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PostPosted: Fri Mar 25, 2011 10:57 am 
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http://online.wsj.com/article/SB1000142 ... 51286.html

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It all seems rather mad, doesn't it? The decision to become involved militarily in the Libyan civil war couldn't take place within a less hospitable context. The U.S. is reeling from spending and deficits, we're already in two wars, our military has been stretched to the limit, we're restive at home, and no one, really, sees President Obama as the kind of leader you'd follow over the top. "This way, men!" "No, I think I'll stay in my trench." People didn't hire him to start battles but to end them. They didn't expect him to open new fronts. Did he not know this?

He has no happy experience as a rallier of public opinion and a leader of great endeavors; the central initiative of his presidency, the one that gave shape to his leadership, health care, is still unpopular and the cause of continued agitation. When he devoted his entire first year to it, he seemed off point and out of touch. This was followed by the BP oil spill, which made him look snakebit. Now he seems incompetent and out of his depth in foreign and military affairs. He is more observed than followed, or perhaps I should say you follow him with your eyes and not your heart. So it's funny he'd feel free to launch and lead a war, which is what this confused and uncertain military action may become.

What was he thinking? What is he thinking?

Which gets me to Mr. Obama's speech, the one he hasn't given. I cannot for the life of me see how an American president can launch a serious military action without a full and formal national address in which he explains to the American people why he is doing what he is doing, why it is right, and why it is very much in the national interest. He referred to his aims in parts of speeches and appearances when he was in South America, but now he's home. More is needed, more is warranted, and more is deserved. He has to sit at that big desk and explain his thinking, put forward the facts as he sees them, and try to garner public support. He has to make a case for his own actions. It's what presidents do! And this is particularly important now, because there are reasons to fear the current involvement will either escalate and produce a lengthy conflict or collapse and produce humiliation.

Without a formal and extended statement, the air of weirdness, uncertainty and confusion that surrounds this endeavor will only deepen.

The questions that must be answered actually start with the essentials. What, exactly, are we doing? Why are we doing it? At what point, or after what arguments, did the president decide U.S. military involvement was warranted? Is our objective practical and doable? What is America's overriding strategic interest? In what way are the actions taken, and to be taken, seeing to those interests?

From those questions flow many others. We know who we're against—Moammar Gadhafi, a bad man who's done very wicked things. But do we know who we're for? That is, what does the U.S. government know or think it knows about the composition and motives of the rebel forces we're attempting to assist? For 42 years, Gadhafi controlled his nation's tribes, sects and groups through brute force, bribes and blandishments. What will happen when they are no longer kept down? What will happen when they are no longer oppressed? What will they become, and what role will they play in the coming drama? Will their rebellion against Gadhafi degenerate into a dozen separate battles over oil, power and local dominance?

What happens if Gadhafi hangs on? The president has said he wants U.S. involvement to be brief. But what if Gadhafi is fighting on three months from now?

On the other hand, what happens if Gadhafi falls, if he's deposed in a palace coup or military coup, or is killed, or flees? What exactly do we imagine will take his place?

Supporters of U.S. intervention have argued that if we mean to protect Libya's civilians, as we have declared, then we must force regime change. But in order to remove Gadhafi, they add, we will need to do many other things. We will need to provide close-in air power. We will probably have to put in special forces teams to work with the rebels, who are largely untrained and ragtag. The Libyan army has tanks and brigades and heavy weapons. The U.S. and the allies will have to provide the rebels training and give them support. They will need antitank missiles and help in coordinating air strikes.

Once Gadhafi is gone, will there be a need for an international peacekeeping force to stabilize the country, to provide a peaceful transition, and to help the post-Gadhafi government restore its infrastructure? Will there be a partition? Will Libyan territory be altered?

None of this sounds like limited and discrete action.

In fact, this may turn out to be true: If Gadhafi survives, the crisis will go on and on. If Gadhafi falls, the crisis will go on and on.

Everyone who supports the Libyan endeavor says they don't want an occupation. One said the other day, "We're not looking for a protracted occupation."

Mr. Obama has apparently set great store in the fact that he was not acting alone, that Britain, France and Italy were eager to move. That's good—better to work with friends and act in concert. But it doesn't guarantee anything. A multilateral mistake is still a mistake. So far the allied effort has not been marked by good coordination and communication. If the conflict in Libya drags on, won't there tend to be more fissures, more tension, less commitment and more confusion as to objectives and command structures? Could the unanticipated results of the Libya action include new strains, even a new estrangement, among the allies?

How might Gadhafi hit out, in revenge, in his presumed last days, against America and the West?

And what, finally, about Congress? Putting aside the past half-century's argument about declarations of war, doesn't Congress, as representative of the people, have the obvious authority and responsibility to support the Libyan endeavor, or not, and to authorize funds, or not?

These are all big questions, and there are many other obvious ones. If the Libya endeavor is motivated solely by humanitarian concerns, then why haven't we acted on those concerns recently in other suffering nations? It's a rough old world out there, and there's a lot of suffering. What is our thinking going forward? What are the new rules of the road, if there are new rules? Were we, in Libya, making a preemptive strike against extraordinary suffering—suffering beyond what is inevitable in a civil war?

America has been through a difficult 10 years, and the burden of proof on the need for U.S. action would be with those who supported intervention. Chief among them, of course, is the president, who made the decision as commander in chief. He needs to sit down and tell the American people how this thing can possibly turn out well. He needs to tell them why it isn't mad.


I think this is a really good critique of Obama's latest actions. He is solidifying himself as a mediocre president.


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PostPosted: Fri Mar 25, 2011 11:22 am 
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The thing is, Obama doesn't want the US to be seen as leading the charge on Libya. He wants to thread the needle - on the one hand, avoid having the US be accused of standing idly by while a massacre happens, and on the other hand, avoid having the US be accused of attacking yet another Muslim country "unprovoked". When viewed in that context, a subtle, low-key, seemingly wishy-washy approach makes perfect sense in terms of global opinion. The problem is that it's a completely unfamiliar approach for Americans, so American opinion is mixed. We've been leading the charge in every fight for so long that it simply doesn't occur to most of us that in this case, and probably increasingly in the future, we're better off not being the first ones to go "over the top" and out of the trench.


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PostPosted: Fri Mar 25, 2011 11:52 am 
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RD -

There's nothing secret about what you are saying there. He could, quite easily, fashion a speech to say exactly that.

"We're concerned about a humanitarian crisis".
"We're busy with other things."
"Therefore, this is a NATO engagement with limited US support. Success or failure is up to NATO on this one."

But he OWES the American Public an explanation.


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PostPosted: Fri Mar 25, 2011 11:53 am 
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Lex Luthor wrote:
I think this is a really good critique of Obama's latest actions. He is solidifying himself as a mediocre president.


Mediocre means "not bad. Not good, but not bad." You'll be hard-pressed to sell that description to many people around here.

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PostPosted: Fri Mar 25, 2011 11:55 am 
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Talya wrote:
Lex Luthor wrote:
I think this is a really good critique of Obama's latest actions. He is solidifying himself as a mediocre president.


Mediocre means "not bad. Not good, but not bad." You'll be hard-pressed to sell that description to many people around here.


He's mostly just keeping the status quo.


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PostPosted: Fri Mar 25, 2011 11:58 am 
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Talya wrote:
Lex Luthor wrote:
I think this is a really good critique of Obama's latest actions. He is solidifying himself as a mediocre president.


Mediocre means "not bad. Not good, but not bad." You'll be hard-pressed to sell that description to many people around here.


I think we need to wait a few years to decide between mediocre and bad. Health care will need time to do its damage and/or extend the average healthy lifespan to 120 years.


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PostPosted: Fri Mar 25, 2011 12:01 pm 
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RangerDave wrote:
The thing is, Obama doesn't want the US to be seen as leading the charge on Libya. He wants to thread the needle - on the one hand, avoid having the US be accused of standing idly by while a massacre happens, and on the other hand, avoid having the US be accused of attacking yet another Muslim country "unprovoked". When viewed in that context, a subtle, low-key, seemingly wishy-washy approach makes perfect sense in terms of global opinion. The problem is that it's a completely unfamiliar approach for Americans, so American opinion is mixed. We've been leading the charge in every fight for so long that it simply doesn't occur to most of us that in this case, and probably increasingly in the future, we're better off not being the first ones to go "over the top" and out of the trench.

The only opinions that are mixed are on the left. On the one hand you want to support your boy and he's crusading for the ideals you've been espousing forever and a day, on the other hand war is teh debil!! On the right it is just sarcasm, hilarity and jabbing, more of a tongue-in-cheek welcome to the real-world morons. At least that has been my experience.

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PostPosted: Fri Mar 25, 2011 12:02 pm 
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Arathain Kelvar wrote:
I think we need to wait a few years to decide between mediocre and bad. Health care will need time to do its damage and/or extend the average healthy lifespan to 120 years.
It's already doing damage to the "average" American.

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PostPosted: Fri Mar 25, 2011 12:05 pm 
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Obama led the charge on Libya by firing 110 missiles into their land, which is a clear act of aggression.

Gadaffi, from what I can tell, mainly planned on fighting the rebels. Any "massacre" would actually be a pitched battle against ex-soldiers who stole weapons, planes, tanks, and seized cities. We can't tell how much support Gadaffi actually has because Western media heavily slants all news against him.

It doesn't matter whether we are the only aggressors or with a pact of Europeans. It is still aggression and starting a non-defensive war, for tenuous claims of protecting civilians. Also we are in a tough economic situation so there's that too.


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PostPosted: Fri Mar 25, 2011 12:09 pm 
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Khross wrote:
Arathain Kelvar wrote:
I think we need to wait a few years to decide between mediocre and bad. Health care will need time to do its damage and/or extend the average healthy lifespan to 120 years.
It's already doing damage to the "average" American.


Arathain wrote:
I think we need to wait a few years


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PostPosted: Fri Mar 25, 2011 12:18 pm 
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I'm less frustrated with the President than I am with House Republicans. Why they hell aren't they demanding an emergency session of Congress to be informed of what the President intends?

There was supposedly some conference call with a very limited amount of people. I'm sorry, but a conference call doesn't cut it and I don't buy into this crap that attendees had bad connections and couldn't understand everything. The top-ranking Republicans are friggin spineless. They're waiting to see how this plays out so they can take full advantage in 2012.

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PostPosted: Fri Mar 25, 2011 12:21 pm 
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Arathain Kelvar wrote:
Khross wrote:
Arathain Kelvar wrote:
I think we need to wait a few years to decide between mediocre and bad. Health care will need time to do its damage and/or extend the average healthy lifespan to 120 years.
It's already doing damage to the "average" American.
Arathain wrote:
I think we need to wait a few years
I just mentioned that it's already doing damage to the "average" American, Arathain. This does not preclude "waiting a few years" to see what else happens.

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PostPosted: Fri Mar 25, 2011 12:29 pm 
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Arathain Kelvar wrote:
RD - There's nothing secret about what you are saying there. He could, quite easily, fashion a speech to say exactly that....{H}e OWES the American Public an explanation.

Oh I agree. I also think he should be seeking formal Congressional authorization now that the initial emergency response phase is over. I was commenting on the "We need bold, assertive leadership!" tone of the linked article and its call for a detailed roadmap of the strategy and endgame. That kind of speech-making would be counterproductive in my opinion.


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PostPosted: Fri Mar 25, 2011 12:33 pm 
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RangerDave wrote:
Arathain Kelvar wrote:
RD - There's nothing secret about what you are saying there. He could, quite easily, fashion a speech to say exactly that....{H}e OWES the American Public an explanation.
Oh I agree. I also think he should be seeking formal Congressional authorization now that the initial emergency response phase is over. I was commenting on the "We need bold, assertive leadership!" tone of the linked article and its call for a detailed roadmap of the strategy and endgame. That kind of speech-making would be counterproductive in my opinion.
It's the same tone articles in other new sources took with Bush during Afghanistan and Iraq.

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PostPosted: Fri Mar 25, 2011 1:08 pm 
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RangerDave wrote:
The thing is, Obama doesn't want the US to be seen as leading the charge on Libya. He wants to thread the needle - on the one hand, avoid having the US be accused of standing idly by while a massacre happens, and on the other hand, avoid having the US be accused of attacking yet another Muslim country "unprovoked". When viewed in that context, a subtle, low-key, seemingly wishy-washy approach makes perfect sense in terms of global opinion. The problem is that it's a completely unfamiliar approach for Americans, so American opinion is mixed. We've been leading the charge in every fight for so long that it simply doesn't occur to most of us that in this case, and probably increasingly in the future, we're better off not being the first ones to go "over the top" and out of the trench.


We really weren't here. The British and the French were really leading the effort to get it started. Then of course the fact that the U.S. has vastly more assets than either reared its ugly head and we ended up getting involved (I won't comment on the political machinations therein.) Its not a matter of who is leading and who is following, its a matter of who has the ability to do the heavy lifting.

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PostPosted: Fri Mar 25, 2011 2:01 pm 
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Actually, a Canadian general (Lt.-Gen. Charlie Bouchard) is in charge of the NATO coalition in Libya.

(I know, I know, you meant politically, not militarily. I just had to mention that.)

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PostPosted: Fri Mar 25, 2011 2:15 pm 
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Talya wrote:
Actually, a Canadian general (Lt.-Gen. Charlie Bouchard) is in charge of the NATO coalition in Libya.

Totally off-topic, but anyone happen to know (or have a link regarding) the anglophone/francophone percentages in the Canadian military?


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PostPosted: Fri Mar 25, 2011 2:17 pm 
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My search-fu fails me in this question, RD.

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PostPosted: Fri Mar 25, 2011 2:19 pm 
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Yeah, ditto.


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PostPosted: Fri Mar 25, 2011 2:27 pm 
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Very little demographic information on Canadian Forces. A little here, but not about language:
http://www.journal.forces.gc.ca/vo8/no3/jung-eng.asp

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PostPosted: Fri Mar 25, 2011 3:15 pm 
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We are absolutely better off not being the ones "leading the charge", yet we are. It should fool no-one who understands that the US is the only nation fully capable to project the needed force in an effective and timely manner. If that is easily understood, then the fact that the US's role would be limited to "surveillance and mid-air refueling" (as was the attempted spin in the beginning), is laughable.

While the US, France and England were lobbying the UN for weeks to get approval was when Congressional authorization should have been sought. The use of the phrase "emergency response phase" is just an attempt to skirt the issue; the "emergency" started weeks before the "response". That phrase is much like the phrase "Kinetic Military Action" being bandied about in an attempt to obfuscate and divert attention ("Man-Caused Disaster", anyone?).

Unless something has changed in the last day, Canadian Lt. Gen. Bouchard is in charge of enforcing the No-Fly Zone; the US is still in strategic command.

edit:
According to the vaunted Wikipedia:
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The strategic command of Operation Odyssey Dawn is under the authority of General Carter Ham, the Combatant Commander of the United States Africa Command (AFRICOM), a Unified Combatant Command of the Department of Defense. Tactical command in the theater of operations is under command of Admiral Sam Locklear, the Commander of United States Naval Forces Europe onboard the command ship USS Mount Whitney (LCC-20) in the Mediterranean Sea.[11][23] President Obama stated the US military action will be scaled back soon[24] and is considering handing over the command of the operation to either UK, France or NATO. On the 24th of March, 2011, NATO took command of enforcing the no-fly zone in Libya and is still considering taking control of the rest of the mission.[25] On March 24, 2011, the coalition agreed to have NATO command the no-fly zone,[26] and the U.S. Department of Defense stated that the U.S. will relinquish command of Operation Odyssey Dawn in a few days.[27]

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PostPosted: Fri Mar 25, 2011 3:25 pm 
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To my knowledge, NATO isn't officially doing anything more than "enforcing the no-fly zone." We're not officially participating in the rebellion.

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PostPosted: Fri Mar 25, 2011 3:34 pm 
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strategic = the whole operation
tactical = a portion of the operation

"enforcing the no-fly zone" = tactical
"everything" = strategic

ipso facto: strategic >>>> tactical

Destroying convoys, tanks, artillery, concentrations of Libyan troops etc. may not be "officially participating in the rebellion", but if it walks like a duck...

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PostPosted: Fri Mar 25, 2011 4:34 pm 
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I'm wondering when we're going to see anti-war liberals protesting Obama.

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PostPosted: Fri Mar 25, 2011 4:46 pm 
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@daveweigel: Massive anti-war protests against Obama in 3, 2, never.

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Last edited by Vindicarre on Fri Mar 25, 2011 4:48 pm, edited 1 time in total.

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