Monday, July 11, 2011 - 10:50 AM

Vacation is over, and as I took the bus to my office this morning I had a sudden thought: Whatever happened to the war in Libya? You know, the one that used to be on the front pages every day? The one that was critical to preventing a humanitarian bloodbath and to preserving the momentum of the "Arab Spring?" The one that Obama's obedient lawyers claimed didn't involve "hostilities," in a transparent effort to evade the requirements of the War Powers Resolution? Oh, right: that one.
Obviously, the war is still going on, and it sometimes rates a new story buried deep in the middle of the newspaper, but the hopes of a rapid and cheap victory were dashed a long time ago. Assuming NATO continues to back the rebels, they will probably succeed in slowly grinding the Qaddafi family/regime into the ground -- though apparently some European leaders are now saying that negotiations are the way to go, which suggests a less-than-optimal degree of unity among the coalition (h/t Juan Cole). But if Qaddafi does go, then the liberal hawks will give each other high-fives and do their best to obscure the miscalculations and longer-term consequences of this latest whimsical war.
Three thoughts. First, although the main justification for intervention was the fear of a possible "bloodbath" had Qaddafi's forces captured the rebel stronghold in Benghazi, a second rationale was the fear that permitting Qaddafi to triumph would derail the entire Arab Spring. In essence, this was a fear of "reverse contagion": If a kleptocratic dictator like Qaddafi could use force to stay in power in Libya, then other autocrats would be similarly emboldened and the progressive forces that had launched the various upheavals would lose heart. To keep the revolutionary wave moving forward, Qaddafi had to go.
This argument now seems fallacious. There was clearly an element of contagion in the original revolutionary wave, which spread from Tunisia to Egypt to Libya to Yemen to Bahrain and to Syria with remarkable speed. But like other examples of political contagion, the outcomes in each case depended on the constellation of local and external forces in each particular place and not on what was occurring in some other country. The outcome in Egypt is very different from those in Syria or Yemen, for example, and Libya and Bahrain and Morocco are carving their own paths too. In short, what happened in Libya probably had little or no effect on what is occurring elsewhere in the Arab world. To put it bluntly: If we had stayed out and Qaddafi had won outright, I suspect Assad would still be in trouble.
Second, back when NATO first got involved, a number of people made the obvious comparison to the 1999 war in Kosovo. Both wars were launched on impulse, there were no vital strategic interests involved, and both wars were fought "on the cheap" through the use of air power. NATO leaders expected the targets to succumb quickly and were surprised when their adversaries (Milosevic in 1999, Qaddafi today) hung on as long as they did.
But there's another parallel that deserves mention too. Serbia eventually surrendered, and I expect that Qaddafi or his sons will eventually do so too. But in the case of Kosovo, NATO and the U.N. had to send in a peacekeeping force, and they are still there 10 years later. And Kosovo has only about 28 percent of Libya's population and is much smaller geographically (some 10,000 square kilometers, compared with Libya's 1,800,000 sq. km.). So anybody who thinks that NATO, the United Nations, or the vaguely defined "international community" will be done whenever Qaddafi says uncle (or succumbs to a NATO airstrike) should probably lower their expectations and prepare themselves for long-term involvement in a deeply divided country.
Third, this latest little war leads me to think we need a new term. You all know the distinction between "wars of necessity" and "wars of choice." The line between the two is sometimes blurry, but we tend to think of the former as wars where vital strategic interests (and maybe national survival) are at stake, while the latter are wars where there is no immediate or urgent necessity for either strategic or humanitarian grounds, though one can imagine some strategic benefits accruing if all goes as planned. I propose a third category: "wars of whim." These are wars that powerful and wealthy countries fight for the same reasons that some powerful politicians cheat: "because they can."
It's not that the leaders who start these wars can't come up with reasons for what they are doing. Human beings are boundlessly creative, and a powerful state can always devise a rationale for using force. And proponents may even believe it. But the dictionary defines whim as a "sudden or capricious idea, a fancy." A "war of whim" is just that: a war that great powers enter without careful preparation or forethought, without a public debate on its merits or justification, and without thinking through the consequences if one's initial assumptions and hopes are not borne out. Wars of whim aren't likely to bankrupt a nation by themselves or even lead to major strategic reversals. But they are yet another distraction, at a time when world leaders ought to focusing laser-like on a very small number of Very Big Issues (like the economy).
