Archive for March 29th, 2011

March 29, 2011

Why Libya 2011 is not Iraq 2003

Cached:  http://www.cnn.com/2011/OPINION/03/20/bergen.libya.us/index.html

By Peter Bergen, CNN National Security Analyst
March, 2011
Part of complete coverage from

Editor’s note: Peter Bergen is the director of the national security studies program at the New America Foundation in Washington; a fellow at New York University’s Center on Law and Security; and CNN’s national security analyst. He is the author of the new book, “The Longest War: The Enduring Conflict between America and Al-Qaeda.”

(CNN) — A critique of the U.S. involvement in the military intervention in Libya that will no doubt be common in coming days is that the Obama administration is making a large error by embarking on a war with a third Muslim country, as if reversing Moammar Gadhafi’s momentum against the rebels will be a rerun of the debacle of the war against Saddam Hussein.

A further element of this view is that — whatever the outcome of the Libyan intervention — the United States’ standing in the Islamic world will once again be severely damaged by an attack on a Muslim nation.

There are, of course, some real similarities between Hussein and Gadhafi — both ruthless and erratic dictators of oil-rich regimes who fought bloody wars with their neighbors, brutalized their own populations, sought weapons of mass destruction, and sired some equally unattractive sons and heirs.

The déjà vu quality of the Libyan situation may help account for recent polls taken before the intervention which found that while Americans were either split or slightly in favor of imposing a no-fly zone over Libya, most were opposed to stronger U.S. military action.

The military intervention that President Obama authorized against Libya on Saturday…is a quite different operation than the 2003 invasion of Iraq.

–Peter Bergen

But the military intervention that President Obama authorized against Libya on Saturday — eight years to the day after President George W. Bush announced the commencement of “Operation Iraqi Freedom” — is a quite different operation than the 2003 invasion of Iraq.

Beyond the obvious difference that Obama has not authorized the use of U.S. ground forces in Libya, there are several other differences to consider:

First, the Obama administration was handed a gift by the Arab League, which in its more than six-decade history has garnered a well-earned reputation as a feckless talking shop, but unusually took a stand one week ago by endorsing a no-fly zone over Libya.

That endorsement put the Arab League way out in front of the Obama administration, which was then dithering about whether to do anything of substance to help the rebels fighting Gadhafi.

The unexpected action by the Arab League gave the administration the impetus and diplomatic cover to then go to the United Nations Security Council to secure a broad resolution endorsing not only a no-fly zone, but also allowing member states to “take all necessary measures” to protect civilians in Libya.

This U.N. resolution is reminiscent of the one that President George H.W. Bush secured in November 1990, which gave Iraq six weeks to withdraw from Kuwait following Hussein’s invasion of that country. The U.N. resolution in 1990 similarly empowered states to use “all necessary means” to force Iraq out of Kuwait if Hussein ignored the deadline.

The similarities do not end there. The coalition that massed to drive Hussein out of Kuwait involved significant forces from major Muslim countries such as Saudi Arabia and Pakistan. So too the Libyan no-fly zone will be enforced by Qatar, along with western powers such as France and the U.K.

This is all quite in contrast to George W. Bush’s ineffectual attempts to gather international support for the invasion of Iraq in 2003. There was no U.N. resolution explicitly authorizing the use of military force against Hussein, and no Muslim countries participated in the American invasion and occupation of Iraq.

Indeed, before the March 2003 invasion of Iraq, the Turkish parliament voted against allowing American troops passage across Turkey to invade northern Iraq, which put a wrench in U.S. military planning.

Underlining the fact that the Iraq War was widely viewed as illegitimate by Muslim countries, the same year that Turkey voted against allowing American soldiers to use its soil to attack Iraq, Turkish soldiers were also leading the International Security Assistance Force helping to keep the peace in post-Taliban Afghanistan, a military operation that was also authorized by the United Nations and was not seen as illegitimate by much of the Muslim world.

The Bush administration’s largely unilateral decision to go to war in Iraq (the U.K. and a few other nations provided troops) undermined America’s standing in Islamic countries. A poll taken a few months after the 2003 invasion found that Indonesians, Jordanians, Turks, and Moroccans all expressed more “confidence” that Osama bin Laden would “do the right thing” than that Bush would.

