It's
Their War, Not Ours
by
Patrick
J. Buchanan
by
Patrick J. Buchanan
Recently
by Patrick J. Buchanan: A
Middle East Without America?
Before the
United States plunges into a third war in the Middle East, let us
think this one through, as we did not the last two.
What would
be the purpose of establishing a no-fly zone over Libya? According
to advocates, to keep Moammar Gadhafi from using his air force to
attack civilians.
But if Gadhafi
uses tanks to crush the rebellion, as Nikita Khrushchev did in Hungary
and the Chinese did in Tiananmen Square, would that be OK?
What is the
moral distinction between using planes to kill rebels and running
over them with tanks? Do we Americans just want to see a fair fight?
To establish
a secure no-fly zone, we would have to bomb radar installations,
anti-aircraft batteries, missile sites and airfields, and destroy
the Libyan air force on the ground, to keep the skies secure for
U.S. pilots.
These would
be acts of war against a nation that has not attacked us.
Where do we
get the legal and moral right to do this? Has Congress, which alone
has the power to declare war, authorized Barack Obama to attack
Libya?
The president
may respond to an attack on American territory or U.S. citizens,
but Libya has not done that since Lockerbie, more than two decades
ago.
Since that
atrocity, George W. Bush and Condi Rice welcomed Gadhafi in from
the cold, after he paid $10 million in blood money to the families
of each of the Lockerbie victims.
What, then,
is our present justification for attacking Libya?
The U.N. Security
Council has not authorized military action against Libya. No NATO
ally has been attacked. Why is Libya not a problem for the Arab
League and the African Union, rather than the United States, 5,000
miles away?
Last week,
the Senate whistled through a nonbinding resolution urging the creation
of a no-fly zone. Call it the Sidra Gulf resolution.
But what are
U.S. senators doing issuing blank checks for war eight years after
George W. Bush cashed the last one to commit the historic blunder
of invading Iraq? Do these people learn at all from history?
That war cost
the Republican Party the Congress in 2006 and presidency in 2008.
Far worse, it cost the country 40,000 dead and wounded, a trillion
dollars, and the respect of hundreds of millions of Arabs and Muslims
who saw the war as an imperial attempt to crush a nation that had
done nothing to the United States.
Assume we attack
Gadhafi's air defenses, and in the collateral damage are a dozen
children – like those kids collecting sticks on that hillside in
Afghanistan – and Al-Jazeera spreads footage of their dismembered
bodies across the Middle East, as commentators rail, "The Americans
are killing Muslims again, this time for Libya's oil." The pro-democracy
demonstrations across the Middle East would instantly become anti-American
riots.
If we destroy
Gadhafi's air defenses, could we simply let the rebels and regime
fight it out? If Libyans, seeing us intervene, rose up against Gadhafi,
could we let them be massacred as Bush I let the tens of thousands
of Shiites be massacred who rose up in 1991 against Saddam after
Bush urged them to do so?
If we attack
Libya, we could not let Gadhafi prevail and plot revenge attacks
on U.S. airliners. Having wounded the snake, we would have to go
in and kill it. And the interventionists know this, and this is
what they are all about.
Never strike
a king unless you kill him. In for a dime, in for a dollar. If we
declare a no-fly zone, we have to attack Libya. And if we attack
Libya, an act of war, we have to see that the war is won.
And after that
victory, we could not wash our hands and walk away. We would have
to ensure the new government was democratic and a model to the Muslim
world, as we are trying to do in Afghanistan and Iraq.
Do we really
want to adopt another Muslim country?
Don't start
down a road the end of which you cannot see or do not know. There
is no vital U.S. interest in whether Gadhafi wins or is deposed.
We ought to stay out. This is their war, not ours.
Churchill once
said: Take away this pudding, it has no theme.
What is the
theme, where is the consistency in U.S. policy?
We backed the
dictators Zine El Abidine Ben Ali in Tunisia and Hosni Mubarak in
Egypt, who were as autocratic as Gadhafi, whom we demand be deposed.
We
support the dictator in Yemen, the absolute monarch in Saudi Arabia,
the king in Bahrain, the sultan in Oman and the emir in Kuwait,
but back pro-democracy demonstrators in Iran, though there have
been more elections in Iran than in all those other nations put
together.
America has
taken a terrible beating for what she has done and tried and failed
to do in that region for a decade.
Let the "world
community" take the lead on this one.
Tell them,
this time, the Yanks are not coming.
March
10, 2011
Patrick
J. Buchanan [send
him mail] is co-founder and editor of The
American Conservative. He is also the author of seven books,
including Where
the Right Went Wrong, and A
Republic Not An Empire. His latest book is Churchill,
Hitler, and the Unnecessary War. See his
website.
Copyright
© 2011 Creators Syndicate
The
Best of Patrick J. Buchanan
|