May 12, 2011 - Issue 426 |
|||||
|
|||||
The Other Killing:
|
|||||
It happened and received very little attention. Shortly
after I searched the paper looking for explanations for this murder and could find none. It was as if NATO believed that it could act with impunity. This killing comes on the heels of an earlier attempt by NATO to actually kill Qaddafi himself. Though in no way a supporter of Qaddafi, I am angered at
what some people are calling “mission creep.” Though the United Nations
unfortunately passed a resolution calling for a “no fly zone” over Many well-intentioned progressives, including some friends of mine, supported the NATO intervention in the name of protecting civilians from being massacred by forces loyal to Qaddafi. In addition to there being a serious question as to whether a massacre was ever just over the horizon, it is now important for progressive and democratic-minded people to assess what is going on in Libya and what the intentions of the NATO forces happen to be, not to mention the impact of the NATO intervention on the pro-democracy forces within Libya. While Qaddafi’s family was being murdered, to the east in
It is worth noting that the NATO countries felt it was important to go to the United Nations in order to secure a mandate in order to implement an intervention under the cover of a “no fly zone.” Yet that resolution did not call for support of regime change and it definitely did not call for the assassination of Qaddafi and his family. Yet, despite a slowly growing international chorus of criticism of NATO for these aggressive actions, NATO feels no compulsion to explain what it is doing or to cease and desist from the efforts that it is undertaking. While it is quite possible that some individuals in the
administrations of NATO countries believed that they were embarking on
a humanitarian effort, it is impossible to accept that this is what has
been guiding their strategy. The actions of the NATO countries have been
hypocritical in the extreme. Instead, it is more likely that NATO aims
to set up a reliable client state in The only thing that will stop the NATO aggression is an
aroused populace in NATO countries that understands that the airstrikes
underway in The murder of Qaddafi’s son and grandchildren cannot be addressed through a heartfelt apology by President Obama or any other leader of the NATO gang. NATO must withdraw from the conflict, and do so immediately. BlackCommentator.com Editorial Board member, Bill Fletcher, Jr., is a Senior Scholar with the Institute for Policy Studies, the immediate past president ofTransAfrica Forum and co-author of Solidarity Divided: The Crisis in Organized Labor and a New Path toward Social Justice(University of California Press), which examines the crisis of organized labor in the USA. Click here to contact Mr. Fletcher. |
|||||
|
|
||||