24 June 2011

The Myth of Precision-Guided Coercion


Cross posted from Counterpunch

June 22, 2011
From Serbia to Libya
The Myth of Precision-Guided Coercion
By FRANKLIN C. SPINNEY, Counterpunch
Vieux Port, St Raphael, France
At the end of May the British press was filled with stories headlined "Gaddafi to be told to stand down or face Apache attack." As of this writing, the Apaches have attacked, but Gaddafi has not stood down.
The Apache threat is a case study in the sterile but financially lucrative marriage of coercive diplomacy to surgical strikes by precision guided weapons. What passes for a war strategy in Libya is now a comic opera starring NATO as an understrength, self-referencing techno bully, who acts as if he is now so fearsome that he does not even need a carrot to go with his stick.
In effect, the British press said NATO forces were telegraphing their punch. NATO was about to deploy eight attack helicopters, four British Apaches and four French Tigers, armed with Hellfire precision-guided missiles, like those fired from US Predator drones in Pakistan, Yemen, and Libya. The Hellfires were to be targeted against Qaddafi's forces besieging the Libyan city of Misrata in a desperate hope that that Qaddafi's forces would crumble or withdraw their support from him.
The psychology described in these reports was not an aberration; it reflects a techno-dependency that comes straight out of the US playbook. In fact, the US version of technological supremacy eliminates the need for cleverness in a military strategist. The mental labors of a Sun Tzu, Napoleon, Grant, or a Manstein are no longer needed, because they can be displaced by silver bullets spit out by machines. All that is needed in a 'strategist' is the ability to construct coarse threats, even when, as in the case of Libya, the bullies making those threats are manifestly out of altitude, airspeed, and ideas.
This kind of primitive thinking proves again the extent to which NATO has bought into the flawed US ideology that its technological advantage gives it the ability to coerce all opponents into doing their bidding, even though NATO's European forces can not afford to waste money on a scale remotely approaching that of the US. You would think a European planner would understand this economic limitation, if not the fallacy of ideology itself. After all, the European planners in NATO have seen this nonsense before -- in the Balkan Wars of the 1990s, not to mention Afghanistan and Pakistan.
The central idea in the compound theory of precision-guided coercion is a marriage of the military theory of techno-war, especially the use of high tech surveillance systems and precision-guided weapons, to the political theory of coercive diplomacy. This marriage is more a product of the Pentagon's advocates of techno-war than the go-along bureaucrats in Foggy Bottom. The Pentagonians sold the succession of Presidents after 1990 on the idea of combining the cold-war inspired theory of the Revolution in Military Affairs (RMA) with post-cold war foreign policies. The RMA (not to mention the Apache attack helicopter) was originally conceived for fighting the tank-heavy forces of the Warsaw Pact on the North German plain, although the roots of using precision guided weapons and surgical strikes can be traced back to the disgraced theory of gradual escalation in Vietnam and the theory of daylight precision bombing in WWII.
Its contemporary reincarnation was spearheaded by William Perry over a twenty year period between the mid 70s and mid 90s. Perry, a quintessential military-industrial operator, equally at home in the Pentagon, the boardroom, or in the lecture halls at Stanford University, got the ball rolling during the height of the Cold War when he was Director of Defense Research and Engineering in the late 1970s during the Carter Administration, and then he sealed it into the post-cold war mindset when he was Deputy Secretary and Secretary of Defense during the Clinton Administration in the 1990s. The Reaganauts merely followed his script during the interregnum in the 1980s by blindly pouring money into high-cost programs he worked so hard to start during the 1970s.
In the 1990s, when the Soviet Union and the Warsaw Pact evaporated, the threat of a peace dividend terrified the Pentagon, the contractors, and their wholly owned subsidiaries in Congress. Perry helped save the day by twisting old cold-war ideas into their contemporary form by combining the military theory of precision strikes to the political theory of coercive diplomacy that had become so attractive to the self-styled foreign policy elite housed in think tanks and academia, awaiting their calls to government service. Most of these 'elites' are trained in political science (itself an oxymoron), have little or no military experience, are technological illiterates, and lust after the policy jobs in the Pentagon and Foggy Bottom -- in short, they are perfect consumers of the fools gold produced by the technically savvy alchemists of the MICC, like Perry and his ilk.
Coercive diplomacy assumes that carefully calibrated doses of punishment (sticks that would sometimes be accompanied by carrots, but not necessarily) will ineluctably persuade an adversary to act in a way that we would deem acceptable. There is, for example, no carrot in the case of Qaddafi, where Nato is trying to coerce him into leaving office, so NATO can send him to the dock in the Hague to stand trial for crimes against humanity. Some choice! In theory, the precision guidance technologies give the military a capability to carefully calibrate the coercion by surgically striking selected targets with so-called precision-guided weapons, fired from a safe distance, with no friendly casualties, and little unintended damage. Hi-tech surveillance systems would enable target identification and selection and then monitor the effects of the surgical strikes -- thus reducing strategy to a cybernetic negative feedback control system, a conception not unlike
that of a common household thermostat.
This marriage of primitive pop psychology with the simplistic promises of hi-tech weapons makes war look easy, safe, and cheap -- and therefore easy to sell to Presidents with little or no military experience but who are under political pressure to do something 'decisive.' These benefits quickly became evident in the United States' increasing addiction to pointless drive-by shootings with cruise missiles and precision-guided bombs in the 1990s -- e.g., bombing a pharmaceutical plant in the Sudan, or destroying an Al Qaeda obstacle course in Afghanistan, not to mention the endless attacks on Iraq's air defense sites in the 1990s. This mode of thinking is now clearly evident in NATO's operations against Qaddafi in Libya.
The military dimension of this theory was eagerly adopted by the US foreign policy elite during the 1980s and 1990s, because it mechanized their simplistic theories of coercion by giving them a tool to play their game. Madeline Albright, in particular, as Clinton's Secretary of State, became addicted to coercive diplomacy in the Balkans, backed up by tit-for-tat surgical strikes. According to General Colin Powell's memoirs, she once almost gave him an aneurism by demanding, "What's the point of having this superb military you're always talking about, if we can't use it?" Albright and Perry got their first chance to strut their stuff in Operation Deliberate Force in Bosnia in September 1995. While they claimed it was a stunning success, and notwithstanding the uncritical acceptance of these claims by the mainstream media, the results were ambiguous, to put it charitably.
Some might argue I am being unfair. Surely, the damage done in 11 days by the 708 guided weapons striking 48 target complexes forced Slobodan Miloševic to the bargaining table at Dayton. Did that not prove, to paraphrase Richard Holbrooke's remarks to the annual convention of the Air Force Association in 1996, that more bombing leads to better diplomacy?
That argument, however, ignores the decisive effects of Operation Storm, the August 1995 Croatian ground offensive that cleansed the Krajina of more than 200,000 Serbs and changed the situation on the ground in Bosnia by cutting the Bosnian Serb supply lines. It also fails to consider that all the belligerents were exhausted and needed a rest. Nevertheless, the lesson the marriage partners wanted to learn, namely that a weak-willed Miloševic would respond predictably to precision-guided coercion, did have one effect: It set the stage for the gross miscalculation at the so-called Rambouillet peace conference.
This can be seen in an intelligence analysis of Miloševic's psychology in late 1998 and early 1999. A U.S. National Intelligence Estimate issued in November 1998 (quoted in the Washington Post of April 8,1999) said, "Miloševic is susceptible to outside pressure. He will eventually accept a number of outcomes [in Kosovo], from autonomy to provisional status with final resolution to be determined, as long as he remains the undisputed leader in Belgrade." An interagency report coordinated by the Central Intelligence Agency in January 1999 (reported in the April 18, 1999 New York Times) went even further, saying "After enough of a defense to sustain his honor and assuage his backers [Miloševic] will quickly sue for peace."
The Rambouillet "Accord" aimed to give Miloševic a chance to defend his honor. That NATO's demands were unacceptable should be no surprise. Like the infamous Austro-Hungarian diktat to Serbia in 1914, they were blatant infringements on Serbia's national sovereignty. The Accord's military implementation annex (Appendix B) proposed to give NATO forces "free and unimpeded access throughout the FRY" [Federal Republic of Yugoslavia, i.e., Serbia, Montenegro, and Kosovo], immunity from "arrest, investigation or detention," and authorized NATO to "detain" Serbian individuals and turn them over to unspecified "appropriate authorities."
The plan backfired. Miloševic did not react predictably like a mechanical thermostat, but chose instead to escalate rapidly by unleashing his forces in Kosovo -- whereupon the "carefully calibrated" limited bombing campaign aimed at changing one man's behavior exploded into a general war against the Serbian people. NATO had expanded the target list to include the Serbian power grid and civilian infrastructure, the war settled into a grinding siege of attrition, and planners worried about running out of cruise missiles. The conduct of the bombing campaign was shaped more by the speed with which targets got through the approval cycle than by any strategy linking a particular target's destruction to a desired tactical or strategic effect. As a result, NATO bombers effectively destroyed the economic infrastructure of a tiny nation with an economy smaller than that of Fairfax County, Virginia.
U.S. military planners had predicted that a "precision" bombing campaign would force the Serbs to capitulate in only two to three days, but the air campaign ground on for seventy-nine days. At war's end, U.S. forces had flown only 15 per cent as many strike sorties as in Operation Desert Storm against Iraq in 1991, but had expended 72 per cent as many precision-guided munitions and 94 per cent as many cruise missiles.
When it was over, NATO intelligence determined that only minute quantities of Serbian tanks, armored personnel carriers, self-propelled artillery, and trucks—all high-priority targets—were destroyed, in part because the Serbs fooled our complex surveillance and precision guidance technologies with simple decoys. There are even reports that they used cheap microwave ovens as decoys to attract our enormously expensive radar homing missiles. Serbian troops marched out of Kosovo in good order, their fighting spirit intact, displaying clean equipment and crisp uniforms, and in larger numbers than planners said were in Kosovo to begin with. Moreover, the terms of Serb "surrender," which the undefeated Serb military regarded as a sellout by Serbian president Miloševic, were the same as those the Serbs agreed to at the Rambouillet Conference, before U.S. negotiators led by Secretary of State Madeleine Albright inserted a poison pill (in the form of the
military annex mentioned above) to queer the deal.
Of course, the weapons makers love the marriage of high-cost precision weapons to coercive diplomacy, because it generates an astronomical need for a never ending flow of money into their financial coffers with orders for new weapons, even when the quantity of those weapons decreases. Congressmen love it because the money and patronage continues to flow to their districts. So, the economic result is what we in the Pentagon used to call a self-licking ice cream cone. And the cone has become particularly tasty in the age of perpetual small wars we have created after the Cold War ended in 1991. [Readers interested in the domestic causes of this perpetual war are referred to my essay, The Domestic Roots of Perpetual War.]
Will precision guided coercion get lucky and eventually work for NATO in its pissant operation in Libya?
Perhaps. After all, Qaddafi's forces are tiny, ill equipped and poorly trained. They can not possibly be compared in terms of effectiveness to the Serb Army in the 1990s. On the other hand, England and France cannot afford to waste money on the scale of the US. Moreover, it is by no means certain that the theory will work in Libya: it did not and has not worked in Iraq or Afghanistan, where the decapitations of Saddam and Osama were done the old fashioned way via lots of detective work coupled with by activities that looked more like those of a police SWAT team than a military combat operation. In any case, it is not at all clear that these decapitations are silver bullets that achieve anything beyond soothing our pride. The Pentagon and its wholly owned subsidiaries in Congress certainly do not want these decapitations to end the perpetual war. Indeed, Buck McKeon, Chairman of the House Armed Services Committee, is madly trying to legislate the
idea that the terrorist threat posed by Al Qaeda has mutated and the long war will continue for the foreseeable future.
If the marriage of coercive diplomacy to surgical strikes succeeds in Libya, its proponents will trumpet it as a canonical proof of their theory. If it fails again like it did in Kosovo, it won't matter. There will be no divorce in the US, and the union will live on and grow richer. The high-cost of precision guided coercion may bankrupt England and France and reduce the foreign market for US weapons, but that is a small price to pay. It will not affect the money flowing into the coffers of the US Military - Industrial - Congressional Complex. That is because new, more-expensive weapons are always on the drawing board to discount any failures in the present weapons. In this way, the promise of new technology repeatedly washes the inconvenient truth of history from what is left of the critical faculties of the mind.
No one will question what is a patently silly way of thinking, because, as the late American strategist Colonel John Boyd used to say, 'the real strategy is don't interrupt the money flow, add to it' -- and that always works like a charm in Versailles on the Potomac, if not Brussels.
Franklin "Chuck" Spinney is a former military analyst for the Pentagon. He currently lives on a sailboat in the Mediterranean and can be reached at chuck_spinney@mac.com

