.
10/18/12, "The Libya Lie," Victor Davis Hanson, NRO
have been told about Libya over the last two years is untrue.
A free Libya was supposed to be proof of President Obama’s
enlightened “reset” Middle East policy. When insurgency broke out there,
the United States joined France and Great Britain in bombing Moammar
Qaddafi out of power — and supposedly empowering a democratic Arab
Spring regime. Not a single American life was lost.
Libyans, like most in the Arab world, were supposed to appreciate the
new, enlightened American foreign policy. Obama’s June 2009 Cairo
speech had praised Islam and apologized for the West. A new “lead from
behind” multilateralism was said to have superseded George W. Bush’s
neo-imperialist interventions of the past.
Obama’s mixed racial identity and his father’s Muslim heritage would
also win over the hearts and minds of Libyans after the Qaddafi
nightmare. During this summer’s Democratic convention, Obama supporters
trumpeted the successes of his Middle East policy: Osama bin Laden dead,
al-Qaeda defanged, and Arab Spring reformers in place of dictators.
To keep that shining message viable until the November election, the
Obama administration and the media had been willing to overlook or
mischaracterize all sorts of disturbing events. We had asked for a
United Nations resolution for humanitarian aid and a no-fly zone to
intervene in Libya, but then deliberately exceeded it by bombing
Qaddafi’s forces — after bypassing the U.S. Congress in favor of a
go-ahead from the Arab League.
Libya was not so much liberated as descending into the chaos of
tribal payback.
Former Qaddafi supporters and African mercenaries were
executed by those we helped. Islamists began consolidating power,
desecrating a British military cemetery and driving out Westerners.
On the eleventh anniversary of 9/11, a radical Islamist hit team with
heavy weapons stormed the American consulate in Benghazi, killing
Ambassador Chris Stevens and three other Americans.
In response, White House press secretary Jay Carney, National
Intelligence Director James Clapper, and U.N. ambassador Susan Rice
desperately insisted that the murders were a one-time, ad hoc
demonstration gone awry, without much larger significance. Supposedly, a few Muslim outliers —
inflamed over one American’s anti-Islamic Internet video — had
overreacted and stormed the consulate. Such anger was “natural,” assured
the president.
But why would furor over an obscure, months-old Internet video just
happen to coincide with the 9/11 anniversary attack? Do demonstrators
customarily bring along rocket-propelled grenades, mortars, and heavy
machine guns? Why did the Libyan government attribute the killings to an
al-Qaeda affiliate when the Obama administration would not?
Forget those questions: For most of September, desperate
administration officials still clung to the myth that the Libyan
catastrophe was a result of a single obnoxious video. At the United
Nations, the president castigated the uncouth film. Secretary of State
Hillary Clinton lamented the senseless spontaneous violence that grew
out of one American’s excesses, as she spoke beside the returning
coffins of the slain Americans.
Nonetheless, more disturbing facts kept emerging: Ambassador Stevens
repeatedly had warned his State Department superiors in vain of
impending Islamist violence. Security personnel — to no avail — had also
urged beefing up the protection of the consulate, prompting former
regional security officer Eric Nordstrom to say in exasperation that
“the Taliban is on the inside of the building.” Video of the attack
revealed that there had been no demonstration at all, but rather a
full-fledged terrorist assault.
Even as the fantasy of a spur-of-the-moment demonstration dissipated,
administration officials tried to salvage it — and with it their
idealistic policy in the Middle East. Vice President Joe Biden told a
flat-out whopper in last week’s debate, saying the administration hadn’t
been informed that Americans in Libya had ever requested more security.
He scapegoated the intelligence agencies for supposedly failing to warn
the administration of the threat.
The new administration narrative faulted not one video, but the
intelligence community for misleading them about the threat of an
al-Qaeda hit on an American consulate — and the Romney campaign for
demanding answers about a slain ambassador and his associates.
Meanwhile, the State Department, the Obama reelection team, and the
intelligence community were all pointing fingers at each other.
What the Obama administration could not concede was the truth: The
lead-from-behind intervention in Libya had proved a blueprint for
nothing. Libya had descended into chaos. Radical Islam had either
subverted or hijacked the Arab Spring. Al-Qaeda was not dismantled by
the death of bin Laden or by the stepped-up drone assassination missions
in Pakistan. Egypt was becoming Islamist. Syria was a bloody mess. Iran
was on the way to becoming nuclear. Obama had won America no more good
will in the Middle East than had prior presidents.
In other words, the administration’s entire experience in Libya — and in most of the Middle East
in general — has been a bright and shining
lie." via Free Republic
----------------------------------------------------
Ed. note: On an interview program Thursday night, a Capitol Hill reporter noted Obama has already said if he's re-elected he'll consider it a mandate from the American people to do whatever he wants. Obama's answer to most things after his first election was, "I won," so a second election would be a bigger version of that, the Beltway reporter surmised.
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