Ian wrote:Coito, first of all, FBM is right. Qaddafi wasn't just fighting against armed rebels. His forces were also attacking and driving out civilians who might've been disloyal to the regime, and most importantly his troops were no more than days away from reaching Benghazi when NATO intervened.
So? We can intervene in any civil war then? Got it.
And, "attacking and driving out civilians?" A few hundred? That's a series of pileups on the freeway, not a "humanitarian crisis."
Look - we were specifically told, over and over again, that Saddam's murders - by the HUNDREDS OF THOUSANDS- were not sufficient. There had to be an imminent threat to the US, or intervention was not proper.
Ian wrote:
Your earlier post asked him to prove that Qaddafi was slaughtering civilians and threatening to do more. FBM obliged. Now, you switch to "So what? Isn't that the same thing as the unjustified (or at least now unpopular) invasion of Iraq?"?
Your right - there weren't "0" civilian deaths in the internecine Libyan conflict. I should have been more careful, and to that extent, FBM did oblige. But, to call a couple of hundred deaths a "humanitarian crisis" of such proportions that we couldn't possibly delay action and we just HAVE to intervene is to ignore the reality that a couple hundred civilian deaths is nothing compared about a dozen other places around the world where we don't intervene at all. While any death is serious - you can't possibly suggest that the test for military action against a country is now whether the government kills a couple of hundred civilians (allegedly)? Is that it, really?
And, we went for 7 years in Iraq with calls that the humanitarian reasons didn't matter? For 7 years we've been hearing how we absolutely need an "imminent threat" and that domestic problems with dictators are not sufficient, and now the rule is that couple hundred deaths not only justifies intervention but also makes intervention a moral imperative?
Ian wrote:
I'm not really picking sides here - if you recall, I wasn't terribly enthusiastic about the idea of intervention in Libya - but foreign involvement wasn't simply a case of NATO backing one armed side over another. A humanitarian disaster was already underway,
No - 200 people is not a humanitarian disaster. The incursion was to prevent the disaster. It wasn't underway. Darfur - now, that was underway. Somalia? Nigeria? Zimbabwe? Sierra Leone? Syria? Saudi Arabia? Now far more civilians have been killed in each of those countries by the governments there, putting down uprisings, etc. No intervention. No moral imperative to intervene.
Libya has oil. Saudi Arabian government is on our side.
Where is the smug, "oh, I don't know....maybe it's because they have ......OIL????" and the implication that the "real" motivation is the Libyan oil....?
Ian wrote:
and from all the information I've seen I have zero doubt that it was about to become far worse.
...from all the assertions of the powers that wanted to intervene....
Ian wrote:
And the Iraq War should not even qualify for comparisons; they're far too different. Iraq had its dissidents and they were brutally suppressed under Saddam, but Iraq wasn't in the midst of a full-scale civil war with the Republican Guard about to charge into Karbala. Libya's situation three months ago was vastly different to that of Iraq in 2003.
Yes, more civilians were dying in Iraq every week....the brutal oppression of the regime prevented a civil war BY KILLING ALL OPPOSITION. The situation in Iraq was far worse than Libya.
Ian wrote:
So I don't see the hypocrisy. I think you're just defensive that Bush was derided so much for invading Iraq and Obama has gotten something of a pass from the public over assisting NATO with Libya. But no matter how much you try to dress them up as "six of one, half dozen of the other" they're vastly different situations.
Yes, and the difference on a humanitarian level point to a far worse situation in Iraq.
And, in Iraq, the hue and cry from the Left opposing intervention was that there had to be an "imminent threat."
Now, there doesn't have to be an imminent threat. The whole year long argument over is there or is there not an imminent threat in 2002-03 was just a complete irrelevancy. All they ought to have done was point to a few hundred civilian deaths and say "humanitarian crisis," and the Left would have jumped on the band wagon. LOL