Where
U.S. Chooses to Back ‘Armed Struggle': Obama Backtracking
On His Pledges
09 April 2011
By Nicola Nasser
Within a few days, the "Silmiya"
(peaceful) popular uprising against the 42-year old
rule of Muammar Gaddafi in Libya had turned into an
"armed struggle" and in no time the U.S.
administration was in full gear backing the Libyan
armed violent revolt, which has turned into a full
scale civil war, despite being the same world power
who officially label the legitimate (according to the
charter of the United Nations) armed defense of the
Palestinian people against the 34- year old foreign
military occupation of Israel as "terrorism."
Backing the armed struggle of the
Libyan people came less than a month since President
Barak Obama on February 11 hailed the Egyptians'
"shouting ‘Silmiya, Silmiya'" -- thus adding the
Arabic word to the international language lexicon –
because the "Egyptians have inspired us, and they've
done so by putting the lie to the idea that justice is
best gained by violence .. It was the moral force of
nonviolence, .. that bent the arc of history toward
justice," he said.
When Obama was awarded the Nobel
Peace Prize in October 2009, he viewed the decision
less as a recognition of his own accomplishments and
more as "a call to action." Within less than two
years, he "surged" the U.S. – led war in Afghanistan,
expanding it into Pakistan, stuck almost literary to
his predecessor's war agenda in Iraq, and now has
opened a third war theater for the United States in
Libya, where his administration ruled out any peaceful
settlement of the conflict, insisting on its
internationalization, ignored all efforts at
mediation, especially by the African Union, and lent a
deaf ear to calls for an immediate ceasefire as a
prelude for dialogue in search for a way out of the
bloody civil war, which were voiced recently in
particular by the presidents of China, the world's
most populous country, and Indonesia, the largest
Islamic country.
Libya is a "unique situation,"
Obama says, where the U.S.-led military intervention
and the backing of an armed revolt is the exception
and not the rule in U.S. foreign policy. This
exceptional and unique situation, it seems, justified
his resort to an exceptional and unique process of
decision-making that nonetheless doesn't justify
bypassing a consultation with the Congress and
explaining his decision to the American public, where
his hasty military intervention overseas could not in
any way be justified by any immediate or direct threat
to U.S. national security.
In his 2006 book, "The Audacity
of Hope," Obama wrote: "Instead of guiding principles,
we have what appears to be a series of ad hoc
decisions, with dubious results. Why invade Iraq and
not North Korea or Burma? Why intervene in Bosnia and
not Darfur?" Now, Obama seems to have no objection to
an "ad hoc decision" on Libya.
His backtracking on his previous
pledges to Arabs, Palestinians in particular, would
not make any Arab or Palestinian expect him to pose
any questions like: Why a U.S. military intervention
in an internal conflict in Libya to protect civilians
who resorted to arms to defend themselves and not one
to protect defenseless Palestinian civilians who have
been under military, economic and political siege for
the sole purpose of depriving them of any means of
defense against the external Israeli military
occupation?
The Libyan precedent, of course,
according to Obama's reasoning, could not be applied
to Israel because Libya is a "unique situation" where
the circumstances are unlikely to recur, but
nonetheless dictate arming the "rebels," a process
which the coalition of the intervening western powers
are now considering and which the U.S, British, French
and other intelligence teams are already on the ground
to identify who among the rebels deserve arming and to
facilitate the process in support of the Libyan
people's "armed struggle," at the same time when the
occupying Israeli Defense Forces (IDF) are publicly
threatening a new all-out assault on the besieged Gaza
Strip with the declared purpose of uprooting the
Palestinian armed struggle in self defense against a
foreign power.
A thinly – veiled Arab cover and
the UN Security Council Resolution 1973, which was not
supported by major powers like Russia, China, Germany,
India and Brazil, could hardly give legitimacy to the
U.S.-led military intervention in Libya; neither does
distancing itself by transferring the leadership to
NATO because, as former U.S. ambassador to the United
Nations, John Bolton, told Fox News recently, "Obama
may be the only man in the whole world who does not
know that we, the United States, run NATO."
* Nicola Nasser is a veteran
Arab journalist based in Bir Zeit, West Bank of the
Israeli-occupied Palestinian territories.