12 June 2011

Obama and Palestine



Attached herewith is an important essay on the long term implications of the Netanyahu - Obama spectacle of late May. The Author, William R. Polk, has kindly granted me permission to distribute it.
Polk is one of the most knowledgeable observers of the Middle East as well as the general politics of insurrection.  He was the  member of the Policy Planning Council responsible for the Middle East during the Kennedy Administration.  Upon leaving government service, he became Professor of History and Director of the Center for Middle Eastern Studies at the University of Chicago.  He was called back to the White House during the 1967 Arab-Israel war to write a peace treaty and still later, at the request of Israeli Prime Minister Golda Meyer, he negotiated the Suez Canal ceasefire with the Egyptian government. His short book, Violent Politics: A History of Insurgency, Terrorism, and Guerrilla War, from the American Revolution to Iraq is one of the very best books on the subject of guerrilla warfare and insurrection that  I have ever read.
Polk’s essay is no sound byte, and it should be studied carefully.  Essentially, he addresses the question What will it take to get Obama to move decisively on the Arab-Israeli issue? 
He takes the reader on a wide ranging, deeply informed, historical journey.  He does not end on an optimistic note, but with a suggestive comparison of imperatives implicit in the situation now facing President  Obama to those facing President Charles De Gaulle in the 1950s and early 1960s with regard to the crisis in Algeria.  To be sure there are many differences, but it is an interesting insight, if not carried too far.  Polk clearly recognizes this limitation and does not read too much into it ... his point is limited to the political imperatives on decision makers to change a policy involving occupation that is clearly not in a nation’s interest.
Whereas De Gaulle faced decisive pressure to act, Polk concludes that Obama does not yet face the pressures needed for decisive action, even though a course correction is definitely in US interests.  He ends by saying it will take some kind of catastrophic event to jar things loose.
He is probably right, but one lesson 9-11 ought to have taught us is that while catastrophic events do trigger policy changes, those changes do not always place a nation on a salutary pathway into the future.
Chuck Spinney
Bandol, France




Obama and Palestine

What will make Obama willing to move on the issue? 

William R. Polk
May 29, 2011
No international problem of modern times has been more studied, commented upon and disputed than the conflict between the Zionist movement and its Israeli successors, on the one hand, and on the other, the Palestinian Muslim and Christian people.  The conflict is embedded in deep historical memories, religious beliefs and great power struggles in Europe, Asia and the Middle East.  Hardly any contemporary issue anywhere in the world is not to some degree affected by it. 

Can there be anything new to be said or done about it?    If ever there was an issue that  has played out the sequence of events predicted from the beginning, it is this one.   The British statesman, Lord Curzon put it succinctly in Biblical terms when the creation of a Jewish Home was first discussed in the British Cabinet during the First World War.  In response to the hope of one of his colleagues that Britain’s plan would be welcomed by the inhabitants, he retorted dryly that he doubted that they  would be content to be merely “hewers of wood and drawers of water" for the incoming Jewish settlers.

Britain did not credit Curzon’s dictum. Its wartime strategic needs overcame all other concerns.  Indeed, As Lord Balfour, the author of the founding document of what became Israel, the Balfour Declaration, wrote secretly to the Cabinet, “In short, so far as Palestine is concerned, the Powers  [that is, Britain itself] have made no statement of fact which is not admittedly wrong, and no declaration of policy which, at least in letter, they have not always intended to violate."

And, in pursuit of their own objectives,  increasing numbers of the Jewish people adopted their own myth.  Driven by vicious anti-Semitism, first from Russia and then from other European countries, they saw the danger of extinction nearly realized in Nazi Germany.  They did not consider rights of the native Palestinians any more than incoming American settlers had earlier considered those of the Native Americans.  Indeed, one of the early fathers of Zionism, Israel Zangwill, coined a description of the Palestine issue that has permeated Zionism and Jewish thought ever since: Palestine was, he said, "The land without people for the people without land."   Echoing that assessment more recently, Prime Minister Golda Meir famously said  there weren’t any Palestinians except for the Jews. If they existed at all, Palestinians were regarded as simply not comparable human beings.

But the three quarters of a million natives did not, of course, accept this definition of their status.  Most were settled villagers whose lives, culture and social organization were rooted in the land.  Their identification with land was almost mystical.  The terrace walls of one’s father, grandfather and great-grandfather, the fields in which one played as a child and in which one’s ancestors were buried, the localities where saints have been venerated and besought, all these gave rise to emotions virtually impossible for Western urban (and virtually nomadic) man to fathom.  Before their diaspora, Palestinian villagers built their genealogies physically into the layout of their neighborhoods so that placement of dwellings corresponded to family trees.  Consequently, they had not only the sort of feeling most Americans have about our homes, temporary as they are to many of us, but a more intense, more permanent, more “living” sense of relationship to the earth.  Even in the cities, people recreated their villages as autonomous neighborhoods.  Over the past sixty years, I have talked with scores of individuals who have described for me rooms, houses,  gardens, orchards, streets as vividly as though they were seeing them at that moment.  And, in retrospect and in the mind's eye of the refugees, these scenes have taken on a melancholy longing that only loss can bring.  The idea that these people did not love their land or were wandering gypsies for whom any place is as good as another is not only nonsense, but is, itself, since the Palestinians are Semites,  an ugly variety of anti-Semitism.

 For the Palestinians, from the beginning and with increasing intensity, the incoming Europeans were alien colonists intent on taking their land and destroying their society.   They were right.  Already in 1937, David Ben Gurion wrote, "we must expel the Arabs and take their places.”  His voice was not alone.  Vladimir Jabotinsky, the father of “muscular Zionism” and the ideological mentor of  Israeli prime ministers  Begin, Shamir, Sharon and Netanyahu, told the 1936 British Royal Commission, which was trying to find a way to satisfy both Jews and Arabs, that the Zionists would never be satisfied with anything less than all of Palestine -- "We cannot.  We never can.  Should we swear to you we would be satisfied, it would be a lie."  

                  Thus, conflict was inevitable from the beginning.  The tragic story of a century of increasing danger, conflict and misery is well known.  There are not and probably never were any obscurities.  But what may be different now is that almost everyone agrees that the problem must somehow be solved.   Indeed, even that  sense of urgency is not new:  the British, having been instrumental in creating the conflict, staked out already in 1936 what has always seemed to outsiders to be the essential element in a solution:  dividing the land between the Jews and Palestinians.  To the British,  division seemed as sensible as the traditional saying, “half a loaf is better than no bread, ”  but to both the Arabs and the Jews, partition seemed subversion of their nationhood.  Undeterred, the British set up one commission after another to figure out how to accomplish it.

