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A Libyan Report Card
Via FLC
"... Given the calls for intervention in Syria, let's consider Libya, where a
modest intervention was tried...., ...., .... Toppling an evil regime or stopping a war is a profoundly
moral act. But taking moral responsibility for what happens next in a country is
the hard part. Bosnia-Herzegovina, 18 years after the U.S.-led intervention and
the Dayton Peace Accords, is a nasty, dysfunctional state. And
Bosnia-Herzegovina has advantages that Libya and Syria simply do not have. It is
next-door to the European Union and has a modern history of relatively strong
institutional structures compared to much of the Middle East. Bosnia was in a
relatively developed part of the Ottoman Empire; Libya and Syria were in much
less developed parts. But because Washington tends to overestimate its own
significance in terms of its ability to alter distant societies, the
following pattern will continue to emerge: a terrible war resulting in calls
for humanitarian intervention, an intervention in some cases, always followed by
a blame game inside the Washington Beltway after the country has slipped back
into tyranny or anarchy.
Meanwhile, here is a probability: Libya's relatively short history as a strong
state is over. It will go on and on as a dangerous and weakly governed area
between Tunisia and Egypt. Its considerable oil resources can internally
generate revenue for armed groups and politicians both...."
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