So maybe that's the silver lining: If we're not paying much attention to Libya anymore, doesn't that tell us something about its real importance?
MARCO LONGARI/Getty Images
Thanks for your post. I enjoyed reading it.
Only some one on a bus in relative safety could call a liberation he had only just remembered a whim.
With an election on the line and with an economy recoiling from a lack of regulation(remember the get quick rich gamblers who made off with the money from second rate mortgages) I do not think any politician would act on a whim.
It was the disgust of those who dont fall asleep on buses which finally made NATO(not the US-some people live in a bubble dont they) decide that the slaughter had to stop.
If they had moved immediately instead of having the isolationist rust to shake off first, they would not have the peacekeepers there so long.
It amazes me how people can stick their heads in the sand , purely because they are home safe and snuggly.
Its the lack of responcibility which has your economy where it is , and its the responcibilty, that you call a whim, that builds your national character.
where is your pride.
The fact that you started your post with "election" tells everything. It sounds great when you attack the ones who aren't on board with another aggressive war, but in reality, all these whimsical wars are just providing distraction for the plebiscite and cover for the politicians who are plainly failing at home. In the 2012 campaign, Obama will herald himself as a champion of the oppressed, for irresponsibly bombarding and ransacking another poor country. And you are buying it.
Very good thoughtful post...we need less militarism.
At a time when needed domestic spending is being cruelly slashed, poverty and poor health is rising we can longer afford, financially, morally, or for the sake of our democracy, our warmongering military empire, where 'unofficial', undeclared non-wars are popping up left and right... I'm very, very disappointed in Obama on war and militarism...Obama promised to be an improvement over Bush's infamous record of presidential power abuse and countless constitutional violations...Obama's failure to reverse and address Bush's record and his embrace of many of the most constitutionally destructive policies of the Bush Admin. is very damaging to our democracy.
Where are our priorities? We're slashing spending on programs providing vital, indispensable health services for the disabled, children and elderly like Medicaid as hundreds of billions are wasted on militarism and war. This must stop. We can be an empire or democracy, not both.
the US will finally find a base in Africa for Africom. The Libyans will be stitched up by the IMF and the globalisers will get their hands on Libya's assets.
Just call it a hunch.
the less something is discussed the more important it is. Also, anything that happened 3 or more months ago is ancient history. Ancient events, because they are ancient, have no bearing on the discussion. Who wants to dwell on the past? Ancient events are pertinent, however, if used to justify more war and more intervention or to score partisan points. Rwanda justifies Libya, but no discussion needed about US aid to Saddam in the 1980s. Obama is a spendthrift, but who was that Texan in the White House 2000-2008? US "abandonment" of the Afghans in the 1990's justifies more intervention, but why the US was in a position to "abandon" said Afghans is not brought up, unless to make a campy movie about a degenerate Congressman from TX.
It would be nice to say that this is simply a pathology of the politicians and chattering classes, but I suspect this pathology is widespread in the American populace.
I wouldn't draw conclusions about the importance of any issue based on the amount of public attention paid to it.
Just look at this blog. Walt's last post, on the subject of American "decline," elicited 23 comments. The one before that, about the evergreen Israeli-Palestinian conflict, produced 247. Just let him try to post something on the Casey Anthony trial. See what happens then.
The significance of the intervention in Libya's civil war, I think, is twofold. Quite obviously, it illustrates the impotence Congress has chosen for itself in national security affairs. That's a pretty important statement by itself. It isn't just that Congress was not consulted in any formal way before the intervention; as an institution, it didn't want to be consulted, or otherwise involved. Whether lack of interest or fear of controversy -- or simply the distaste for engagement with a subject that did not excite any organized interest groups or sources of campaign funds -- doesn't matter so much. Impotence is impotence.
The second element of significance in this affair is how it illustrates the way recent American administrations first form a picture of what is happening, and then respond to it while paying careful attention to how they look while doing so.