The British efforts were picked up after the Second World War by the newly established United Nations.  But nothing anyone thought up made any sense:  no matter how the little land was carved up, there were just too many Palestinian natives and too few Jewish immigrants.   The best effort proposed a Palestine with an Arab population of 725,000 and a Jewish population of 10,000 while the Jewish state would have 498,000 Jews and 407,000 Arabs.  Jerusalem was to be internationalized and would contain 100,000 Jews and 105,000 Arabs.  The Jewish state, which had all the best land, was estimated to have revenues about three times that of the Arab state, but with a higher birth rate, the Palestinian population would soon have been a majority even in the Jewish state.

That dilemma was solved by the expulsion of virtually all of the Palestinians in the 1948-1949 war. 

Expulsion made Israel possible, but it did not create peace. So, one “solution” after another has been  brought forward by American statesmen and their appointees.  Some of their plans  can be regards as only bizarre, even jejune, but they are worth remembering to show how desperate has been the search for a solution and to get a measure of what President Obama would face if  today he tried to reach a solution.  

Almost everything has been proposed – dividing the waters of the River Jordan (so the states would not clash over that vital resource, the “Johnston plan”), aid programs to create a labor shortage (so the refugees could be absorbed elsewhere, the  “Lilenthal Plan”), state-to-state negotiations (so as to by-pass the Palestinians, the Carter-Begin-Sadat “Camp David Negotiation”), honoring the right of return while making it unattractive (the “Johnson plan”).  My favorite among the fantasies was the brainchild of that dour, normally practical and certainly unemotional Secretary of State, John Foster Dulles.  He decided that since the Arabs and Israelis did not want to step on one another’s territory but needed to go from the various parts of their own, the frontiers should be redrawn in the form of intersecting triangles meeting at a point – over which, presumably,  each could jump, taking care not to bumb into one another!

Meanwhile, paying no attention to these flights of fancy, the Israelis steadily took over the land and today have incorporated about 78% of the former British mandate.  Additionally, they have effective control, with walls, fortresses, check points, garrisons and settlements over much of what the original UN decision designated as part of the Palestinian state.  While the Israeli settlement policy is a direct violation of international law and is in defiance of a number of United Nations resolutions, Israel has created not only a physical presence – with about 650,000 settlers living on the West Bank -- but also a political position  that would take great courage to dismantle. 

 Now, President Barack Obama has waded into the fray.  So what is he trying to do and how serious is his effort?

We cannot read his mind, but what we know is that he has made a series of statements.  As some of his critics have said, Obama will talk, even talk bravely as well as eloquently,  but he will not act.   Writing in The New York Review of Books this month, David Bromwich observed that throughout his public career, Obama “has a way of retreating into vagueness at just the point where clarity matters most…and has always preferred the symbolic authority of the grand utterance to the actual authority of a directed policy.”  Others believe his inaction is politically shrewd:  to win the next election he needs the votes and money of American supporters of the current Israeli government and its powerful lobby, AIPAC.    And then there is the prospective charge of anti-Semitism.

American academics, journalists and politicians today fear the charge of anti-Semitism as acutely as they used to fear the charge of pro-Communism.

Not fearing that charge,  Israelis evidently are more able to discuss America’s relationship to Israel than are Americans.  Reacting to the  Congress’  fawning and uncritical response to Binjamin Netanyahu’s speech last week,   the prominent Israeli statesman, former Knesset member and peace advocate, Uri Avnery,  was revolted by the sight of  “members of the highest legislative bodies of the world’s only superpower, flying up and down like so many yo-yos, applauding wildly, every few minutes or seconds, the most outrageous lies and distortions of Binjamin Netanyahu...The most distressing part of it was that there was not a single lawmaker – Republican or Democrat – who dared to resist.”  The blogger Mitchell Plitnick, chided that Congress, thoroughly beholden to AIPAC and completely indifferent to the best interest of not only the Palestinians but also Israel and their own  country, cheered the home team as it defeated the President of the United States…The home team, in this case, was Netanyahu.”   And, on the day after the speech, Ben Caspit of the Israeli newspaper Maariv, wrote that “Those who are scared of peace yesterday got their wish.  Those who are scared of war will be a lot more scared today.’

The domestic American political reality, of which Obama is obviously aware, is that Israel is above political discussion.  So, regardless of his obvious dislike of Netanyahu and his apparent belief that Israeli policies are not only wrong but dangerous to America,  he promised that massive American economic and military aid – regardless of the state of the American economy – will not only be continued but will be increased.  So, it appears to me almost certain that Obama will not grasp the Palestine nettle. 

Obviously,  that is what Netanyahu also believes.  So the Israeli response, from an advance copy of Obama's speech, was for Israeli Minister of Defense Ehud Barak to authorize the building of still more settlement housing.  In a sense, this was a gratuitous act.  Netanyahu/Barak did not need to snub or insult Obama.  But, perhaps they felt that they needed to reaffirm the now traditional Israeli strategy -- their predecessors  first explained it  to me in the 1960s -- of building  "facts on the ground."  They have now done such a complete job of it that they want Obama to believe, and probably believe themselves, that no Israeli government can  change the geography of settlement on the West Bank because Israel's settler population won't let it.  

So, what will happen?

To move toward a prediction, I find it suggestive to compare Obama’s position on Palestine today with French President Charles De Gaulle’s position on Algeria in the 1950s and 1960s.  While there are obvious differences, there are similarities that cast light on possible policies today, and perhaps tomorrow.
                                                     
What is similar, of course, is that both men recognized that a situation had arisen that was dangerous to their countries.  Obama has been told even by such different and opposing advisers as Secretary Hillary Clinton and General David Petraeus that the Palestine problem is the major cause of the terrorist threat to America.   And therefore, that the Israeli refusal to move toward compromise peace settlement is against American national interests.  Yet, the President is unwilling to risk moving to enforce a solution.   So far, at least, he can afford inaction.

In terms of personality, Obama is no De Gaulle, but De Gaulle was not a determined leader until France came to the brink of civil war and to the edge of losing its civic culture.    He saw that his regime risked being over thrown and perhaps himself be murdered  if he did not act.    Remember that  Paris was then ringed by anti-aircraft cannon and De Gaulle feared an army putsch.  So he went secretly off to Germany to assure himself of the army and the loyalty of the Paratroop leader General Jacques Massu before he moved.  Then, once he made up his mind to get out and was sure of his military base, he sent the army --  with tanks, artillery and bombers -- into "European" Algiers to crush the opposition to his decision.

Simply put, the situation had become so grave that De Gaulle was forced to assert French national interest.  Could any aspect of  Israeli-American relations reach such a level? 

Apparently not, because it did not when in 1967 the Israeli Navy and Air Force attacked and tried to sink an American naval vessel, hitting it with some 821 cannon shells, thousand pound bombs and napalm shells and firing five torpedoes.  They killed 34 US Naval personnel and wounded 171 others.  If  President Lyndon Johnson did not then feel under severe pressure, it is understandable why President Obama does not feel under pressure from events and policies far less damaging to American security today.

However, he may feel about Netanyahu personally or the Israeli suppression of the Palestinian version of the Arab spring – which closely resembles what he so opposes in Libya and Syria, firing into the ranks of peaceful demonstrators – he reverses President Teddy Roosevelt’s dictum by talking  eloquently but carrying a small stick. 

While I presume Obama believes that America has a compelling national interest in bringing about negotiations, Israel is determined not to heed his warnings.  Indeed, Netanyahu and his Likhudniks have given the settlers -- Israel’s version of De Gaulle’s enemies, the Pieds-noirs  of Algeria – a veto on negotiations.  They have now created an iron wall of "facts on the ground" that they believe Moses himself could not have moved.  Thus, Obama on May 13 accepted the resignation of his negotiator, Senator George Mitchell and apparently does not intend to appoint a successor. 

Viewing these events, Netanyahu  felt strong enough to throw down the gauntlet to Obama, daring him to pick it up – his  timing is perfect, his  supporters are lined up, his critics in America are scattered and unable to reach a mass audience.  It will take, I believe, some really catastrophic event to change the parameters.  A speech will not do it.




08 June 2011

Afghan Sitrep: A Grunt from the Front Sounds Off



Inside Versailles on the Potomac, pressure is building on President Obama to reduce his promised withdrawal of combat troops in Afghanistan to a cosmetic level, and perhaps more to the point, to protect the defense budget from efforts to reduce the deficit. The two -- i.e., perpetual war and the defense budget -- are joined at the hip (as I explained here).  The Pentagon's mouthpieces in thinktanks are therefore dutifully filling the op-ed pages with fact-free arguments to continuing the ten year war unabated.


Attached below is a more informed, less self-interested view.  It is from an email written by an active duty colonel who travels all over Afghanistan. For obvious reasons, he must remain anonymous, but it came to me from a trusted source.  This colonel, unlike many of his peers, actually goes on foot patrols with troops to see things for himself.  His message, which is only a few days old, is bad Ju Ju, I am afraid.  


[I vetted the colonel's email thru a retired Army officer, and he responded: "I talk to Soldiers and Marines of most ranks on a weekly basis, many of whom have just returned from Afghanistan. Not one says we are winning. They think Afghanistan is a waste of our time. Why doesn't anyone listen to the guys that know? Ivory-tower intellectuals in think tanks get listened too, but they are not walking the ground as a grunt or a combat arms dude."]


I urge readers to read the op-ed links embedded in in the colonel's email and then compare their intellectual content the Patrick Seale's essay, Washington Wrestles with Afghan Options.  Ask yourself who is better plugged into reality: The colonel and Seale or O'Hanlon and the Kagans?




