The United States and the European powers are moving towards direct
military intervention in Libya. They are seeking to exploit a legitimate
popular uprising against the 41-year rule of Muammar Gaddafi, preempt
any possibility of a more radical regime emerging, and install a
colonial-style puppet in place of the discredited dictatorship.
The
pace of the shift in American policy, in particular, is extraordinary.
Washington has moved from relative silence on the movement against
Gaddafi to leading the charge for outside intervention.
As in
every US operation in the region, the driving forces are twofold: a grab
for the resources of one of the major oil-producing countries and the
pursuit of the broader strategic interests of American imperialism in
the Middle East and North Africa. Imperialist military forces on the
ground in Libya would be in a position to influence the future course of
events in Egypt, Tunisia, Algeria and Morocco, all now in turmoil, as
well as across the Sahara in Sudan, Chad, Niger and Nigeria.
No
one—least of all the Libyan people themselves—should believe the claims
of humanitarian concern put forward to justify the entry of American,
British, French, German, Italian and other military forces. The same
powers stood by when the Tunisian and Egyptian dictators, Zine El
Abidine Ben Ali and Hosni Mubarak, massacred demonstrators seeking jobs,
democratic rights and an end to the plundering carried out by a corrupt
ruling elite. They offered political, diplomatic and in some cases
direct security assistance in an effort to prop up these stooge regimes.
During
the same two weeks that Gaddafi’s security forces have shot down
opposition demonstrators, similar crimes have been committed by US
allies in Oman and Bahrain and by the US client regime in Iraq without
any public rebuke by Washington, let alone the organization of an
international campaign for military intervention.
A full-scale
propaganda blitz is under way, modeled on the campaigns that paved the
way for US and NATO intervention in Bosnia and Kosovo in the 1990s,
highlighting atrocities committed by the Gaddafi regime as an argument
that a joint intervention by the imperialist powers is needed to “save”
the Libyan people. US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton set the tone
Monday, denouncing Gaddafi’s use of “thugs” and “mercenaries” and
declaring, “Nothing is off the table so long as the Libyan government
continues to threaten and kill Libyans.” British Prime Minister David
Cameron chimed in, telling the House of Commons, “We do not in any way
rule out the use of military assets” in Libya.
Taking
its cue from Washington, London and other imperialist capitals, the
international media has focused enormous attention on the alleged use of
air power by Gaddafi’s forces against rebels in eastern Libya and
around Tripoli, the capital city. The attacks actually documented have
been limited to a handful, since many of Gaddafi’s pilots have defected.
Australian
Foreign Minister Kevin Rudd emerged from a meeting with Clinton to
declare that a no-fly zone should be imposed immediately. “Guernica is
known throughout the world for the bombing of the civilian population,”
he declared, referring to the massacre carried out by Nazi warplanes
during the Spanish Civil War. “We have seen evidence of that in Libya.
Let us not simply stand idly by while similar atrocities are committed
again.” Far from standing idly by, Australia has been a full partner in
American wars of aggression in both Iraq and Afghanistan, which have
produced far greater atrocities.
The US-European posture of
humanitarian outrage has no credibility. Until two weeks ago, these
powers were paying court to Gaddafi to obtain lucrative contracts for
the exploitation of the oil and gas resources of Libya. A parade of
Western suitors—Condoleezza Rice, Britain’s Tony Blair, Chirac of
France, Berlusconi of Italy, Zapatero of Spain—followed the smell of oil
to Tripoli. They paid no heed then to Gaddafi’s police state and the
screams emanating from his torture chambers.
The United States
made a major political and financial investment in the cultivation of
friendly relations with Gaddafi, regarding his sudden rapprochement with
Washington and US foreign policy after 2003 as a major strategic gain.
Hillary Clinton recently feted one of Gaddafi’s sons in Washington and
appointed the founding chairman of the US-Libya Business Association to
be the State Department’s coordinator for international energy affairs.
If these powers are now lining up to return to Libya as the supposed
patrons of the opposition forces that have seized control of much of the
country, they are being driven by the very same appetites for profit
and plunder. And despite their professions of support for Gaddafi’s
overthrow, the entry of military forces of the United States and the
former European colonial powers is no favor to those genuinely fighting
to overthrow the dictatorship.
Foreign intervention will inflame
popular hostility. Many of those engaged in the uprising in Benghazi
have already declared their vehement opposition to the entry of US and
European troops. It is the only thing that could allow Gaddafi to resume
his bogus posture as an anti-imperialist and give his regime a new
lease on life.