The Obama administration was plainly entranced from the beginning by the Arab Spring narrative that described political liberalization sweeping from one Arab polity to all the others. In a somewhat similar fashion, the Bush administration convinced itself that establishing democratic forms in Iraq would put "freedom on the march" throughout the region. Both administrations wedded themselves to narratives that bore a close resemblance to what they wanted to believe.
Both administration were also preoccupied with not leaving the wrong impression with the Arab "street." The Bush administration -- to be fair, this includes senior military officers -- worried incessantly about having too large an American "footprint," both in Afghanistan and in Iraq. The Obama administration didn't want it said that America had "boots on the ground" in Libya. Both were afraid that presenting the wrong appearance would turn Arab opinion against America's role. Both wanted to preserve the appearance the political change impossible without Western intervention had really been accomplished by the Arabs themselves: an illusion in the service of illusion.
Not coincidentally, both administrations began American participation in wars expected to be over quickly, which weren't. Both administrations were surprised, and neither one wanted to admit that surprise. One hopes that the Obama administration will at least be able to avoid in Libya the geopolitical quagmire in which its predecessor sank the United States in Iraq and Afghanistan.
In a time sensitive situation, quick responses are not necessarily whims. The Lybia intervention broadly fit preexisting Western aims (such as defending a democracy movement in the heart of an odious and dangerous regime) and was geopolitically feasible (supported by the Arab League). Plus, fallacious or not in our rearview mirrors, the fear of reverse contagion was real and reasonable at the time.
I'm not saying NATO decision-makers paused and carefully weighed all the possible outcomes, but we shouldn't say the move was simply a whim. The outcomes have just not been as clean or quick as hoped.
Plus, imagine the angst if no one had intervened and Qadaffi won the day?
The reflex of nearly every commenter (outside the administration) after such decisions is dully predictable: finger waging.
That's not useful and is usually derived (in hindsight) from applying an idealized vision of decision-making and outcomes to a messy and contingent situation.
Lybia is messy, and the decision to intervene was rushed, but the move was rational and, yes, still falls somewhere between necessity and choice.
send Charlie Sheen to clean up
The mere fact that all these people are supporting the Libya protesters makes it all stink to – over the rainbow – high heavens. Sending His Awesomeness Charlie Sheen to whack Gaddafi would seem more believable.
It was up to Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov to introduce a note of sanity, describing the notion of a no-fly zone over Libya as “superfluous”. This means in practice a Russian veto at the UN Security Council. Earlier, China had already changed the conversation.
In their Sheen-style hysteria – with US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton desperately offering “any kind of assistance” – Western politicians did not bother to consult with the people who are risking their lives to overthrow Gaddafi. At a press conference in Benghazi, the spokesman for the brand new Libyan National Transitional Council, human-rights lawyer Abdel-Hafidh Ghoga, was blunt, “We are against any foreign intervention or military intervention in our internal affairs … This revolution will be completed by our people.”
The people in question, by the way, are protecting Libya’s oil industry, and even loading supertankers destined to Europe and China. The people in question do not have much to do with opportunists such as former Gaddafi-appointed justice minister Mustafa Abdel-Jalil, who wants a provisional government to prepare for elections in three months. Moreover, the people in question, as al-Jazeera has reported, have been saying they don’t want foreign intervention for a week now.
The Benghazi council prefers to describe itself as the “political face for the revolution”, organizing civic affairs, and not established as an interim seoexpert government. Meanwhile, a military committee of officer defectors is trying to set up a skeleton army to be sent to Tripoli; through tribal contacts, they seem to have already infiltrated small cells into the vicinity of Tripoli.
Whether this self-appointed revolutionary leadership – splinter elements of the established elite, the tribes and the army – will be the face of a new regime, or whether they will be overtaken by younger, more radical activists, remains to be seen.
Is the war not receiving attention just in the USA or all over the world? My impression (a bit vague perhaps) is that Europeans are far more involved here than the USA. That is probably a good thing, at least for us. I would suspect the war will go on until Qadaffi is removed, in one fashion or another. Meanwhile it might be a good thing that attention is focused elsewhere. PS I support the removal of Qadaffi since this is not the removal of an Arab nationalist but an Arab tyrant. His removal by the West would improve its reputation in the Muslim world unlike the removal of Saddam Hussein.