Chuck Spinney
La Ciotat, France

Email To Col  XXX
The mendacity is getting so egregious that I am fast losing the ability to remain quiet; these yarns of "significant progress" are being covered up by the blood and limbs of hundreds - HUNDREDS - of American uniformed service members each and every month, and you know that the rest of this summer is going to see the peak of that bloodshed.
The article by Michael O'Hanlon last week (i.e. Success worth paying for in Afghanistan) and the one in today's WSJ by Kagan and Kagan (i.e., We Have the Momentum in Afghanistan) made me sick to my stomach - especially the latter.  Have you seen it yet?  It is the most breathless piece of yellow journalism I’ve seen in the entire OIF-OEF generation.  
According to the Kagans, "If Mr. Obama announces the withdrawal of all surge forces from Afghanistan in 2012, the war will likely be lost. Al Qaeda, Lashkar-e-Taiba, and other global terrorist groups will almost certainly re-establish sanctuaries in Afghanistan. The Afghan state would likely collapse and the country would descend into ethnic civil war. The outcome of this withdrawal policy would be far worse than Nixon's decision to accept defeat in Vietnam, for it would directly increase the threat to the American homeland.  Apparently they forgot, "there's a commie behind every bush," "the Russians are coming!" and "if Vietnam falls, all of Asia falls to the Communists!"  That logic was absurd in the 1960/70s, and its even more laughable today - or it would be laughable if it didn't cost so damn many American lives to prop up the fantasy.  
These people are actually arguing for increased involvement.  In fact, they are saying that we should expect high casualties this summer (after which - without explanation - we'll have beaten the TB in the south), then we'll move the troops up to RC-East where there's still a lot of fighting - and as a result, we'll have another spike in the 'fighting season' of 2013, after which (according to the neat schedule the Kagans map out) we'll be ready to hand over control of the country to GoIRA and the ANSF on schedule in 2014.
 It’s sheer madness, and so far as I can tell, in the mainstream media and reputable publications, it is going almost entirely without challenge. 
Colonel YYY

22 April 2011

Obama Takes the Cape


Pakistanizing the Libyan War
By FRANKLIN C. SPINNEY, Counterpunch (Weekend Edition, April 22 - 24, 2011)
Barcelona.
Taking the Cape is a time-honored term of art used in the Pentagon for luring your opponent into going for your solution, especially when it is not in his or her best interest.  The analogy is to waving the red cape in front of the bull.  While the psychological game of the dazzle and the stroke has been perfected in the Pentagon as a means for winning its domestic budget wars, the American military has been far less successful in beating its adversaries in a game that goes back to at least the time of Sun Tzu.  Consider please the following
On Thursday, April 22, Defense Secretary Robert Gates announced President Obama approved the initiation of drone strikes in Libya.  The Vice Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, General James Cartwright claimed the drones were "uniquely suited" for attacks in urban areas because they can fly lower and get better visibility of targets, presumably, than pilots's eyeballs in airplanes.  Gates went on to claim drone strikes Libya would be done for "humanitarian reasons."
In other words, someone has sold Obama on Pakistaning the Libyan War, i.e., pursuing a military strategy of relying on drone attacks to a destroy an adversary hiding in the environmental background.  What is astonishing is that Obama took the cape, despite the fact that only 12 days earlier, a  report in the Los Angeles Times by David Cloud illustrated once again the absurdity of Cartwright's and Gates' claims.  
Cloud's report is worthy of very careful study, because it is loaded with all sorts of unexplored ramifications -- none of them good.  Using actual transcripts of conversations among drone operators, David Cloud revealed the sinister psychological effects that so-called precision bombing and techno war has on its American participants.  Their sterile dialogue shows vividly how the idea of precision techno warfare fought from a safe distance desensitizes our "warriors" to the bloody physical effects of their actions on the people they are maiming, and killing and the property they are destroying.  There is no bravery or soldierly honor or spirit of self sacrifice among the bravado of the drone operators safely ensconced in Creech AFB, Nevada; they are simply cogs in a dysfunctional dehumanizing machine.  That dysfunction is revealed by the complete absence in their dialogues of any psychological appreciation of their "adversary." Nor is there even hint of a desire to make such an appreciation.  Consider for example, the emptiness in the following dialogue reported by Cloud:
The Afghans unfolded what looked like blankets and kneeled. "They're praying. They are praying," said the Predator's camera operator, seated near the pilot.
By now, the Predator crew was sure that the men were Taliban. "This is definitely it, this is their force," the cameraman said. "Praying? I mean, seriously, that's what they do."
"They're gonna do something nefarious," the crew's intelligence coordinator chimed in.
The lack of inquisitiveness into the mind of the enemy stands in stark contrast to the Pentagon's subtle psychological appreciation of its domestic adversaries (in this case the hapless President Obama, but also his predecessors reaching back to President Kennedy, as well as members of Congress) that has been so successful in waging and winning its budget battles to extract money from the American people.
Extreme psychological one-sidedness on our side is nothing new in our military operations, however.  It has been a central feature of the American way of techno war for a very long time.  Indeed, the theory of the adversary being merely a physical set of targets (a dehumanized set of critical nodes devoid of any mental agility or moral strength) that can be defeated by simply by identifying and physically destroying these nodes is a doctrine that has been evolving and becoming more extreme since the development of daylight precision "strategic" bombardment doctrine by the US Army Corps in the 1930s.  In WWII one set of critical nodes was the ball bearing factories, for example; today in Pakistan the critical nodes are Taliban and al Qaeda leadership targets (of course, history has shown repeatedly that the enemy is adaptable and so-call critical nodes can be worked around or replaced again and again).  In Libya, we may have reached a new low, however.  God only knows what a critical nodes are in the oxymoronic case of humanitarian attacks, other than assassinating Qaddafi. In fact as Patrick Cockburn has shown, we don't even know who our allies among the Libyans are, and some may well be former anti-American Islamists.  Nevertheless, once again, the fallacious presumptions of techno war are coming into full flower.
At the center of the theory of techno war is the comforting idea that precision bombardment (in WWII, via the technical wizardry of the Norden bombsight and the blind bombing systems like the H2X radar) would enable us to attack precision "military targets" deep in hostile territory while avoiding  destruction of civilian lives and property.  In fact, many of its proponents claimed, absurdly as it turned out, that daylight precision bombing of Germany would save lives by obviating the need a land invasion of Europe.   The drone coupled with precision guided weapons merely evolves this original mentality to a new  level of recklessness, because its gripping effect on the our psychology further disconnects the killer, sitting in his air conditioned operations center thousands of miles away from the killed, from the consequences of the killers actions.  
This clinical detachment creates the illusion that war is cleaner and easier to fight from our perspective -- civilian deaths become morally acceptable because they are merely accidents of good intentions. The clinical term "collateral damage" says it all.  Cloud closes his report by describing the American apologies and financial payoffs to family survivors of civilians we inadvertently killed -- although given the emptiness of the dialogue revealed by Cloud, the idea of these deaths are collateral damage of a  precision killing machine approaches the bizarre, to put it charitably.
On the other hand, the idea that financial payoff of a few thousand dollars fits the dehumanizing model of techno war, because it ignores the mental and moral dimensions of war.
In this case, the psychological natures of Pashtun concepts of honor and the Pashtun warrior ethos guarantee that financial payoffs will not mitigate their thirst for revenge, which will last for generations.  But such psychological considerations have no place in the mechanistic mindset of techno war that views the adversary as a mere collection of physical targets and rationalizes civilian deaths as being unfortunate accidents of good intentions.
The illusions of techno war are very soothing to its generalissimos like Clinton, Bush, and Obama, and its accompanying video games provide a great distraction to an American public being impoverished by government policies to redistribute wealth to the super rich. Moreover, by making war at a distance easier to prosecute and less painless to us (at least in the short term), the fallacies of techno war set the stage for our current state of perpetual war.  Continuous small wars, or the threat of such wars, are necessary to prop up the sclerotic cold-war military - industrial - congressional complex, or MICC (see my essay The Domestic Roots of Perpetual War).  Perpetual small wars, or the threat thereof, create a never ending demand for the MICC's high-tech, war-losing products, which are legacies of the now defunct Cold War, but without which the MICC could not survive in the post-cold war era.  Keeping MICC budgets at cold war levels and higher also serves to reinforce the government policies to redistribute wealth to the rich and super rich.  
And that is why, every time the techno strategy fails to deliver on its promises, as it did with strategic bombing in WWII, Korea, Vietnam, the first Iraq War, Kosovo, the Second Iraq  War, Afghanistan, and now in Libya, the solution is not a serious "lessons-learned" examination of why it did not deliver its promises of a quick clean victories, but instead, the solution is always the same: to recommend spending even more money for more expensive and complex versions of the same old idea, i.e., more and better sensors, more and better guidance systems, and more and better command, control, communications, computer, and intelligence systems. 
Franklin “Chuck” Spinney is a former military analyst for the Pentagon. He currently lives on a sailboat in the Mediterranean and can be reached at chuck_spinney@mac.com

05 April 2011

Libya: Backgrounder by W.R. Polk


The war in Libya is more complex than portrayed in the mainstream media.  William R. Polk has written a very important historical essay on Libya.  Polk is author of Violent Politics: A History of Insurgency, Terrorism, and Guerrilla War, from the American Revolution to Iraq, one of the very best books I have ever read on the subject of guerrilla warfare.

Whence Libya?  Why Libya?  Whither Libya?


