http://www.stratfor.com/analysis/20110308-how-libyan-no-fly-zone-could-backfire?utm_source=SpRep&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=110308b&utm_content=readmore&elq=a23ac5101d02498ebe42e559c9446337


How a Libyan No-fly Zone Could Backfire
March 8, 2011 | 1550 GMT 

S
JOHN MOORE/Getty Images
Libyan rebels on March 7 load an anti-aircraft gun near oil facilities in Ras 
Lanuf
By George Friedman

Calls are growing for a no-fly zone over Libya, but a power or coalition of 
powers willing to enforce one remains elusive.

In evaluating such calls, it is useful to remember that in war, Murphy's Law 
always lurks. What can go wrong will go wrong, in Libya as in Iraq or 
Afghanistan.


Complications to Airstrikes
It has been pointed out that a no-fly zone is not an antiseptic act. In order 
to protect the aircraft enforcing the no-fly zone, one must begin by 
suppressing enemy air defenses. This in turn poses an intelligence problem. 
Precisely what are Libyan air defenses and where are they located? It is 
possible to assert that Libya has no effective air defenses and that an SEAD 
(suppression of enemy air defenses) attack is therefore unnecessary. But that 
makes assumptions that cannot be demonstrated without testing, and the test is 
dangerous. At the same time, collecting definitive intelligence on air defenses 
is not as easy as it might appear - particularly as the opposition and thieves 
alike have managed to capture heavy weapons and armored vehicles, meaning that 
air defense assets are on the move and under uncertain control.

Therefore, a no-fly zone would begin with airstrikes on known air defense 
sites. But it would likely continue with sustained patrols by SEAD aircraft 
armed with anti-radiation missiles poised to rapidly confront any subsequent 
threat that pops up. Keeping those aircraft on station for an extended period 
of time would be necessary, along with an unknown number of strikes. It is 
uncertain where the radars and missiles are located, and those airstrikes would 
not be without error. When search radars and especially targeting radars are 
turned on, the response must be instantaneous, while the radar is radiating 
(and therefore vulnerable) and before it can engage. That means there will be 
no opportunity to determine whether the sites are located in residential areas 
or close to public facilities such as schools or hospitals. 

Previous regimes, hoping to garner international support, have deliberately 
placed their systems near such facilities to force what the international media 
would consider an atrocity. Libyan leader Moammar Gadhafi does not seem like 
someone who would hesitate to cause civilian casualties for political 
advantage. Thus, the imposition of a no-fly zone could rapidly deteriorate into 
condemnations for killing civilians of those enforcing the zone ostensibly for 
humanitarian purposes. Indeed, attacks on air defenses could cause substantial 
casualties, turning a humanitarian action into one of considerable consequence 
in both humanitarian and political terms.


Airstrikes vs. Ground Operations
The more important question is what exactly a no-fly zone would achieve. 
Certainly, it would ground Gadhafi's air force, but it would not come close to 
ending the fighting nor erode Gadhafi's other substantial advantages. His 
forces appear to be better organized and trained than his opponents, who are 
politically divided and far less organized. Not long ago, Gadhafi largely was 
written off, but he has more than held his own - and he has held his own 
through the employment of ground combat forces. What remains of his air force 
has been used for limited harassment, so the imposition of a no-fly zone would 
not change the military situation on the ground. Even with a no-fly zone, 
Gadhafi would still be difficult for the rebels to defeat, and Gadhafi might 
still defeat the rebels.

The attractiveness of the no-fly zone in Iraq was that it provided the 
political illusion that steps were being taken, without creating substantial 
risks, or for that matter, actually doing substantial damage to Saddam 
Hussein's control over Iraq. The no-fly zone remained in place for about 12 
years without forcing change in Saddam's policies, let alone regime change. The 
same is likely to be true in Libya. The no-fly zone is a low-risk action with 
little ability to change the military reality that creates an impression of 
decisive action. It does, as we argue, have a substantial downside, in that it 
entails costs and risks - including a high likelihood of at least some civilian 
casualties - without clear benefit or meaningful impact. The magnitude of the 
potential civilian toll is unknown, but its likelihood, oddly, is not in the 
hands of those imposing the no-fly zone, but in the hands of Gadhafi. Add to 
this human error and other failures inherent in war, and the outcome becomes 
unclear.

A more significant action would be intervention on the ground, an invasion of 
Libya designed to destroy Gadhafi's military and force regime change. This 
would require a substantial force - and it should be remembered from Iraq that 
it would require a substantial occupation force to stabilize and build a new 
regime to govern Libya. Unlike in Egypt, Gadhafi is the regime, and sectarian 
elements that have been kept in check under his regime already are coming to 
the fore. The ability of the country to provide and administer basic government 
functions is also unknown. And it must also be borne in mind that Gadhafi 
clearly has substantial support as well as opposition. His supporters will not 
go without a fight and could choose to wage some form of post-invasion 
resistance, as in Iraq. Thus, while the initial costs in terms of casualties 
might be low, the long-term costs might be much higher.

It should also be remembered that the same international community that 
condemned Saddam Hussein as a brutal dictator quite easily turned to condemn 
the United States both for deposing him and for the steps its military took in 
trying to deal with the subsequent insurgency. It is not difficult to imagine a 
situation where there is extended Libyan resistance to the occupying force 
followed by international condemnation of the counterinsurgency effort. 

Having toppled a regime, it is difficult to simply leave. The idea that this 
would be a quick, surgical and short-term invasion is certainly one scenario, 
but it is neither certain nor even the most likely scenario. In the same sense, 
the casualties caused by the no-fly zone would be unknown. The difference is 
that while a no-fly zone could be terminated easily, it is unlikely that it 
would have any impact on ground operations. An invasion would certainly have a 
substantial impact but would not be terminable.

Stopping a civil war is viable if it can be done without increasing casualties 
beyond what they might be if the war ran its course. The no-fly zone likely 
does that, without ending the civil war. If properly resourced, the invasion 
option could end the civil war, but it opens the door to extended low-intensity 
conflict. 


The National Interest
It is difficult to perceive the U.S. national interest in Libya. The interests 
of some European countries, like Italy, are more substantial, but it is not 
clear that they are prepared to undertake the burden without the United States. 

We would argue that war as a humanitarian action should be undertaken only with 
the clear understanding that in the end it might cause more suffering than the 
civil war. It should also be undertaken with the clear understanding that the 
inhabitants might prove less than grateful, and the rest of the world would not 
applaud nearly as much as might be liked - and would be faster to condemn the 
occupier when things went wrong. Indeed, the recently formed opposition council 
based out of Benghazi - the same group that is leading the calls from eastern 
Libya for foreign airstrikes against Gadhafi's air force - has explicitly 
warned against any military intervention involving troops on the ground.

In the end, the use of force must have the national interest in mind. And the 
historical record of armed humanitarian interventions is mixed at best.


Read more: How a Libyan No-fly Zone Could Backfire | STRATFOR 


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