Townhall...
Obama’s
Mideast Mess
By Oliver North
8/19/2011
Having
completed his three-state
“Midwest listening tour,” President Barack Obama is now on vacation on
Martha’s
Vineyard. According to his handlers, in between golf outings and
cocktail
parties, our president also is working on yet another speech on how he
will
balance our government’s books and put Americans back to work. Those
who
believe that ought to recall his remarks March 22, five days after U.S.
and
allied military operations began in Libya: “I said at the outset that
this was
going to be a matter of days and not weeks.”
This
week, we passed the five-month
mark since U.S. and NATO airstrikes began in Libya. Nearly 30,000 air
missions
-- including more than 250 cruise missile strikes -- have been flown
since
Obama announced that the U.S. military’s “unique capabilities” would be
used to
“take down Libyan air defenses.” Rebel units armed, trained and
supported by
British and French special operations units are inching toward Tripoli,
but
Moammar Gadhafi remains in power, and his depredations against the
Libyan
people continue. On Tuesday, forces loyal to the dictator fired at
least one
Scud missile -- a weapon capable of delivering chemical warheads -- at
opponents
of his regime.
Though
the ongoing “humanitarian
mission to protect civilians in Libya” was approved by United Nations
Security
Council Resolution 1973, U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-Moon is having
second
thoughts. On Aug. 12, he issued a statement saying he’s “deeply
concerned by
reports of the unacceptably large number of civilian casualties as a
result of
the conflict in Libya.” Exactly what “unacceptably large” means was not
explained, and calls to the U.N. press office were not returned. Nor
are there
any definitive numbers on how many have been killed or wounded since
hostilities commenced March 17. Some human rights groups put the number
at more
than 30,000. So much for the president’s claim that U.S. forces were
being
committed in Libya on a “mission to protect civilians.”
Whether
this claim and Obama’s bogus
“days and not weeks” comment were simply naive Utopian idealism, gross
incompetence or outright duplicity, well, we may never know. What we do
know is
that the operation in Libya -- like the rest of the O-Team’s hesitant,
ambivalent and contradictory Mideast policy -- is a fiasco.
Egypt,
once the linchpin of U.S.
policy in the Muslim world, is in nearly total disarray. After weeks of
rioting
in Cairo and other cities along the Nile, our detached commander in
chief
finally said Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak had to go. When a
military junta
-- encouraged by the Obama administration -- replaced Mubarak on Feb.
10, White
House officials babbled euphorically about an “Arab spring” and a “new
era of
democracy.”
It
hasn’t happened. The Supreme
Council of the Armed Forces, now running things in Cairo, has put
Mubarak on
trial but has proved to be unable to restore law and order, stem
inflation or
improve employment opportunities for young Egyptians. Tourism, once the
source
of nearly 20 percent of the Egyptian economy, is nonexistent.
Virulently
anti-Western candidates endorsed by the Muslim Brotherhood’s Freedom
and
Justice Party are expected to dominate parliamentary elections in
October.
Worse
still, the Egyptian army, long
regarded by Washington to be a stabilizing force in the region, now
appears to
be less capable of keeping radical Islamic terror elements in check. A
pipeline
across the Egyptian-controlled Sinai Desert -- providing fuel to both
Israel
and Jordan -- has been targeted five times since February. And this
past week,
terrorists killed eight Israelis and wounded 25 more near the Red Sea
port of
Eilat. Israeli security officials say the perpetrators were Hamas
gunmen from
Gaza who transited the Egyptian Sinai security zone into Israel.
Apparently,
the bloody assault in
Eilat caught the attention of the very distracted folks at 1600
Pennsylvania
Ave. and made them realize that things aren’t all they should be in the
Middle
East. The White House eventually released a three-line written
statement
condemning the attack. But first, the White House press office
announced new
measures to be taken against the oppressive, Iranian-supported regime
in Syria.
According
to this statement, also issued
without further comment from Obama, our president finally has decided
that
Bashar Assad should “step aside” in Damascus and that a new executive
order
with “unprecedented sanctions” will “deepen the financial isolation of
the
Assad regime.” A careful reading of the executive order reveals that it
does
little more than bar U.S. citizens and companies from doing business in
Syria.
It’s disingenuous and not much different from the futile restrictions
currently
imposed on Iran for its nuclear weapons program.
To
be effective, real sanctions must
bar all individuals and companies -- U.S.-based or not -- from doing
business
in Syria if they want to do business in America. But that would require
formulating a genuine Mideast policy and a viable national energy
policy and
having real leadership. It’s a lot easier to simply go on vacation and
issue a
news release.
Read
it at Townhall
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