William R. Polk, March 31, 2011  
[reprinted with permission of author]
Since the Libyan regime was established by a coup d’état in 1969,  Americans and Europeans -- with a three-year intermission from 1986 to 1988 -- found it acceptable enough to recognize it, sell it arms and buy its petroleum.  In that one interval, on April 15, 1986, the American government under President Ronald Reagan attempted to kill Colonel Muammar Qaddafi by bombing his residence and did wound his wife and kill about 75 Libyans including his adopted daughter.  Two years later, Qaddafi retaliated by bombing an American airliner.  That attack killed 270 people including 190 Americans among whom were at least four intelligence officers.  These were just the major events; there were many others.  Of course, Americans and Libyans took very different views of them.  But both sides eventually smoothed over their angers, and relations again became profitable and “correct” on both sides, as they remained until early this year.
So, what is the basis of those attitudes and the causes of those actions?  Who are the Libyans anyway?  And what is the position of Qaddafi among them?  What motivates the Libyans?  What governs their action?  And what is likely to be the outcome of the revolt, the regime’s resistance to it and the Western intervention?   
With the prejudice of a historian, I find that seeking answers to these questions requires at least a glance at the past.  That is the aim of this essay.
* * *
Let me reveal my prejudice.  As it happened, I was in Tripoli a few years before the coup.  I had been sent by our government to figure out what we should do with the huge airbase we had rebuilt and were running to train pilots assigned to NATO.  Secretary of Defense Robert McNamara wanted to close it down.  I concluded that he was right.  One look at the base convinced me, as I reported back to the Policy Planning Council, that the base made a coup against the pro-American, decrepit and very corrupt monarchy almost inevitable:  on one side of the base were scores of the latest jet fighters and bombers (ours) while across the tarmac were half a dozen puny trainers (theirs).  Any Libyan nationalist, particularly a military officer, like then Lt. Muammar Qaddafi, was bound to want, at least,  to “level the playing/air field.” That is what he eventually did by throwing out the old king and bidding us goodbye.  
The Libyans were ecstatic.  Those then alive had grown up on tales of generations of greed, violence and humiliating foreign rule.  So what was the historical substance of those memories?
For centuries, “Libya” had been a loose collection of poor outposts of the Ottoman Empire on the Mediterranean coast. The Ottoman Turks wisely confined themselves to minimal government.  That suited the nomads in Cyrenaica and the deep interior who were opposed to the very concept of government.  In the coastal towns and villages, such resistance to Ottoman rule as existed was both feeble and sporadic.   While probably not “popular,” the Ottoman Turks were at least fellow Muslims and, over the years, the garrison in Tripoli had become fathers of many of the inhabitants. Merchants and artisans occasionally voiced resentment over the level of taxation and abuses of arbitrary administration, but the Libyans had yet to discover that exciting and lethal elixir, nationalism.
Nationalism, however, had already been discovered by other Ottoman populations.  One by one, the several Balkan ethnic groups and the Greeks had broken away from the Empire..  Everywhere in Europe nationalism was in the air.
  
Among the late comers were the Italians.  Only half a century after they had achieved a formal union, the Italians had become assertive nationalists (or, more accurately, revanchists); that is, they had begun to dream about repossessing the Roman empire.  This dream got them into a war in 1911 with the decrepit Ottoman empire which still occupied much territory that had been Roman.  
Right across the Mediterranean – which the Italians were coming to think of as our sea, mare nostra --  was the collection of Ottoman port-towns.  At that time, few outsiders knew anything about them, but Italian antiquarians thought that in Roman times, at least some of them had been agriculturally rich.  Led by this dubious view of history,  Italian politicians saw them as answers to the quest for imperial glory for themselves and agricultural land for the poverty-stricken Italian peasants.  By the early years of the 20th century, Libya had become an Italian national obsession.
  The other European states, particularly Britain and France, were slightly more realistic.   While they were trying to turn similar imperial dreams into reality elsewhere in Africa and Asia, they had no serious objections to an Italian push into a more or less empty piece of North Africa between Britain’s Egypt and the Sudan on the east and France’s Tunisia, Algeria, Morocco and central Africa (modern Niger and Chad) on the west and  south.   The reason for their indifference was their evaluation of the “the prize.”  Libya hardly seemed worth the effort to collect it.  
Italy paid no attention to their views and in 1911 belatedly  joined the race for North Africa by sending an expeditionary force of 35,000 men with whom it assumed it could overwhelm the garrison of 7,000 Ottoman Turkish soldiers.  Neither the Italians nor any of the other Europeans then thought much about the natives.  At least for the Italians, that proved to be a major mistake:  there was a remarkable invigorating movement among the Libyans, the Sanusiyah. 
The Sanusiyah or Sanusi Brotherhood was a powerful example of what is known in Islam as a Salafi movement. Salafiyah (“Salifi-ism”) is difficult concept for outsiders to comprehend.  The word itself comes from the verbal “root,” salafa, that means “to take the lead”  but also “to keep pace with” and “to return to origins.”  Westerners usually place the emphasis on “return,” that is, on backwardness.  But the sense is “return to first principles” and,  as defined by Muslim thinkers,  the implication is “in order to advance.”  If this seems awkward or unlikely,  consider the European counterpart.  Protestant reformers in 16th and 17th centuries also thought that “purifying” the present by going back to origins was necessary to be able to advance.  That concept sparked the great commercial and intellectual revolution in Holland, Belgium and North Germany. The Salifis were not so interested in commerce;  their aim was to recapture the power and dignity of the days when Islam was a world leader.  They believed that by stripping away the shroud of dark ages, they could advance toward a magnificent future.
One of several revivalist movements in 18th and 19th century Islam, the Sanusiyah was founded by the scholar, poet and mystic Sayyid Muhammad bin Ali al-Sanusi who was born in what is now Algeria in 1787.  After study in Fez,  he left in haste when the authorities became disturbed by his revolutionary pronouncements. 
On his way east toward Mecca, al-Sanusi moved from town to town along the North African coast, through Egypt and into Arabia, preaching and gathering adherents. After two long periods of study in Mecca and having worked with other Salafi groups, al-Sanusi had achieved sufficient fame by 1837 to found the order that bears his name. Leaving Arabia, he intended to return to Morocco but stopped in Tripoli when he learned of the French invasion of Algiers.  
Thus, having spent years in fear of Moroccan,  Egyptian and Arabian religious and secular authorities, and now worried about the incursions of Europeans, he found himself, one might say by historical accident, in Libya.  There, he decided to establish his new religious organization in as remote an area as he could find.  He picked the hump of Libya sticking out in the Mediterranean, Cyrenaica.  But, since the northern part of Cyrenaica is relatively well watered and relatively densely inhabited, he moved south to where the cultivated land fades into the Sahara.  In the then-uninhabited oasis of Jaghbub, he established a zawiya.  The word is usually translated as “lodge,” but more accurately it means a settlement focused on a mosque. 
To Jaghbub came devotees and students from the core of Africa and, as they graduated, they established new zawiyas.  Through  his teaching and their proselytizing, a religious society was born.  This community overlaid the Bedouin tribal divisions so that, in a way similar to what the Prophet Muhammad had done a millennium before, al-Sanusi was able to effect a supra-tribal community of “brothers,”  ikhwan.  And just as the Prophet Muhammad had found, the Bedouin who became his followers were content to leave mysticism and theology to him and his acolytes but gave him intense loyalty because his cause seemed to them to take on transcendental purpose.
By the end of al-Sanusi’s  life, about 150 zawiyas had been created in oases scattered across the landscape from Tunis in the West across what is now Libya through Egypt to Mecca in the east.   The expanse was enormous.  Measured in the means of contemporary means of travel – by camel caravan -- it was months wide.  So it could be held together only by an active religious organization and a shared faith.  To promote these, al-Sanusi created a religious university to which students flocked from all over the Islamic world.  
 For years after al-Sanusi’s death, the order prospered and, as it did,  its effects were increasingly felt by the French (who had moved into West and Central Africa), the British (who controlled Egypt) and the Italians (who after 1911 had begun colonizing the Libyan coast).  All three saw the Sanusiyah  and the tribesmen it inspired as obstacles to imperial ambition.
* * *
So what was the “Libya” in which this Sanusi-led coalition was based?   We can describe it roughly as Caesar summarized that other object of imperial Rome, Gaul.  As Caesar wrote, Gaul est omnis divisa in partes tres.  Libya similarly could be divided into three:  Cyrenaica (including Bengazi), Tripolitania (including Tripoli) and the  vast steppe and desert interior.
In the early years of the 20th century, the only real city was Tripoli which then had a population of about 40,000 while the main eastern town, Bengazi did not reach 16,500 until 1911.   Smaller towns and villages were scattered along the coast.  European travelers reported that most of the townsmen were not natives but recent arrivals. They included Arabs from Egypt and Algeria,  qulaughla (Turco-Arabs), shawashna (Negro-Arabs), a few European renegrados (converts to Islam and/or refugees) and Jews.  
The steppe and desert interior supported the other and much larger division of the population.  Most of these people were semi-nomads who lived part of the year in spring-fed oases where they raised millet, vegetables and dates and around which they herded sheep.  The true nomads, the people the Arabs differentiate by their reliance on the camel, ranged widely from the Nile all the way to southern Morocco.  They had to move because only by nomadism could people and animals survive in the desert.  This was because the Sahara does not receive enough rainfall to sustain agriculture or sufficient grass, brush and water in any one place for camels and the people who are their parasites.   Rain, being both scanty and sporadic, set the pattern of life.
This pattern of life, as throughout the steppe and desert lands of North Africa and the Middle East, gave rise to a particular way of life, tribalism.  Generally far from any form of government, each group of people had to be small because resources of water and fodder could not support many.  This group of kinsmen is what we call a clan.  In Libyan Arabic it is called a  bait  -- literally,  a household, the family with whom one sleeps.  Groups of clans, a tribe (Arabic:qabilah), could gather in temporary congregations only in the rainy season, if rain actually fell which it often did not. Most of the time, each bait, composed of perhaps 50 to 100 men, women and children,  was on its own.   To protect what little it had, it either was prepared to fight fiercely or it died out.  It was the intense loyalty of members of a bait – asabiyah,  as the great medieval North African historian and student of the nomads, Ibn Khaldun,  identified it --  that enabled it to survive.
What was politically important about the Sanusiyah was that it afforded an acceptable way for groups that were necessarily hostile to one another to “turn their faces in one direction,” as the Arabic expression has it,  and unite against foreigners.  That is precisely what had given Islam its Bedouin-based power in the time of the Prophet Muhammad.  
* * *
We associate the attempt by Italy to create an African empire with Fascism and Mussolini, but the attack on Libya began 12 years earlier.  Indeed,  it was there, on November 1, 1911 that the Italians invented the new kind of warfare which we are still employing -- aerial bombing -- when an Italian pilot tossed a grenade out of his plane at a Bedouin.  That episode illustrates the disparity between the forces, but still the Italians lost some 8,000 men and wasted roughly half of their gross domestic product on their venture into Libya that year.   It did not much impress their local opponents, but the Italians moved to establish the legality of their invasion by resurrecting the ancient name “Libya,” aiming to show that it was, after all, Roman.
The Italian invasion and the Turco-Bedouin-Senusi resistance morphed into the First World War.  In that great conflict, Libya was a backwater, but it was not unimportant to either side.  In 1915, Italy declared war on Austria and joined the Allied side.  Although they became bogged down in the ghastly “White War” with Austria where they lost nearly a million men, the Italian government did not dare to pull back from Libya for fear of being charged with lack of patriotism by Italy’s virulent journalists.  So they sent over another 20,000 soldiers.   (Ironically, Benito Mussolini, then still a socialist, was put in jail for urging dock workers to oppose the invasion.  He soon abandoned socialism and came out in favor of the Libyan war.) 
  
