, should foot the bill and provide much -- does anyone know exactly how much -- of the weaponry, including munitions and aircraft. Then again, arguably he could have had American forces move in more forcibly right away, as some of your conservative friends wished. But to what end? What do we get out of the overthrow of this tyrant? And why are we not sending someone the bill for what the costs incurred by us in overthrowing him? But to whom can we send it? I suppose the world is always better off with one less tyrant, but it might be prudent to know what the neighborhood is going to look like without this family in charge. And what will happen to all those martial arts women in his employ? Or are they preparing to go down defending him; whoops, bad taste, but I meant go down fighting. One thing's for sure, if the rebels kill those bodyguards, we'll now they are not gentlemen.

Alan Brooks| 8.21.11 @ 9:59PM

"The media was very much against it"

Who care what dem Lib'ral Medeuh pepul thinks, they am jus' dere to sell th' Medeuh's producks, dats all.

Th' Medeuh onli care 'bout de botom-lyne.

hook| 8.21.11 @ 8:16PM

Mr. Brooks, I do not believe that this will help Obama much. The media was very much against it and they would really have to be ultra ultra hypocritical. I also think that the economy will be what sinks Obama. Where I live among mostly Obama voters there is little of the enthusiasm as before.

Also, as Mr. Tabin says, Obama is "bad rubbish," but personally I wonder if what replaces him will be better. Obama engineered Lockerbie but he did give up his weapons program.

I do not think Muslim states are compatable with democracy---at least not yet, and remember there will be an anarchy unless boots are on the ground--western boots.

Alan Brooks| 8.21.11 @ 9:54PM

"Also, as Mr. Tabin says, Obama is "bad rubbish," but personally I wonder if what replaces him will be better. Obama engineered Lockerbie but he did give up his weapons program."

Obama? you dislike him so much you would subconsciously confuse him with Khaddafi!

Alan Brooks| 8.21.11 @ 10:55PM

Admit it, you detest Obama- he is a voodoo doll to you.

Clint| 8.22.11 @ 2:43AM

ObamaBoy Israel Firster Brooks is upset because he sees the handwriting on the wall.

The Failed Presidency of Obama means His Mancrush Obama will be deposed.

Hook| 8.22.11 @ 1:42PM

I did NOT confuse him. That was an unfortunate typo. I do think Obama's way will ultimately compromise our freedoms though.

A Balrog of Morgoth| 8.22.11 @ 1:00AM

Oddly enough, apparently overthrowing dictators is an election ploy for Presidents when they are Republicans.

Even more odd is the startling dearth on anti-war marches these last few years.

Why, if I didn't know better, I'd think Mr. Alan Brooks and his ilk were stone cold hypocrites.

moncler cheap | 8.22.11 @ 11:44AM

nice post, please visit my web: www.monclercheap.cc

More Blog Posts by John Tabin

http://spectator.org/blog/2011/08/21/gaddafis-end

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