As an European, I agree. You are quite right (as is prof Walt).
And I am pretty sure that Qadaffi will go, but it will take some time more.
Tunisia and Egypt erupted without input from the West. This appeared quite unforgivable, if not indeed impertinent, and it became imperative the West seize the first opportunity to get in there and re-establish their proper place in these matters whatever they may be. Although a bit wobbly on its pins the West is not yet ready to retire, and the outcome in Libya is less important than being seen still to be in the game. Heaven forbid the Arabs and so be left to deal with their own affairs.
The notorious colonial powers in the region couldn't just sit and see their earlier puppets (Tunisia for France, Egypt for the US) act on their own behalf. They just had to get there and show off some strength.
Libyan oil could be another factor, especially for the US. The campaign isn't going as expected, so they have to wait until Qaddafi is worn down to start looting the country.
Notorious colonial powers? Is this view not just a tiny be out dates, say by fifty years?
Firstly Libya: France, Britain, America and Italy had no problem “looting” (aka actually doing most of the drilling for) Libya’s oil before the Arab Spring (see for example how many British and French oil workers had to be rescued from the desert), the war has hurt their oil interests. For France (see my post below) this is a post colonial policing action, if you will a War of Opportunity, which Britain and America can’t afford for her to fail at, but it is nothing more.
Secondly, Tunisia: true, the French didn’t see this coming, and it is was scandal there, but Tunisia is quite bound into France anyway, no matter who is ruling it, and will probably remain so for the rest of our lifetimes. Ben Ali or no Ben Ali.
Lastly, Egypt: lets be blunt, the Cairo Street and American White House only gave the Egyptian general staff the political cover to do in Spring what they would have done anyway in September, prevent a Mubarak dynasty. The whole thing may be getting away from them, with the Copt-Muslim Brotherhood problem, and over zealous protestors - making the same mistake they have always made - thinking that they will actually be able dictate the creation of a utopia, against geo-political reality, economic gravity and common sense.
None of it is not a re-run of Iraq or Nicoragua.
* None of this is a rerum of iraq....
I follow prof. Walt post with much interest and generally agree with many of his arguments, but I have trouble supporting his position on Libya.
1. first of all, because i agree with what you have said here many times about the US relations with the Arab world and how a negative image affects US foreign policy.
so now there is a chance for US to change its stand, no longer supporting dictators for their pure interests and Israel's. Not necessary my view, but the common view in the ME. (when the news of military intervention broke through i was in the middle of a Turkish family - with very liberal views -and even their first reaction was that Libya's oil constituted the real reason!)
so, why not take this chance and actually do something that will show to America's critics a different face? can you imagine the views if Qaddafi would be shooting his people and West did nothing?
there is actually a nyt report from a town in Libya from where many talibans where recruited, and the report states that the view on US may have changed!
i am not denying that the situation holds a lot of uncertainty but why aren't you
considering the larger benefits of this intervention?
There are no larger benefits. Do Russia or China appear in a bad light for leaving the Libyans to evolve in their own way, or Germany for that matter? The US would have earned a much better image globally by keeping out of it and then adjusting pragmatically to the outcome. Is it not naïve to assume Qadaffi ‘s blood curdling threats other than rhetoric? How can you possibly calculate that the death toll would have been higher without external intervention, or be sure some accommodation might not have been found between the opposing elements by now. That is the way the world works; one element, concept, system, call it what you will, Qadaffi, brings into existence an opposite and opposing element, the protesters, and from their conflict emerges a resolution which, though it may be arrived at with difficulty, represents a coherent new system born of its own tensions and compromises. To seek to interfere with such a process on the grounds of woolly selective sentimentality does not help. That is what we observe today, or do not observe since it has become another failed undertaking better pushed under the carpet. All the US/NATO intervention will have achieved is to derail a process that would likely have resolved itself by now.