At the same time, the British were beset by still-formidable Ottoman forces and feared that the Sanusiyah might stimulate dangerous uprisings among its thousands of followers in Egypt so it seemed sensible to work with the Italians in Libya.  At the same time they were beginning relations with the Sharif of Mecca, they tried to initiate talks with the Sanusiyah.  These talks could not succeed because of the British alliance with the Italians and because they were fighting the Sanusiyah in Egypt, but their attempt had the effect of splitting the Sanusiyah leadership.
Meanwhile, the Ottoman Empire was fighting for its life.  Having already lost Egypt, it was desperately holding onto the Levant and the pashaliks that became Iraq. The Turks thought that in Libya the Sanusi-inspired tribesmen might, at least, create a diversion and thus relieve British pressure on their eastern front. So, they smuggled arms into Cyrenaica (even by submarine) and sent officers to teach the tribesmen how to fight in a more modern way. But by 1916, reeling from defeats in the Middle East, the Empire had few resources left and so recalled most of the remarkable officers it had sent to Libya.
   The few remaining Turkish soldiers and their Bedouin allies were attacked by the relative vast 35,000 man British army in Egypt, by a smaller French colonial army driving north from central Africa and by the Italians along the coast.
For the tribesmen, the Italians were the nearer of their three enemies.  The war, in their eyes, was local: it was to defend their way of life, their religious brotherhood and their dignity against the European intruders.  Early in the war, the Sanusiyah led this struggle, but when the leadership split, one faction, led by the man who later became King Idris, began to play the British game.  Judging that his followers had no hope of defeating the Italian-British-French coalition, he  began – like other Arabs in Egypt, Lebanon and Arabia – to negotiate with the British.  
As the First World War ended, the major issues in Libya were unresolved.   But the Libyans were exhausted. So, with British help, Idris began negotiations with the Italians. To have someone with whom to deal effectively and to end the fighting, the Italians were forced to recognize the Sanusiyah as a de facto government and to recognize Idris as amir.  In short, the Italians did what the British were doing in Transjordan and Iraq, using Idris to create a façade for their rule.  He would get a title, a handsome allowance and various marks of prestige while the coastal peoples would be offered limited self-rule and even Italian citizenship.  Provided, of course, that he could deliver Libya to Italy.
Idris could not.  Knowing that, he equivocated as long as he could.  By 1923, the incoming Fascist Party, led by Mussolini, decided to force the issue; so the  second phase of the Italo-Libyan war began.   For the Fascists, Libya became a test of their right to rule.  To be sure of victory, they committed still more soldiers who were armed with the latest equipment, machine guns, armored cars and aircraft. 
Against this modern European army and then more or less abandoned by the Sanusiyah leadership, the Bedouin could employ only classical guerrilla tactics.   They probably never had as many as a thousand men under arms at any one time.  But their war against the Italians – in which the coastal, settled peoples played no part -- was to last for a decade, from 1923 to 1932.  Students of insurgency will find nearly exact parallels to Iraq, Afghanistan and other African and Asian conflicts.
Mussolini’s Marshal Rodolfo Graziani used all the tactics of counterinsurgency  to break the insurgents -- favoring the coastal people, whom the Italians called the sottomessi (the submissive), empowering Quislings, playing off the leadership of the Sanusiyah while punishing, starving, “regrouping” (Graziani’s invention) or killing the tribesmen they called the  ribelli.   Graziani was a master of this brutal game.  He built a barrier to cut the Bedouin off from their migration and supply routes into Egypt, filled in and cemented their water wells and dug metaphorical solci di sangue – channels of blood --  among the tribes, hoping that they would defeat one another. 
Unable to stand against large well armed formations, the insurgents learned new tricks.  They stole and carried identity cards to pretend to be “reconciled” to Italian rule, struck without warning and at night – it is from such tactics that we got the expression “guerrillas own the night” -- concealed their weapons and pretended to be just herdsmen in daylight or when outgunned and forced the sottomessi  to shelter them, furnish intelligence and give them supplies. Even when the leadership of the Sanusiyah abandoned them, the tribesmen fought on.  Indeed, they created for themselves a new form of the Sanusiyah under the leadership of one of the least known of the great anti-imperial patriots, Umar al-Mukhtar.  Like the leaders of the Afghan Taliban, he was both a man of religion, an alim (or as the Afghans would say, a mulla)  and a warrior, a mujahid.  
Under al-Mukhtar’s leadership the Sanusi brotherhood proved to be a flexible bond, responding with arms when possible, fleeing when nearly overwhelmed but never giving up.   Of Bedouin background and also a Sanusi “brother,” he became Libya’s hero. In a decade of almost daily fire-fights against the Italian army, it fair to say that Libya itself was born.   But it also nearly died.  In desperation, the Italians decided on a campaign of genocide.  Putting nearly the whole Bedouin population in concentration camps, the Italians slaughtered the herds on which the Bedouin lived and killed tens of thousands of men, women and children. Finally, they wounded, captured and hanged al-Mukhtar.

The long campaign of infiltration, bribery and assassination has left a bitter residue:  to the generation of the 1960s, Qaddafi’s generation, it appeared as a clash of Africa versus the West, the poor versus the rich, the weak versus the strong, Islam against Christianity.  Fertilizing that crop of hatred were the bones of about two in three of the Bedouin population.  This is the national epic on which young Muammar Qaddafi grew to manhood.  He would proclaim his coup d’état in the name of Umar al-Mukhtar.
* * *
The decade of unremitting war had turned Libya into an empty husk.  This was precisely what the Italians intended as they wanted to send Italians to inhabit it.  But, even the Fascist state had difficulty persuading Italians to settle in Libya.  Finally, only about 100,000 went, and most of them, despite all the help they were given by the state, left as soon as they could.  
The big influx of Italians was in the army.  So fragile was their hold on Libya in the 1930s that the Italians stationed a quarter of a million soldiers there – ironically their need to garrison Libya enabled them, when they declared war on Britain in June 1940,  to attack the 86,000 troops the British had in Egypt.  Their overwhelming numerical advantage lasted less than a year because in February 1941 the whole Italian 10th Army surrendered.  Thereafter,  it was the Erwin Rommel’s Afrikakorps that did most of the fighting.  After the great battle of al-Alamain, the British moving along the coast and the French coming up from central Africa had captured all of Libya by February 1943.  Ironically, the British then found themselves administering what remained of the colonial Fascist state.  
In 1945, the victorious Allies met to decide what to do with Libya.  The United States wanted to turn it over to the United Nations; the Soviet Union demanded that it become the Libyan “trustee;” France wanted to turn it back to the Italians; the Italians wanted it back; and the Russians, hoping that the Italian Communists would assume power, changed course and adopted the Italian option.  As the Cold War began to dominate thinking of the Western powers and the surge of the Italian Communists petered out, the British swung over to the French plan to return it to Italy.  But this idea evoked memories of too-recent and too-painful events so “The Libyan Problem” was turned over to the United Nations.  There it was decided to give the country independence and to bring back from exile the surviving Sanusi leader who had spent the war under British protection in Egypt.  He would become King Idris I. 
Idris’s rule was marked from the beginning by petty tyranny, corruption and charade.  No one then much cared.  This was, at least partly, because Libya didn’t seem worth much consideration.  It then produced nothing of any serious value, it had a total population smaller than most Western cities and it posed no threat to anyone.  Weighed in the balance of all the other world problems, it drew no attention.  
But then the US Strategic Air Command rediscovered the air base.  Located just outside Tripoli, the old Italian-German-RAF-American field was within bomber range of the Soviet Union.   Moreover, with Libya’s nearly perfect flying weather, it also was an ideal place to train NATO pilots.  So the Americans took over the field and enormously expanded it, eventually placing nearly 5,000 Americans in it.  It was described by the then American ambassador as "a Little America...on the sparkling shores of the Mediterranean."  It was upon seeing it, as I have mentioned,  that I became convinced that the government that had rented it to the Americans could not itself long continue.  It didn’t, but the airfield itself did continue.  Ironically, it would later be used by the Soviet air force and still later (on April 5, 1986 and in March 2011) would be bombed by the United States. 
The airfield was not the only attraction of Libya to postwar foreigners.  Stimulated by the discovery of oil in Algeria, French, British and American companies began to search for oil in Libya.  In one of those curious “might-have-beens” of history, the Italians had come close to finding oil in the late 1930s and had the Afrikakorps taken up their research, they could have solved the shortage of fuel that was the major cause of their defeat.
  (Allegedly, they thought the curious oily taste of water in the wells on which they drew was because the British must be trying to poison them.)   It was 17 years later, in 1959, that Esso struck the first field and 2 years later opened a pipeline to the little Mediterranean port of Brega.  Other discoveries quickly followed.  
As oil flowed out, money flowed in.  The relatively enormous inflow of money greatly increased the capacity of the coterie of officials around King Idris to enrich themselves.   As the late American journalist John Cooley observed,
 “Concession brokers and influence peddlers operated in the near fringes of the royal court.  The sudden infusions of huge amounts of cash were dramatic in a poor country that, by some estimates, had only a forty-dollar per capita income as it completed its first years of independence…For poor tent-village-dwelling families like that of [Muammar Qaddafi’s parents] Abu Meniar and Aissha al-Qaddafi, this was rubbing silt into the wounds of poverty.”  
The disparity between rich and poor multiplied by corruption, the empty puffery of the leadership, the government’s pandering to foreigners, its weakness and petty tyranny were all too evident in the Libya in which Muammar Qaddafi grew to manhood. 

