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Libya: Obama’s Latest, AFRICOM’s First, NATO’s African War
25 March 2011 By Rick Rozoff
Following similar developments in neighboring
Tunisia and Egypt, anti-government protests began in
Libya on February 15. On March 19 the U.S., France and
Britain delivered air and cruise missile attacks
against targets in Libya: 112 Tomahawk missile strikes
from U.S. and British submarines and warships in the
Mediterranean Sea and attacks by French warplanes on
what were identified as government military vehicles
on the ground.
Twenty French Rafale and Mirage jet fighters took
to the country’s skies and U.S. stealth bombers
delivered 40 payloads to its main airfield.
A Russian parliamentarian pointed out that the
attack on Libya represented the fourth country
targeted for armed assault – the fourth war launched –
by the U.S. and its allies in the North Atlantic
Treaty Organization in 12 years: The current one,
codenamed Operation Odyssey Dawn, and Operation Allied
Force in Yugoslavia in 1999, Operation Enduring
Freedom in Afghanistan in 2001 and Operation Iraqi
Freedom in Iraq in 2003. The beginning of the war
against Libya occurred on the eighth anniversary of
the attack on Iraq and five days before the twelfth
anniversary of that against Yugoslavia.
However, whereas it took several months for the
U.S. and its NATO allies to selectively identify
developments in Yugoslavia (Kosovo) and Iraq as crises
requiring international attention before proclaiming
them grounds for war, with Libya the process has been
reduced to a month’s duration. The slaying of unarmed
civilian protesters in Yemen and Bahrain has not
evoked a comparable outcry and has not produced
analogous military actions from Western military
powers.
This time equipped with a United Nations
Resolution, 1973, passed in the Security Council with
the BRIC nations – Brazil, Russia, India and China –
and Germany abstaining, the U.S. and its NATO partners
are prepared for an indefinite conflict more closely
resembling that in Afghanistan, which will be ten
years old in less than seven months, than the wars
against Yugoslavia and Iraq.
Despite opposition to Western military operations
voiced by the BRIC nations, since yesterday echoed by
the 53-nation African Union, the 22-member Arab League
and several Latin American nations like Bolivia, Cuba,
Nicaragua and Venezuela, Washington and its allies are
portraying their attack against Libya as an
international effort – because the West has recruited
the kings of Morocco and Jordan and the emirs of Qatar
and Abu Dhabi as allies in what is presented as a
humanitarian campaign to bring democracy to an Arab
nation.
In the current reincarnation of the “humanitarian
war” model of the 1990s, an estimated 65 Libyan
civilians were killed and 150 wounded on the first day
of the bombing onslaught. Oil depots and a medical
facility were among the targets of bombing and missile
attacks.
President Barack Obama was in Brazil at the start
of the attacks, and by rights should have been
declared persona non grata and expelled for his role
in ordering U.S. Tomahawk strikes and bombing runs.
If anyone had doubted that it was possible to
out-Herod Herod in surpassing his predecessor George
W. Bush’s record of waging military aggression
internationally, that illusion should be finally laid
to rest. The Obama administration has increased
American troop strength in Afghanistan (which has
become the longest war in U.S. history on Obama’s
watch) to 100,000, with another 50,000 foreign forces
serving under NATO’s International Security Assistance
Force.
Approximately 50,000 combat-ready troops remain in
Iraq and at least 500 U.S. troops are based in
Mindanao in the Philippines where they are involved in
counterinsurgency combat operations.
The White House and the Central Intelligence Agency
have also massively escalated unmanned aerial vehicle
(drone) strikes in Pakistan, killing nearly 2,000
people in the last 26 months, including over 80
civilians slain in 12 missile strikes – the deadliest
on a tribal meeting – in North Waziristan only two
days before the attack on Libya was launched. The U.S.
is a far better candidate for an international no-fly
zone than any other nation in the world.
The Obama government has launched cruise missile
strikes and run special forces operations in Yemen and
conducted a deadly helicopter raid in Somalia.
It has also acquired the use of seven military
bases in Colombia to assist the decades-long
counterinsurgency war in the country and to threaten
neighboring Venezuela and Ecuador.
The rapidity with which the U.S. and its NATO
cohorts built the case for the attack on Libya should
be cause for serious concern to the last two South
American nations, as it should for Bolivia, Nicaragua
and Syria and for former secretary of state
Condoleezza Rice’s “outposts of tyranny”: Belarus,
Cuba, Iran, Myanmar, North Korea and Zimbabwe.