A similar development is apparent in Egypt where post-revolution US support for the military junta has deprived the people of the resolution they were seeking, were prepared to die for and should by now be enjoying, and driven them back on the streets to shed more blood while suffering delayed recovery of their fragile economy. The unintended consequence of this short-sighted approach could even prove disastrous for Israel since it has ignited widespread anti-Israeli sentiments that were not part of the original protester’s agenda while strengthening the role of the Muslim Brotherhood in a manner that would not have been called for had the people been allowed to gain what they were after.
By attempting to justify these interventions on humanitarian grounds, US foreign policy has become weighted down with a load of sentimental domestic baggage whose selective application is close to becoming laughable.
The "Arab Spring" has given the US a chance to ameliorate somewhat (a complete rehab is impossible as long as we are glued to Israel) its hated image in the Muslim world and at least demonstrate that its calls for democracy are more than just nice babble. Yet instead of a fully embracing the movement it gives the impression of being completely insincere and calculating; supporting it more or less where it costs nothing but shunning it wherever its interests lie with the dictators (Bahrain). So that the US, confused and clumsy as ever, is botching its chance and showing again that it is really motivated by hypocrisy rather than any genuine wish for the welfare of Arab peoples.
'woolly selective sentimentality ' :)
thx for your answer, but the larger benefits I point to are simply those associated with having a positive image in a region where you have such interest like security (war on terror) and energy (oil) - does anyone remember the price of oil before the Iraq war? how would if feel for us economy a price of oil at 22$? or maybe the larger interest or stability in the world... you pick it!
there are evident benefits when you brand your country as democracy, liberty and civilization - as it helped during the cold war; or imagine now if US neighbors where to act like china's :)
so there is an interest for US in this selective sentimentality!
Branding is not enough. Neither the US nor the UK are democracies in any meaningful sense since neither follows the wishes and priorities of the majority. The only recognisable slivers of democracy are periodic ballots of questionable integrity after which everything goes back as it was. To revolutionaries, democracy is a clarion call for escape from intolerable oppression, not aspiration for the dysfunctional US political system Liberty is the freedom to live and express oneself as one wishes; just consider the perfectly legal things you cannot express or do, and the extent to which you are scrutinised by unelected and unaccountable authorities. Civilisation is an historian’s judgement, but if you mean obsessive material values and doubtful sexual morality then not everyone on the streets of Cairo holds them in that much regard.
Reputations are gained cumulatively by behaviour and actions, branding simply reveals the proverbial Emperor’s clothes and that, alas, is what appears to be happening.
US ‘meddling’ is becoming counter-productive strategically, politically and economically. This is particularly true in the ME. Mine is an opinion, of course, and I would be delighted to listen to a reasoned argument that, on the contrary, it is nothing but a strategic, political and economic success. It may seem that I am being flippant but that is far from my intention. Most Americans live in a media cocoon, not because of any Big Brother but simply because they like it that way just as they like prurient exposures of celebrity lifestyles. It is Americans who have fallen for all that positive branding you call for and they have evolved an almost religious conviction in the rightness of their views. The US employment of aid and its withholding puts me in mind of the 17th century Vatican with its indulgences and threats of excommunication. In the middle of the 20th century everyone was dazzled by the US. I am 75 and I remember it as world where anything was possible at any hour of any day.
But all is changed, that high horse riderless,
Though mounted in that saddle JFK once rode
And cried 'Ich bin' to the tumultuous acclamation of the world.
with apologies to WBY
A reputation is slowly earned, has to be backed by consistent policy and actions.
- US started being indifferent to the uprising in Tunisia. When it won, they suddenly embraced it.
- US started supporting Mubarak. When he started crumbling, they suddenly abandoned him, supporting the rebels. When the rebellion won and everything seemed rosy, the US tried to appear as if they embraced change all along. Now as the policies seem to reverse, with Mubarak's heritage resting firmly with the generals, the US is hesitant again.
- Bahrain was ruthlessly assaulted and subdued. The US celebrated it.
- Things are evolving in Yemen, yet the US trails behind failing to take a stand, again.
Hardly a coherent set of priorities. Yet Laur suggests that by a single stroke of attacking a country on dubious grounds, the US can make its negative image disappear. Arab people have long-long memories, they can't be fooled that easily.