* * *
During his long reign in power, Qaddafi evolved from the young revolutionary who overthrew the aging monarch until finally becoming an aging (and virtual) monarch himself.  He has always presented a puzzle to outside observers.  He is not an easy study.  My aim is not to pass judgment, but to try to understand how he sees events so that we can predict what he will do.  Clearly,  it is important that we understand as much as we can if we are to work toward a viable solution in Libya. 
In my  time in Government in the early 1960s, the CIA attempted to psychoanalyze rulers of other countries.  Buried somewhere in its vast headquarters building in Virginia, was a team of “shrinks” who, at vast distance, with no personal contact and depending only on diplomats’,  agents’ and journalists’ reports, tried to understand their proclivities.  The analysts probably worked assiduously. I never saw their reports,  but I think most of my State Department colleagues found them merely amusing.  However, it does not seem to me to be beyond the wit of man to understand enough about what influenced Qaddafi to get a reasonable view of his thought and perhaps to predict his likely actions.  These are the points that strike me:
Qaddafi told us in his first pronouncement, announcing the coup, that he was guided by the hero of the war against the Italian Fascists, Umar al-Mukhtar.  This was no abstract identification since he proudly proclaimed that his father was a companion of al-Mukhtar.  What al-Mukhtar meant to him and to the cadets and young officers of his generation, I suggest, came to two main points: al-Mukhtar and the tribal ribelli were the true nationalists and no matter how terrible their ordeal they did not surrender. 
Like al-Mukhtar, Qaddafi and most of the young officers were of tribal origin.  Surely, from tales told by relatives and friends of the vicious Italian campaigns that came close to wiping out their people, they imbibed a deep suspicion of foreigners – not only the Italians who still sought to control Libya even after the end of the Second World War but also the French who occupied the Fezzan (the vast interior) until 1955.  Under the pallid skins of all Westerners, they suspected, beat the heart of imperialism.  
So how does this translate into current events?  After all, to us, our intervention seems justified (by Security Council resolution 1973)  and certainly moral (to protect the rebels who at least initially were unarmed civilians).  To Qaddafi and his supporters, it seems different.  Is there any substance in their feeling?
They know, because it was leaked to the press, that the British had a plan (code named “the Radford Plan,”) to intervene in Libya to prevent precisely what Qaddafi did, overthrow the monarchy.  Like most Middle Easterners, the Libyans generally believe – those opposing the current regime, happily, and those upholding it, angrily – that Western secret agents are constantly being infiltrated into the country.  In recent days, these beliefs have been certified:  a British MI6 team was caught red-handed  in a most embarrassing way while the US government has acknowledged that it has CIA operatives and Special Forces troops now on Libyan soil.  So, whether we like it or not, what is often derided as Arab paranoia is grounded in both history and current events.  The Libyan government must ask how could such agents be effective?  The answer is ‘only if supported by some Libyans.’  Absent local supporters, foreign agents don’t survive long.  It is obvious today that their supporters are the rebels against the regime.  
So the question arises, how does Qaddafi identify these rebels.  Obviously, he has a view different from ours.  To us the rebels may seem incipient democrats, although, we really do not know much about them because they seem to be a very loose collection of individuals and groups.   We are so unsure what they stand for that we have found it necessary to warn them not to engage in killing innocent civilians – or, we hinted,  we would also attack them.  But they appear to share one attribute:  they want a role in running their lives beyond what Qaddafi is willing to allow.
To Qaddafi, I believe, these non-tribesmen seem unpatriotic agents of foreigners. By the men of his father’s generation, Qaddafi would have been regaled with tales about the people the Italians called the sottomessi, the settled, coastal people, who contributed to the Italian conquest and occupation. I suspect that he must view his opponents as essentially the same group.  Moreover, I imagine that he is furious over what he must regard as their lack of appreciation for what he has done for them.   When  I visited Libya in 1963, even Tripoli was a city of slums with many of its houses made from scrap and most without running water or electricity. When he took power, Qaddafi enormously improved the lives of the settled, coastal people.  Today, they live beyond the dreams of their fathers and grandfathers. Finally,  I suspect that Qaddafi sees their revolt not so much as a quest for participation in government (which we believe it is) as proof that they are just another generation of collaborators with foreigners who want to gain unfairly from Libya’s oil. Whether this is true or not is to some extent irrelevant: I think those views are what governs his action.
In addition to Umar al-Mukhtar, the second “role model” for Qaddafi, as he told us, was the Egyptian leader, Gamal Abdul Nasser. At the time of the coup, Westerners were as hostile to Nasser as they later became to Qaddafi, but to most Arabs, Nasser was an almost supernatural figure, orator, guide, font of inspiration and movie star wrapped in one.  Qaddafi adored him.  Indeed, in the first moments of the seizure of power, he and his colleagues wanted to turn Libya over to Egypt and themselves become Nasser’s lieutenants.  That this did not happen was apparently because Nasser, having been burned in the abortive merger with Syria (the United Arab Republic) and his intervention in Yemen (which set up his defeat by Israel), did not want deep involvement in Libya.
Nasser was, of course, an authoritarian ruler.  There are few living rulers in Africa or Asia who are not. Qaddafi is certainly an authoritarian figure.  Worse, he is a true believer.  He is sure, I think, that what he is doing is right and that those who oppose him do so for selfish, unpatriotic motives.  This makes it difficult for him to contemplate sharing power – just as it does for the leaders of Iran, China and many other countries.  We think that representative government is inherently universal, but in fact it is a fragile concept; it took centuries to grow in the West and often broke down even there.  It suffers in much of the rest of the world from the heritage of imperialism, the lack of popular non-governmental organizations, lack of experience, poverty and other problems.  We must hope that it will grow, but the growth is very slow and often takes forms very different from ours.  
To Qaddafi, what was important about Nasser, I think, came down to two points:  he was a true nationalist and he was not corrupt. Qaddafi carried out his coup for the same reasons Nasser carried out his.  What has happened over the years since then in both Egypt and Libya is less edifying.  Nasser’s successors, Anwar Sadat (whom Nasser despised) and Hosni Mubarak wallowed in corruption; evidence is growing that Qaddafi himself or at least his family have evolved from the Nasserist to the Sadat-Mubarak pattern.  
The Israel-Arab conflict also played a part in Qaddafi’s intellectual and emotional development.  Libya had a significant Jewish population in the 19th century, but I find no indication that Qaddafi had contact with those few who remained in Libya after the 1948-1949 Palestine war.  Rather, I think, he shared the emotional commitment of most Arabs, particularly those at a distance, to the Palestinians.  He probably equated the Israelis to the Italians:  both colonized Arab lands and both used overwhelming military force against its defenders.  Multiplying these deeper feelings, I think, would have been the Israeli defeat of his hero, Gamal Abdul Nasser in the 1967 war.
And what about terrorism?  President Reagan memorably referred to Qaddafi as “the mad dog of Africa.”  His attack on a nightclub in Berlin and, above all, his blowing up the Pan American aircraft over Scotland were strongly and rightly condemned.  But, Qaddafi hardly invented terrorism.  The CIA practiced it to the fullest extent in his youth and early days in power.  It tried to murder Nasser, did murder Lumumba, overthrew governments, and engaged in various kinds of black propaganda, seeking as the US government admitted, to overthrow his regime.  As President Reagan said, he wanted Qaddafi to “go to bed every night wondering what we might do.”  From the point of view of most of the world’s weaker peoples, the distinction we draw between such government actions as our shooting down an Iranian passenger plane and their planting bombs on one of ours is specious.  Both are certainly horrible.
Some things American governments did not choose to do directly but wanted to have happen was sometimes done under their auspices and often with their connivance by Israel.  Israel routinely carried out “operations” in the Arab countries in which it murdered Arab leaders.  It also shot down or at least caused the crash of a Libyan  commercial airliner in 1973, killing 108 people.  Israel had its own agenda, of course, and even turned on its American patrons as when, in 1954, its agents set fire to an American government building in Alexandria to try to turn the American government against Nasser and when in 1967 it attacked and tried to sink an American Naval ship in the Mediterranean. The British MI6 and the Soviet KBG also joined in, indeed virtually invented,  this dangerous game.  
Finally, there were mercenaries,  like the “Dogs of War” led by the English soldier-of-fortune and former commando, Colonel (later Sir) David Sterling.  The group associated with Sterling tried to overthrow Qaddafi’s government and kill him in the summer and fall of 1970.  Ironically, it was the British, Italian and American intelligence forces that then squashed this freelance (and partly-Moroccan-funded) attempt.  But the very success of the “formal” intelligence services in suppressing the mercenaries must have convinced Qaddafi, if he needed any convincing, that the real world more resembled the fictional world of  Ian Fleming’s “OO7” than the law-abiding world proposed by Thomas Jefferson or Alexander Hamilton.  As even President John F. Kennedy repeatedly showed, the excitement and seeming effectiveness of a “James Bond” was addicting.  Qaddafi certainly became addicted.
Being one himself, Qaddafi was fascinated by revolutionaries.  He identified with and contributed to a number of revolutionary groups including the Palestinian Intifada, the Basque ETA, the Irish IRA and the Philippine Moro Islamic Liberation Front.  But, of course, he did not create these organizations.  They grew on native soil.  And, where he moved over from financial and propaganda support to “dirty tricks,” he often employed foreigners – including former CIA and US Special Forces officers.
Espionage can be a profitable game – at least temporarily – for those engaged in it, but it is a dirty game that corrupts those who employ it, deludes otherwise reasonable leaders and poisons international relations.  Moreover, its record of “success” is very near zero.   It needs to be abolished everywhere by everyone.  Qaddafi is certainly guilty of many wicked acts, but he joins a notable crowd of statesmen including our own.  As with nuclear arms control, we would do well to begin with ourselves in the quest for getting others to go straight.  In the meantime, we are right to punish those who engage in it.
There is another, brighter,  side of Qaddafi’s record. Qaddafi poured Libya’s oil money into projects to uplift his people.  Under his regime, Libya evinces a remarkable record of development in almost every aspect – education, health care, infrastructure, job creation – and usually with a commendable sense of social justice.  Some of the projects were grandiose.  One, particularly, was to build a massive pipeline to bring water from aquifers from Kufra oasis, deep in the Sahara, to the settled people on the coast.  Libya is often described as “Egypt without the Nile” so, having the money and the water, Qaddafi moved to change geography. “The Second Nile” as it was termed, has often been derided as the Libyan equivalent of building a pyramid and showed Qaddafi’s madness.  But, as a matter of  fact, the project was first proposed not to Qaddafi but to the Libyan monarchy by the  highly successful and eminently practical American oil man, Armand Hammer.  Moreover, today the Spanish government is planning to do exactly the same thing, build a massive pipeline to bring water from a river in the north of Spain to the parched farmers in the south.  Perhaps the pipeline is not so clear an example of Qaddafi’s flight from sanity.  
To manage Libya’s one major resource, energy, Qaddafi essentially continued the very intelligent policy devised by the monarchy. It had aimed to create competition among a number of prospecting companies so that no one company could dominate and so set the scale of its production not on the needs of Libya but according to its own world-wide marketing needs as, for example, British Petroleum (then known as AIOC) had done in Iran.  Under the monarchy this was accomplished by dividing the country into a large number of lease areas and opening bidding on them to a wide variety of American and European oil companies.    Qaddafi carried this policy to the next logical step:  as oil was discovered he moved cautiously to increase the government involvement in production and refining by purchase or nationalization.  What Libyans could not do – handling the highly technical work of field maintenance – he left to foreign companies.  It is notable that the essential features of his program were copied by most of the oil and gas producing countries throughout the world.
In political affairs he was less pragmatic than in economic matters.  Like the rulers of other authoritarian states, China, Egypt, Syria, Iran and others, Qaddafi was not willing to allow participation in governance.  His people could live well, even get rich, but they were not to be allowed to challenge his authority.  There is a joke that sums up the situation:  ‘when a dog ran all the way over to Tunisia, the Tunisian dogs were baffled.  Why, they asked did he come?  After all, they pointed out, they had no more  to eat than dogs elsewhere.   It was not for the food, the migrant replied.  He came to bark.’  “Barking” was not allowed in Libya but having a voice in their national affairs is what the younger generation wants to do. 
If these influences give some hints on Qaddafi’s youth and, in part, during his years as Libya’s ruler, one should ask “what happened to him” that caused him to appear bizarrely costumed and erratic in behavior later in life?  The usual explanation is that he went insane.  Another widely quoted witticism explained how his practical policies meshed with his bizarre behavior -- “he may be insane but he is not crazy.” 
Of course, losing one’s mind  sometimes happens to rulers as it happens to other humans.  And to modify the great English historian’s dictum that “power corrupts and absolute power corrupts absolutely,” one could say that the sycophancy with which statesmen, and particularly absolute rulers, are surrounded promotes eccentricity that occasionally borders on lunacy.   But that answer seems to me inadequate.  I confess I do not have a satisfying answer. But the more interesting question, I suggest, is directed at what he was doing in Libya rather than how he was dressed.  The answer there, it appears,  was that he was a victim of his own success.  He got too rich, became too much of a king, and like many men occupying supreme power began to believe his own myth.  In short he became the aging King Idris he had struggled as a young man to overcome.
As, as he did, he narrowed the circle of his advisers and listened only to praise.  Thus, as I infer from the press, he was genuinely shocked when those he thought he was leading and whom he had so much helped to better their lives, demanded more and loved him less.  I imagine that he really believes much of their motivation is foreign inspired. Given his upbringing and his experience, Qaddafi will undoubtedly attach much, perhaps excessive, importance to the role of foreigners.  The long history of Western intervention, dirty tricks and subversion will be at the forefront in his and his supporters’ thoughts.  We would be wise not to strengthen his evaluation.
* * *
So what is likely to follow when the bombing stops?  At worst, the fighting will continue.  The senior US Air Force commander warned that air power alone would be unlikely to defeat the Libyan government and the US Secretary of State, presumably speaking for President Obama, has ruled out a ground invasion.   It is clear, at least so far, that even with powerful support, the rebels have not been able to defeat the regime and the defections to their side are limited.   Even if the opposition groups are armed by the Western powers, my hunch is that Qaddafi will hark back to his Bedouin mentor, Umar al-Mukhtar, and wage a guerrilla war.  If that should happen, it seems to me likely that Britain and France, whether under a NATO umbrella or not, will decide to intervene with ground forces.  If they do, I suspect that this will energize rather than quiet Qaddafi’s loyalists among the tribes.  Libya, we must realize, like Afghanistan, is a tribal society and the tribesmen are Qaddafi’s people.  It will be very difficult or perhaps even impossible for the opposition, which is made up of coastal people, to cope with the people of the vast interior.  The cost to the Libyans will be enormous.
Then there is the question of legality: even if they deploy overwhelming force, do the Western states and particularly the United States have the right to “regime change” Libya?  Already questions are being posed by the “other” powers, particularly Turkey, but also China and Russia, on the extent and purpose of the UN Security Council resolution.  If the questions are simply ignored as they were in Iraq, the cost to the already weak sense of a comity of nations will be heavy.  Just at a time when we need more than anything to work together on the great and urgent challenges of surging population, declining natural capital of water and productive land and dangerous climate change, the consensus will fray.
And then there is the monetary cost to Britain, France and the United States.  Accurate and inclusive figures are impossible to get, as they still are for Afghanistan and Iraq, but we are told that the war has so far cost – probably at minimum – the United States alone $100 million a day.  Not only America, mired in foreign debt with associated domestic problems, but France and Britain are struggling with severe economic shortfalls and are cutting back on programs that many of their peoples regard as essential for an acceptable pattern of life.  The attack on Libya has already added about $20 a barrel to the cost of oil.  If that price is sustained, the ripple effect will derail attempts to cut back on “dirty” fuels, coal and shale oil, and so hasten the process of climate change.  Libya is more than a straw on the already faltering camel’s back. 
And what follows this “straw?”  The press is already drawing attention to the similar autocratic regime in Syria; Yemen is in virtual revolution against another strong man whom the US is unlikely to keep supporting; the majority population of Bahrain has been repressed, at least so far, by Saudi military intervention; the war in Iraq is by no means over; nor is the war in Afghanistan.  And beyond these nearby issues, what about the regime in Myanmar  (Burma)  which surely is far worse than Qaddafi’s or the Ivory Coast where the arguments for “humanitarian intervention” are far stronger than in any of the other countries.  Where will it stop?  Foreign policy specialists of my generation used to think that there could  be no more Vietnams, that we had learned our lesson.  But we did not.  
It also is worth considering that leaders of some of these countries will ask themselves whether it is wise to follow Qaddafi’s decision to give up nuclear weapons.  Would he be under attack today if he had gone ahead and developed them?  I think it unlikely.   That is surely not the message we want to give to those nations that can but have not yet gone nuclear.
* * *
Finally, what is the alternative today in Libya?  At this point there are no attractive or easy alternatives.  That was true in Vietnam and Iraq; it is certainly also true of Afghanistan.  So the easy thing is to keep on doing the same thing.  But doing the same thing also causes the costs to rise and only rarely produces conditions conducive to policy change.  A more sensible course of action is to try to stop digging the hole into which one is falling.  
Supplying arms to the insurgents and bombing Qaddafi’s army may lead, indeed is likely to lead, to more protracted and more bloody engagements. “Leveling the playing field” will only enable the “game” to go on.  That will mean more misery, more destruction, more death.   Rather than furnishing still more arms to the rebels – after having sold so many for so long to Qaddafi – it is certainly worth exploring whether peace-seeking might still be possible.  Negotiation may not work, but it is always preferable to killing.   Both sides (and we) have something to gain – and much to lose if we do not try.  Attempting to jump into a “quick fix” is probably not going to work and is apt to create new problems.  Moving with “all deliberate speed” is the best course and probably will involve a cooling off period to quiet inflamed passions.  We have the tools to enhance the preconditions of peace during such a period.   We should keep in mind the purpose of diplomacy:  negotiation is not needed when people agree; it is needed when people don’t.  The cost to the Libyans, to us, and to the world community of nations is simply too high not to try.