Last year NATO airlifted thousands of Ugandan
troops to and from Somalia for the war in that country
(its civilian counterpart, the European Union, is
training Somali government troops in Uganda) and is
currently conducting a naval operation off the Horn of
Africa, Ocean Shield, but the ongoing attack on Libya
is the Atlantic Alliance’s first direct war in Africa.
It is also the first war for the newest Pentagon
overseas military command, U.S. Africa Command (AFRICOM).
AFRICOM spokesman Lieutenant Commander James
Stockman boasted that American and British missiles
hit at least 20 of 22 intended targets in Libya on
March 19, and newly appointed AFRICOM chief General
Carter Ham pledged to “degrade the Qadhafi regime’s
capability” under his command’s Joint Task Force
Odyssey Dawn the same day.
Taking part in the attacks were the U.S. submarines
USS Florida, USS Providence and USS Scranton, guided
missile destroyers USS Barry and USS Stout, amphibious
assault ship USS Kearsarge, amphibious transport dock
USS Ponce, flagship of the Mediterranean-based Sixth
Fleet USS Mount Whitney, B-2 Spirit stealth bombers,
AV-8B Harrier II ground-attack aircraft and EA-18G
Growler electronic warfare planes.
The USS Bataan helicopter-carrying amphibious
assault ship and USS Whidbey Island dock landing ship
are on their way to the coast of Libya.
The U.S. maintains 42 F-16 Fighting Falcon jet
fighters at the Aviano Air Base in Italy and has the
use of two air bases in Bulgaria and one in Romania.
The USS Enterprise carrier strike group, with 80
planes, is in the Arabian Sea and can cross back
through the Suez Canal for action against Libya.
The above is to be recalled as the White House
continues to disavow a direct, much less a leading,
role in the war.
Although to date not formally a NATO operation, the
air and sea campaign against Libya began with the
Alliance subjecting the targeted country to
around-the-clock surveillance by Airborne Warning and
Control System (AWACS) aircraft assigned to the nearly
ten-year-old Operation Active Endeavor naval
surveillance and interdiction mission. NATO’s E-3A
AWACS planes fly at a height of 30,000 feet and cover
a range of 120,000 square miles.
The military buildup in the Mediterranean Sea by
other NATO nations matches that of the U.S.
In addition to 20 warplanes flying over Libya, on
March 20 France deployed the Charles de Gaulle
aircraft carrier, the only non-American
nuclear-powered carrier, from its base in Toulon for
air strikes against Libya.
Britain has warships and a submarine off the coast
of Libya which participated in the first round of
missile strikes. The BBC reported that London has also
deployed Eurofighter Typhoon and Tornado warplanes and
Nimrod surveillance aircraft to the region.
Canada, whose prime minister Stephen Harper has
identified the attacks on Libya as “acts of war” while
acknowledging that Libyan civilians will be killed by
them, has sent the HMCS Charlottetown frigate to the
area and has deployed six CF-18 Hornet multirole jet
fighters to Italy for air patrols over Libya. Defence
Minister Peter MacKay has stated that the
Charlottetown is available to assist in enforcing a
naval blockade of the North African country.
Norway has committed six F-16 jet fighters and
Belgium eight F-16s, a frigate and 200 military
personnel in an effort to, in the words of Defense
Minister Pieter De Crem, “topple the Gaddafi regime.”
The Belgian F-16s are currently in Greece and the
warship in the Mediterranean, with European Affairs
Minister Olivier Chastel stating his government has
decided to “tell NATO that we are available, offer
what we have and wait for a common command.”
Spain has provided four F-18 jet fighters, a
maritime surveillance plane, a submarine and a frigate
in addition to turning over to NATO its military bases
at Rota and Moron de la Frontera in the south of the
country.
Italy has offered eight combat aircraft and the use
of seven bases on its mainland and in Sardinia and
Sicily for the war effort. It has also activated five
ships, including the Andrea Doria destroyer, for
action against Libya.
Denmark has six F-16s in Italy prepared for
deployment to Libya.
According to the Sabah newspaper, Turkey will also
supply F-16s for NATO’s Libyan campaign.
Greece has provided the U.S. and NATO the use of
bases at Aktio and Souda Bay in Crete.
More military assets are being added by NATO
nations almost hourly, which indicates that a no-fly
zone is the least of Western plans for Libya and that
the campaign is not expected to end in the foreseeable
future.
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