According to a poll four years later, America’s favorability rating stood at 9% in Turkey (down from 52% before September 11, 2001) and 29% in Indonesia (down from 75% before September 11).

Finally, another key difference between the Iraq war and the Libyan operation is that the casus belli for Iraq was based on highly classified intelligence accessible to few people — later proved to be wrong — that Saddam Hussein continued to maintain a weapons of mass destruction program. By contrast, the Libyan intervention was caused by the real time evidence provided by the world’s leading media organizations — including, of course, Al Jazeera — that Gadhafi is massacring his own people.

The high level of anti-Americanism in the Muslim world that was generated by the Iraq War is unlikely to be replicated by U.S. military action against Libya, because Gadhafi is widely reviled in the Arab world. His antics on the world stage have earned him the enmity of even his fellow autocrats — who will not be welcoming him if he chooses to “retire” to Saudi Arabia as other murderous dictators of his ilk have in the past (think Idi Amin).

And the fact that both the Arab League and the United Nations have endorsed a military action against Gadhafi strongly suggests that the Libyan intervention will not generate a renewed wave of anti-Americanism in the Muslim world.

Instead, it underlines a striking feature of the protests that have roiled the Middle East in the past several weeks: Strikingly absent from those protests has been the ritualized burning of American flags, something that hitherto was largely pro forma in that part of the world. That’s because Arabs have finally been able to express publicly that their biggest enemy is not the United States, but their own rulers.

The opinions expressed in this commentary are solely those of Peter Bergen.

March 29, 2011

US looks to expand ties with Libyan opposition

 

Cached:  http://www.google.com/hostednews/ap/article/ALeqM5hwSuTi7a_JorqlFOPFVU_BLWa1jw?docId=b7fe56c7108d437990d23546acb89f8a

LONDON (AP) — Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton met Tuesday with a representative of the Libyan opposition fighting Moammar Gadhafi’s regime as the Obama administration looked to expand ties with rebel leaders seeking an end to four decades of dictatorship.

Clinton’s meeting in London with Mahmoud Jibril came ahead of a conference on Libya’s future that will be attended by dozens of countries supplying air power or making other contributions to the international military action against Gadhafi’s forces.

A senior administration official said the conference will cement the transition in military leadership from the United States to NATO and create a steering group of nations to spearhead the political effort. Meanwhile, the U.S. will soon send an envoy to Libya to deepen relations with leaders of the rebels seeking to overthrow Gadhafi, the official said.

Chris Stevens, who was until recently the deputy chief of mission at the now-shuttered U.S. Embassy in Tripoli, will make the trip in the coming days. The move doesn’t constitute formal recognition of the opposition, stressed the official, who spoke on condition of anonymity to discuss internal planning.

The London gathering comes a day after President Barack Obama vigorously defended the U.S.-led campaign against Gadhafi’s troops in Libya, declaring that action was necessary to prevent a slaughter of civilians. A massacre would have stained the world’s conscience and “been a betrayal of who we are” as Americans, Obama said.

Yet the president ruled out targeting Gadhafi, warning that trying to oust him militarily would be a mistake as costly as the war in Iraq, and said he would keep his pledge to get the U.S. out of the military lead fast.

In the British capital, world powers will address some of the questions that have been raised since the international strikes against Gadhafi began, from possible endgame scenarios for the regime to plans for the country’s post-dictatorship future.

The senior administration official said three practical outcomes were expected: recognition beyond NATO of the alliance’s new leadership in protecting Libyan civilians; the creation of a “contact group” to lead enforcement of U.N. sanctions and other political efforts against the Gadhafi regime; and a second trip to the country by U.N. special envoy Abdelilah al-Khatib, a former Jordanian foreign minister.

The official suggested that al-Khatib’s mission would be to negotiate the international community’s terms for a graceful exit for Gadhafi to spare further bloodshed in Libya. But the official rejected the idea that the Libyan leader of 42 years could escape accountability and a possible war crimes trial as part of an agreement for him to go into exile — an idea floated by some in the coalition.

 

Related articles

March 29, 2011

Lone, brave woman exposes truth of Libya: Mother of Libyan woman who alleged rape says daughter still in custody

Cached:  http://www.cnn.com/2011/WORLD/africa/03/28/libya.beaten.woman/?hpt=T1

By the CNN Wire Staff

March 28, 2011 7:03 p.m. EDT

Eman al-Obeidy burst into a hotel Saturday, saying she had been raped for two days by Moammar Gadhafi's brigades.

