Nightly Britain bombs Tripoli. Bar death, what do we achieve?

Britain should never have got involved in Libya. But Whitehall constraint
has been eroded, and none in power admit their folly

*        <http://www.guardian.co.uk/profile/simonjenkins> Simon Jenkins

·          

*       Simon Jenkins <http://www.guardian.co.uk/profile/simonjenkins>  

Nato airstrike, Tripoli

The aftermath of a Nato airstrike on Tripoli in June. Photograph:
KeystoneUSA-ZUMA / Rex Features

Britain's half-war against Libya is careering onward from reckless gesture
to full-scale fiasco. As it reaches six months' duration, every sensibly
pessimistic forecast has turned out true and every jingoistic boast false.
Even if the desperate and probably illegal tactic of trying to assassinate
Colonel Gaddafi gets lucky, Britain would find itself running a shambles of
its own making, with troops having to go in to "keep the peace". Unlike in
Basra or Helmand, there will be no Americans on hand to bail them out. It is
frightening how deep the imperial gene runs in generations of British
politicians.

The Libyan rebels, portrayed by Whitehall propagandists as plucky little
democrats, are hardly more sympathetic than Gaddafi's supporters, with those
in the east at odds both with each other and with those in the west. While
Britain claims to be "protecting" the population, the latest, admittedly
unreliable, estimates put the civilian toll from bombing at 1,100 dead
<http://www.deccanherald.com/content/176140/libya-says-1100-dead-nato.html>
and countless injured. Certainly hundreds must have died. The RAF is clearly
running out of targets and must justify each new attack in terms more
appropriate to a Maoist hysteric. Last week the Tripoli television station
was destroyed
<http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2011/jul/30/nato-bombs-libya-tv-transmitter
s>  and reporters killed, "to disrupt the broadcast of Gaddafi's murderous
rhetoric". What has that to do with the original war aim?

There remains no sign that the terror bombing of civilian areas now is
contributing to military victory any more effectively than when Bomber
Harris
<http://www.bbc.co.uk/history/historic_figures/harris_arthur_bomber.shtml>
advocated it. The enterprise has been delegated to the navy and air force,
each desperate to show its latest kit can be of use. They have duly deployed
costly cruise missiles and Typhoon bombers, which have done no more than
impose stalemate on a distant civil war at a cost of hundreds of millions of
pounds.

Had David Cameron the courage of his convictions at the start and declared
proper war on Gaddafi, we might be contemplating a Libyan spring. Why should
we worry about Arab consent or UN support when we have had so little
compunction about exceeding the Libyan mandate? The iron law of plunging
into someone else's civil war is choose the side most likely to win and make
sure it does. The Libyan imbroglio was a spur-of-the-moment intervention
against which every red light should have been flashing when the only other
country to think it a good idea was France.

Nicolas Sarkozy, like Cameron, was a leader under domestic pressure and
craving a foreign policy coup. At a time when the war in Afghanistan was
wretched, Libya seemed a quick win. Gaddafi was intent on doing to Benghazi
what President Assad has been doing to his rebels in Syria. With the
humanitarian juices running strong, and America a suddenly timid policeman,
London was tempted with a precious moment of glory. The inner cabal of
Cameron, George Osborne and Michael Gove reportedly saw Libya as a
neoconservative epiphany. It would be like Thatcher's Falklands task force,
a moment when politics aspires to statecraft and puts on the armour of
crusade. The Downing Street sofa went electric.

These were men who had never gone to war and never known what war requires
of government. Sound advice is drowned by a tide of patriotism. Wisdom is
derided as weakness. I doubt if any of those who got Britain into this mess
had the foggiest idea how they would get out of it, with Gaddafi dead or
alive. Yet ahead they charged. They now have ears only for reports of
imminent victory from the front, and from an intelligence service whose
susceptibility to political pressure has been revealed by the Chilcot
inquiry.

The serious question is why in all this did the normal checks and balances
fail to operate. Where were the soldiers, diplomats and civil servants who
knew Libya well, who knew about military intervention and the likely outcome
of specific operations? Where was the scepticism due to any project so
implausible as a "no-fly zone to impede the advance of government forces",
when this did not embrace ground action (other by bombing) or a legal
entitlement to remove a foreign regime? Where were the law officers or the
crown? Where was the adviser to say to Cameron, you may want to do this but
it must be all or nothing?

When the army wanted no part of the operation, Cameron should have smelled a
rat. By assigning Libya to airmen and sailors, Cameron put in the driving
seat the two services without an ounce of strategic sense. His diplomats
were equally silent, sidelined by technology and a decade of failed western
policy towards the Arab world. The foreign secretary, William Hague, is
known to have shared Washington's scepticism of going to war in Libya. But
scepticism is not enough in these matters.

Above all, where was the senior civil service, supposed constraint on unwise
government? Libya is one of many items on the coalition agenda where rash
politics has run ahead of common sense, like attempted reforms to government
forests, tuition fees, housing benefit, court sentences and planning law.
During the Thatcher and Blair eras Whitehall lost its self-confidence in
curbing and channelling power. Its elite was gradually supplanted by
political advisers, computer salesmen, management consultants and temporary
appointments.

Whatever may have been the shortcomings of the civil service at the end of
the 20th century, it was minor compared with the chaotic policy formation
that took its place. From poll tax and Iraq to the NHS and Libya, the march
of folly through British government seems unstoppable. Now each night a
pilot flies over Tripoli and drops bombs on it, achieving nothing but death
and destruction. Libya is not a dependency of the United Kingdom. It was and
is no threat to Britain or its people, and the consequent rise in the price
of oil is not in Britain's interest. Libya is in the grip of a wretched
civil war that Britain might have relieved with aid, but not bombers. It is
a mistake. But who will say so?

Parliament, silent and feeble over interventions in Afghanistan and Iraq,
has spent three weeks beating its chest over the Murdoch press, even
summoning the prime minister back from abroad to answer for his actions. It
never summoned him over Libya, where every night people die. Parliament
fiddles while Libya burns.

 

 

           Thé Mulindwas Communication Group
"With Yoweri Museveni and Dr. Kizza Besigye Uganda is in anarchy"
            Groupe de communication Mulindwas
"avec Yoweri Museveni et Docteur Kiiza Besigye, l'Ouganda est dans
l'anarchie"

 

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