Equally cynical are the claims of concern over the
fate of the hundreds of thousands who have been fleeing Libya since
fighting broke out February 17 in Benghazi. The official spokesmen for
the various imperialist powers claim that their own nationals, many of
them technicians and other oil company functionaries, are in danger and
must be rescued. At the same time, those countries with a Mediterranean
coastline—Italy, France and Spain—have warned of a flood of refugees
from the escalating civil war. Both problems, of course, have the same
“solution”—military intervention, both within Libya and along its
coastline.
The anti-Libya campaign is in the literal sense of the
word an exercise in plunder. The first major action has been the
effective seizure of $30 billion in Libyan assets held in US financial
institutions, and billions more in European accounts, after the passage
of a sanctions resolution by the UN Security Council. While dubbed an
asset “freeze,” it is in reality the confiscation of resources that
belong to the people of Libya.
So flagrant is the theft that
Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan, speaking at a business
conference in Germany, felt compelled to object. “Mistakes made by
governments should not be paid by people,” he said. “We think
discussions about an intervention in Libya or sanctions are worrisome
considering the people of Libya and foreigners in this country.” He said
that the outside powers should act on Libya “from a humanitarian
perspective and not out of considerations for their oil interests.”
The
momentum toward military intervention is accelerating. The Berlusconi
government in Italy—the former colonial power in Libya and the biggest
customer for its oil—officially repudiated its non-aggression pact with
the Gaddafi regime Sunday. This is the necessary legal preparation both
for Italian military action inside Libya and the unleashing of US
warplanes at Aviano and other NATO air bases in Italy.
The
Obama administration confirmed Monday that it has begun to redeploy
naval assets into the Mediterranean Sea, bringing them within range of
Libya. The Pentagon was caught off guard by the rapid spread of unrest
into Libya, having dispatched the aircraft carrier USS Enterprise
through the Suez Canal into the Red Sea on February 15 in a show of
force four days after the overthrow of Egyptian President Mubarak. The
carrier battle group continued into the Arabian Sea, “showing the flag”
in support of beleaguered pro-US dictator Saleh in Yemen and the Persian
Gulf oil sheikdoms.
A Pentagon spokesman announced Monday, “We
have planners working and various contingency plans and... as part of
that we’re repositioning forces to be able to provide for that
flexibility once decisions are made.” The Enterprise and a smaller
helicopter carrier, the USS Kearsage, have now moved back into the Red
Sea, in position either to re-transit the Suez Canal or launch air
strikes against Libyan targets. The operations under discussion range
from “rescue” efforts like those already mounted by British and German
commandos, to a no-fly zone, to the outright landing of the Marines.
An
additional US concern is the role of China, which is mounting its
first-ever military operation in the Mediterranean Sea. Beijing has
dispatched the naval frigate Xuzhou from anti-piracy patrol off Somalia
through the Suez Canal to the Libyan coast to assist in the evacuation
of the 30,000 Chinese citizens, mostly construction workers, trapped by
the fighting.
There is an element of desperation and extreme
recklessness in the anti-Libyan campaign. It has erupted only a few days
after US Defense Secretary Robert Gates in a speech to a military
audience declared, “In my opinion, any future defense secretary who
advises the president to again send a big American land army into Asia
or into the Middle East or Africa should ‘have his head examined,’ as
General MacArthur so delicately put it.”
Gates was voicing the
pessimism produced by the intractable opposition of the Afghan
population to long-term US military occupation, as well as the concerns
of the military brass over the deteriorating condition of an
all-volunteer force after ten years of constant overseas deployments.
Despite
such trepidations, however, there is a logic to imperialism and the
Obama administration is driven by it. The ultimate goal of US and
European intervention would be to fill the “political vacuum” in Libya,
as the New York Times termed it Sunday, by turning the country into a protectorate of the imperialist powers.
A US expert on Libya, writing in Newsweek
magazine Sunday, directly compared an intervention in Libya to the
long-term US role in the Balkans. The political situation in Libya, he
wrote, “suggests the Balkans rather than neighboring Egypt or Tunisia as
likely precursors for state building in Libya. And as with the Balkans,
the international community could have a large and positive role to
play by providing expertise and, temporarily, security forces.”
In
other words, Libya is to be turned into a semi-colony, ruled by the
United States and its fellow predators from Western Europe, who will
seize control of the oil reserves and transform the country’s territory
into a strategic base of operations against the mass uprisings now
sweeping the Middle East and North Africa.
WSWS