(CNN) — The mother of a woman who burst into a Tripoli hotel to tell journalists that she had been beaten and raped by troops loyal to Libyan leader Moammar Gadhafi said Monday that her daughter is still being held.

Her claim contradicts an earlier statement from the government, which has said that Eman al-Obeidy was released and is at home with her family.

“Yesterday, late at night at 3 a.m., they called me from Bab al Aziziya,” Gadhafi’s compound in Tripoli, al-Obeidy’s mother told Al-Jazeera television Monday. “And they told me: Make your daughter Eman change her statement … and we will release her immediately and whatever you ask for you will get, whether money, or a new apartment, or guaranteeing financial security for you and your children. But just tell Eman to change her statement.”

A government spokesman said Sunday that al-Obeidy had been released and was with her family.

Spokesman Moussa Ibrahim said then that al-Obeidy and her family were asked if they wanted to be interviewed by “one or two, preferably female, reporters to verify that she’s fine, she’s healthy, she’s free with her family.” He refused to take further questions on the issue, repeatedly stating that Libyan society is “very conservative.”

A group of lawyers and human rights activists tried to approach Al-Obeidy’s sister’s house Monday, but were blocked by security forces. The sister’s mobile phone has apparently been turned off, a source with the opposition in Tripoli told CNN, and no one has seen her since the incident at the hotel.

The family of al-Obeidy said she is a lawyer — and not a prostitute or mentally ill as Libyan government officials initially said after the incident. The government has since changed its story, saying she is sane and pursuing a criminal case.

Al-Obeidy’s father told Al-Jazeera that his daughter “has her full mental capabilities and she is a graduate of law school and a lawyer and she is pursuing higher education in Tripoli. And she was kidnapped by Gadhafi’s tyrannical forces.”

“I am not ashamed of my daughter,” al-Obeidy’s mother, who spoke from an undisclosed location in Libya, told the network. “I am proud of her because she has broken the barrier. She broke the barrier that no man can break. And those dogs there with him, Moammar, (are) the criminals!”

She urged the youth of Libya to take action.

Al-Obeidy burst into a Tripoli hotel as international journalists were having breakfast Saturday morning. Her face was bruised, as were her legs. She showed reporters blood on her right inner thigh.

Speaking in English, she said she was from the rebel stronghold of Benghazi and had been held against her will for two days and raped by 15 men.

Though her injuries appeared consistent with what she said, CNN could not independently verify al-Obeidy’s story.

“Look at what Gadhafi’s brigades did to me,” she said. “My honor was violated by them.” Al-Obeidy displayed what appeared to be visible rope burns on her wrists and ankles.

Government officials tried to stifle her, but she persisted. Security forces moved to subdue her, and even a member of the hotel’s kitchen staff drew a knife. “Traitor!” he shouted. Another staffer tried to throw a dark tablecloth over her head.

One government official, who was there to facilitate access for journalists, pulled a pistol from his belt. Others scuffled with reporters and wrestled them to the ground in an attempt to take away their equipment. Some journalists were beaten and kicked. CNN’s camera was confiscated and deliberately smashed beyond repair.

As security forces subdued the screaming woman and dragged her away, al-Obeidy warned, “If you don’t see me tomorrow, then that’s it.”

CNN’s Nic Robertson and Salma Abdelaziz contributed to this report.

Uploaded by on Mar 28, 2011

(Mosaic Video Alert: March 28, 2011) NBN reports on a new crime committed by Muammar Gaddafi and his regime: the rape of Iman al-Obeidi. The victim is a “lawyer who embodies the model Libyan woman, but bothered the regime for being a free woman.” Iman was detained and raped by 15 of Gaddafi’s mercenaries. The regime first accused al-Obeidi of being drunk and mentally ill, then offered to bribe the rape victim in exchange for her silence, a request that was rejected. Benghazi residents held a solidarity rally with Iman and online activists rallied behind her with a Facebook page entitled “We are all Iman al-Obeidi.”

Eman al-Obeidi approaches Press Corps at Rexos Hotel Tripoli 26 March 2011 (English Subtitles)


Related: