luke warm, on 2011-March-23, 15:50, said:
you might be right there helene, but i don't recall that argument being made over here... if it had, and the genocide was ongoing, it seems that it should have been made before now
Well that's the whole point of the UN resolution. It was made after massacres had taken place in Zawiya and it was the thread on Bengazi that pushed it through. The mandate is solely to protect civilians. The American and British political and military leaders are very clear that they are constrained by the mandate. The French seem more aggressive, though.
I concede that this could easily just be something they say in public in order to get the Chinese and Russians to abstain from vetoing, and maybe behind closed doors they work on ways to get more directly involved in ousting Gadaffi while not upsetting the Chinese and Russians too much. But even so, comparing this to Iraq is just absurd. As Kenberg notes, a comparison to Somalia (which was a lot more popular among politically correct opinion makers) is more apt. A comparison to Bosnia, Kosova (I refuse to spell it "Kosovo") and East Timor may be apt, too.
And as for the significance of the fact that US happens to have a democrat president at the moment: Until a week ago Obama was very reluctant to getting involved. He may have been the last person on this Earth to make his mind up. Not blaming him for that, just saying that he can't have influenced many, certainly not outside the US, and certainly not influencing people to be in favor of the war, as he was reluctant while his allies were more pushy.
The world would be such a happy place, if only everyone played Acol :) --- TramTicket