And... come on. A NYT report that US image "may have changed" in a nameless village where Talibans (Talibans?!) have recruited... Wow, now the entire campaign was worth it! Invade another country and you may even have a report in your own newspaper that another village has allegedly started to hate your guts a bit less!
It is not a humanitarian war - the coalition is long past that - and there is simply no such thing as an image-improving war.
typo
Neither the US nor the UK are democracies...
“Neither the US nor the UK are democracies in any meaningful sense since neither follows the wishes and priorities of the majority.”
Arguably no state is a democracy by your standard. You mistake the purpose of democracy. It is not to pander to the tyranny of the mob, but to periodically refresh mandate of, or dismiss, those who must act in the interest of the collective. To legitimise or not “the interested few who must act in the interests of the disinterested many” (I think I quote Rothkopf right).
The vast majority of the population of any country barely understand the basics of either the international system or the workings of state, they are divorced from the nuances of reality and can afford to think in generalities and moralised abstraction. The best contribution the “majority” (if such a thing actually exists on anything other than an ad hoc basis) can make is choosing between contending narratives and competing auras of competency, something that sadly has become little more than a beauty pageant of late, on both sides of the pond.
It would be nice if Walt could find some way to remove or prevent comments that are ads and that have nothing to do with the topic.
Whatever happened to the war in Libya?
When you considered whether the operation in Libya is a "war of necessity" or a "war of whim" , you looked at the situation from a Western perspective, and thus in terms of the economy, foreign relations, and Western politics. The war in Libya, ongoing, needs to be considered from a moral perspective. Is that a war of necessity or one of whim? Probably 5.5 million Libyans will consider it a war of need, which is why they are so puzzled at US Congressional actions. They don't understand the disconnect from the principles the US was built on --freedom of speech, human rights, etc.,-- and the non-application of these principles to any other country besides the US.
It appears to me that the Libyan war is a remarkable French affair, bound into France's Africa policy far more than American or British strategies. For this reason I'm far less worried than commentators in the Anglo-Saxon world appear to be. Consider:
Like most French wars in Africa over the last thirty years, we have picked a side, instead of trying to be a referee.
As in Cote D'Ivoire, Chad, and CAR, this is a slow burning war, where local actors are being backed up by air power, funded, armed and reinforced by special forces.
The bulk or the fighting is being done by the local actors, who will in the end "own" their victory in a way that neither the Iraqis nor the Afghans do.
Gaddafi (choose your own spelling) isn't really much of a problem for London or Washington, but he is a real spoiler for Paris, interfeering in every one of their relationships in Africa.
Of course there are difficulties heading this way, chiefly Ramadan.
...Obviously, the war is still going on, and it sometimes rates a new story buried deep in the middle of the newspaper...
...So maybe that's the silver lining: If we're not paying much attention to Libya anymore, doesn't that tell us something about its real importance?
If it was GWB who had his pet lawyers rule to evade the War Responsibilities Act, and was spending money daily on this war, would these stories still be buried deep in the middle of the newspapers?
Steve's may be correct in asking his rhetorical question, but another interpretation (and one which would never occur to a good lefty like Steve) is that it doesn't suit the liberal leaning media's agenda to highlight a losing issue for Obama.
Nothing new about the disappearance of Libya, which arises because editors feel that if the whole damn thing can't be handled in a couple of weeks, it's about as interesting as last week's episode of Criminal Minds.
Similarly, in 2002, nobody thought to notice that the Pentagon was picking the eyes out of its land force in Afghanistan, where those men were needed, to man up the force for a planned invasion of Iraq -- which all can plainly see (except for Paul Wolfowitz, who recently told FP readers he wasn't going to discuss it) wasn't wanted at all. That doesn't seem to have done much good for the Afghanistan campaign which, for some reason, isn't named the Afghanistan campaign as it drags on from decade to decade.
Similarly, inattentive newspaper editors still don't seem to have to picked up what seems the plain fact that al-Qaeda fled Afghanistan in November of December 2001 and hasn't been back since in any meaningful way. This latter item also seems not to have reached the president of the United States yet.
wotthehell, archie, wotthehell.
Stephen M. Walt is the Robert and Renée Belfer professor of international relations at Harvard University.
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