Analysts: More Libyan bloodshed could prompt U.S., NATO intervention
source: http://www.cnn.com/2011/WORLD/africa/02/24/libya.military.intervention/
-
-
- ZiggyStrange
- added this
http://www.cnn.com/2011/WORLD/africa/02/24/libya.military.intervention/
By Michael Martinez, CNNFebruary 24, 2011 9:17 p.m. EST
(CNN) -- If the U.S. military were to intervene in an increasingly chaotic Libya, it would most likely be part of a NATO action in which Libyan bloodshed has reached a humanitarian crisis, analysts said Thursday.
As reports emerged Thursday about deadly clashes between leader Moammar Gadhafi's forces and anti-government protesters in the town of Zawiya near Tunisia, analysts highlighted how Gadhafi has already pledged to fight a rebellion to martyrdom.
Military intervention "is something which I hope doesn't happen, but it looks as though at some point that it should happen," said Simon Henderson, senior fellow at the Washington Institute for Near East Policy.
"What's an acceptable number of civilian deaths? I don't know. Choose your figure," Henderson said. "At the very least, instead of having a casualty list certainly in the hundreds, possibly in the thousands, we don't want a casualty list numbering in the tens of thousands, or 100,000 or so."
After 10 days of protest, Gadhafi has lost control of the eastern portion of a country he has ruled for 42 years, and analysts portrayed him as a dictator desperately clinging to power. Members of his government have defected, and in a sign of growing international pressure, Switzerland ordered Thursday that Gadhafi's assets be frozen.
"You've got to assume the worst about Moammar Gadhafi," Nicholas Burns, a professor at Harvard Kennedy School and former under secretary of state between 2005 and 2008, told CNN. "With his back to the wall, he's going to go out in a blaze of vicious attacks."
North Atlantic Treaty Organization defense chiefs ought to be holding discussions about "not taking action but preparation" for the Libyan crisis, said Robert Kagan, a Mideast expert who worked in the State Department under President Ronald Reagan.
"I don't think anyone is talking about immediate military actions now," Kagan told CNN, especially as 167 U.S. citizens are waiting on a ferry to leave Libya.
U.S. officials have said all options were under consideration, including sanctions and enforcement of a no-fly zone, to try to keep the Libyan government from attacking protesters.
MORE - http://www.cnn.com/2011/WORLD/africa/02/24/libya.military.intervention/
-
- groups:
- Community, News and Politics, Politics, Actual News, 8 more
-
- tags:
- NATO, Actual News, US intervention, Lybya
-
-
KSirys
-
Let's hope it's not the US... we have already lost to many lives and to much money!
- 2 years ago
-
KSirys
-
-
ZiggyStrange
-
KSirys:
It's the last thing I want but Nato is going to have a heavy US contingent, and we have Navy assets nearby. But this won't be like Iraq, or Afghanistan, this will be short, and to the point if it comes to Military strikes. Mercenaries only fight while they are paid, and tend not to engage US troops.
Let's hope it doesn't come to that.
- 2 years ago
-
ZiggyStrange
-
-
savvy7
-
Where the hell are France, Germany and England? Don't they use oil, too? Why is it always the USA, riding to the rescue, especially since we are already stretched thin as it is? I vote we don't go in unless the Euros put some serious boots on the ground, too.
- 2 years ago
-
savvy7
-
-
KSirys
-
savvy7:
great point! i rather we don't go and save our troops from more war and fatherless kids.
- 2 years ago
-
KSirys
-
-
Psymoniac
-
first some mustard gas, then the UN...
- 2 years ago
-
Psymoniac
-
-
Angeliron
-
...Send it!
- 2 years ago
-
Angeliron
-
-
August_K
-
I hope NATO does something soon. They can't drag their feet on this one.
I just hope the Libyan people stay strong and united after the dust settles and figure out
how to rebuild, feed the people and get some trusted people in place to help govern. - 2 years ago
-
August_K
-
-
royulery
-
his self importance trumps any suffering or death, he is after all a "royal".
we have had bad presidents but nothing on the level of this tyrant.
- 2 years ago
-
royulery
-
-
fudoki
-
Gotta get in there and secure that oil!
Funny, Khadaffi killing civilians hasn't bothered these swine over the past 42 years.... Hmmmm...
- 2 years ago
-
fudoki
-
-
COMMONSENSEFORCOMMONGOOD_COM
-
How many dead bodies constitute a "humanitarian crisis"? If the precise number could be provided, I'm sure that a sufficient number of Libyans would willingly march into gunfire, in order to meet the threshold requirement for "humanitarian" help. Aren't you?
- 2 years ago
-
COMMONSENSEFORCOMMONGOOD_COM
-
-
ZiggyStrange
-
COMMONSENSEFORCOMMONGOOD_COM:
I agree they would. I have no idea what NATO allies are planning.
Whatever gets done in Lybia will have to be a concerted effort.
It's a humanitarian crisis so they have to intervene. - 2 years ago
-
ZiggyStrange
-
-
ArchDruid [removed]
- This comment was removed by its owner.
-
ArchDruid [removed]
-
-
ZiggyStrange
-
ArchDruid:
It's shaping up that way now.
- 2 years ago
-
ZiggyStrange
-
-
caverat101
-
yeah cuz what the american people need is our runaway government 'liberating' more countries.
- 2 years ago
-
caverat101
-
-
toyotabedzrock
-

-
Pulled this photo from an anonnews press release.
http://anonnews.org/?p=press&a=item&i=529
http://anonnews.org/?p=press&a=item&i=511 - 2 years ago
-
toyotabedzrock
-
-
COMMONSENSEFORCOMMONGOOD_COM
-
toyotabedzrock:
LOL! What? It's collateral damage.....we've factored it in already. What? C'mon, you got a expect a little bad with the good. Don't cha?
- 2 years ago
-
COMMONSENSEFORCOMMONGOOD_COM
-
-
martianrocker
-
WHAT ARE THEY WAITING FOR AN INVITATION FROM THE POPE?
- 2 years ago
-
martianrocker
-
-
JohnA [removed]
-
I don't know how much more they need, it's pretty obvious Gadhafi is nutty as a fruitcake and needs a bullet in the brain right now. $5 a gallon gas will shut the US economy down. Shoot him, shoot him now.
- 2 years ago
-
JohnA [removed]
-
-
ZiggyStrange
-
JohnA:
I don't want to admit it, but this guy has to go down before there is more bloodshed.
- 2 years ago
-
ZiggyStrange
-
-
fudoki
-
JohnA:
The high gas prices were predicted 9 months ago and have nothing to do with Libya or any other democratic movements in the Middle East. By fall we'll be paying $6 per gallon and it likely won't come down, ever. Get used to the new normal.
- 2 years ago
-
fudoki
-
-
Angeliron
-
ZiggyStrange:
Thanks for the "Heads up". I appreciate your suggestions! Peace.
- 2 years ago
-
Angeliron
-
-
Dagum
-
Not another one.
- 2 years ago
-
Dagum
-
-
ZiggyStrange
-
Dagum:
Key word is NATO. We can't have a war, but we can participate in a NATO intervention.
The threat is just a head's up letting Lybia know they need to chill. - 2 years ago
-
ZiggyStrange
-
-
kennymotown
-
Isn't it part of the U.S.Marine Corp's motto to the shore's of Tripoli?
- 2 years ago
-
kennymotown
-
-
ZiggyStrange
-
kennymotown:
That's right, this should be interesting. A NATO intervention would be good.
This way we don't have another war.+^d
- 2 years ago
-
ZiggyStrange
-
-
kennymotown
-
ZiggyStrange:
I think one well placed air strike, could end this tomorrow!
- 2 years ago
-
kennymotown
-
-
ZiggyStrange
-
kennymotown:
Remember this guy got shelled once and he shut up for 25 years.
- 2 years ago
-
ZiggyStrange
-
-
kennymotown
-
ZiggyStrange:
Now he will be shut up permanently!
- 2 years ago
-
kennymotown
-
-
royulery
-
ZiggyStrange:
we sent a rocket through his window and killed his son.
- 2 years ago
-
royulery
-
-
ZiggyStrange
-
royulery:
I remember
- 2 years ago
-
ZiggyStrange
-
-
royulery
-
kennymotown:
500 marines with greek mercenaries marched from alexandria and burned ships at tripoli in 1804. they helped in the release of american hostages from the tripoli pirates.
hostages, an old story.
- 2 years ago
-
royulery
-
-
Angeliron
-
kennymotown:
...or one well placed bullet!
- 2 years ago
-
Angeliron
-
-
kennymotown
-
royulery:
But none the less part of the Marine Corp tradition!
- 2 years ago
-
kennymotown