Friday, 15 April 2011

The Weaklings’ War


Prime Minister David Cameron and Presidents Sarkozy and Obama have published a letter declaring that they will keep pressure on Colonel Gaddafi until he is gone. Despite UN Resolution 1973 existing to ‘protect civilians’, the letter from the three leaders claims, ‘But it is impossible to imagine a future for Libya with Gaddafi in power...so long as Gaddafi is in power, Nato and its coalition partners must maintain their operations.’ It is clear that these men wish to exceed the resolution and enforce regime change in Libya. Cameron and Sarkozy particularly want to escalate the military conflict and bring more hardware into the operation – a desire not shared by the other UN member nations. Some nations already believe that the resolution has been exceeded. Why would these three leaders so desperately want to exceed the resolution and commit greater military resources to the conflict? What are their motives?

In Britain we were told by Prime Minister Cameron to expect Libyan government defections: these have not materialised. We were warned of massacres that have not happened and were encouraged by promises of Libyan uprisings as the rebels made progress supported by the military might of the UN. There are no reports of country-wide uprisings. It seems that they will never happen. With little of the promised evidence materialising, Britain shouldering a much greater burden of operational responsibility than first envisaged and Cameron’s desperation growing, his own Conservative Party MPs are beginning to call for a parliamentary recall to re-examine Britain’s involvement in Libya.

David Cameron did not win over the British public in the UK election. He did not win enough seats to form a government and was forced to negotiate a coalition. The Conservative Party’s poll ratings have slumped further since then, Conservative Party membership is down and both Cameron and some of his key players – the Foreign Secretary William Hague, the Education Secretary Michael Gove and Health Secretary Andrew Lansley have made embarrassing public mistakes. The Prime Minister is not in a strong political position. Perhaps he believes he can recreate Margaret Thatcher’s Falklands War victory and following success in the opinion polls?

President Nicholas Sarkozy is bombing in the French polls and is regarded as an unpopular leader. He is despised by the Left and even criticised by some on the political Right. He routinely re-shuffles his own cabinet in response to public criticism and has been personally involved in numerous embarrassing incidents. He is quoted as calling French youth “racaille” or ‘scum’, he believes that paedophilia, depression and suicidal tendencies are “genetic” and, during a speech in Senegal, Sarkozy referred to “African peasants”, angering many Africans who regarded the comment as racist. He was also filmed telling a voter to “get lost” after the man refused to shake hands with him : he then called him a “dumb-ass”. Sarkozy has been accused of receiving illegal campaign donations by French newspapers. He has also distributed photographs of himself that were subsequently proved to be forged. With elections looming, this is a president badly in need of a foreign war to distract his people.

What of President Barack Obama? Obama was always onto a loser. He could never live up to the colossal expectations of his voters. He could never live up to the world’s expectations of the first black president of the United States. Unfortunately, he is a politician and so he indulged those unrealistic expectations. Like Cameron and Sarkozy, his job approval ratings are down. Oil prices are rising and no American president likes to see that. With the Democrats losing the House of Representatives, it is increasingly difficult for Obama to get through the reforms he promised his voters. The Mexican Gulf oil spill was very damaging to his presidency. This demonstrted Obama to have little power to effect change in the face of environmental and economic disaster.

These men are ‘weak’ in a political sense - whether we agree with them or not. Regardless of other very significant problems in their own countries, all three are facing the economic consequences of a global financial meltdown and have little in the way of a solid solution. They are trying to hide their weakness behind a largely unnecessary war: a show of ‘strength’ to disguise their desperation and political vulnerability. They should not be leading the charge in Libya. This is war for all the wrong reasons. A war of political weaklings. At present, it wouldn’t be hard to imagine that Colonel Gaddafi is still more popular amongst the Libyan people than Cameron, Sarkozy and Obama are with their own.

1 comment:

  1. This came to 38 degrees site but I'll answer here. Just to say I agree, really, and that I am amazed there is no greater outcry against the whole affair. Other than the Blair/Thatcher doctrine of "Running a bit of foreign conflict wins you the next election" there is no sane reason for this conflict. To listen to the way the Beeb is pulling all the stops out to justify our involvment is excruciating - and all the newspapers, too.
    Leave Libya Alone.

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