Skip to content or view screen version

End the US-led Armed Intervention in Libya

Citizens Action Party | 23.03.2011 12:34 | Anti-militarism | Social Struggles | Terror War | World

Akbayan (Citizens Action Party) supports the democratic opposition in Libya that seeks to end the 43-year-old dictatorship of Muammar Ghadafie. It cannot, however, support the massive armed intervention launched by the United States, France, and Britain on Sunday, March 20.




A “No Fly Zone” to protect civilians is one thing. An armed assault aimed at regime change is another thing altogether. The latter is the intent of the US-led intervention, which, although displaying the fig-leaf of a United Nations Security Council resolution, goes far beyond the defensive aims of a no-fly zone to cross over into aggression against Libya.

Firing on ground troops and preemptively and indiscriminately destroying anti-aircraft installations will bring about precisely that loss of life that the intervention ostensibly seeks to prevent. Civilians are being killed by the western assault when civilians were supposedly the people the action was supposed to protect.

The fight for democracy waged by the Libyan people must be supported, but not by western military action, that is an instrument of regime change. This action may ostensibly have humanitarian objectives, but its main objective is to reassert western hegemony in a region that is caught up in the winds of democratic change.

Owing to its support for authoritarian regimes in the Middle East, the US has lost much of its credibility among the Arab peoples. Indeed, the US may be said to be one of the targets of the Arab democratic revolution. In this context, the intervention in Libya for regime change is a belated US and western attempt to appear as a pro-democratic force, shore up its tattered legitimacy, and remind the Arab nations of its strategic hegemony in the region.

The West’s “armed intervention for democracy “will not advance the cause of democracy. Indeed, it will discredit it by associating democracy with a western show of force. The intervention in Libya now seeks stoking forces as powerful as the democratic movement: Arab nationalism and Islamic solidarity. It will end up creating conflicts among movements, which should be complementary, and the only victor will be western hegemony.

We in Akbayan call for an immediate end to the US-led war on Libya.

We call on global civil society and for governments and peoples throughout the global south to support the Libyan people’s struggle for democracy against Ghadafie.

We ask especially the democratic forces and transition governments in Tunisia and Egypt to come to the aid of the Libyan people.

We call for an end to all efforts to maintain or reassert US hegemony in the Middle East.

AKBAYAN (Philippines)

 http://www.akbayan.org.ph/

Citizens Action Party

Comments

Hide the following 2 comments

France of all places

23.03.2011 21:35

To end this there must be a Nuremberg tribunal which holds the war criminals responsible.

In Europe the standard procedure for this is the Hague court, to which the US are not subscribed because it makes special exemptions for founding members instead of equal law for all.

France of all places is the most active component in this war. That is very much unlike the Iraq war, although it has been said that their stance in that one was a fraud as well, but it resembles the Kosovo war. When after just too much secret proxy meddling sectarian violence went through the roof, NATO bombed everything and some greyish bogeyman died in a jail cell at the Hague in a trial just as erratic as the peace process, because a summit in France had said so. It is very unlikely that in the Libya war, in which France plays a similar role, the Hague could come anywhere near Nuremberg standards - probably Weimar would be a closer bet. This is the key difference to the Iraq war - there is no international institution which could successfully judge it, anything like this would have to be created first.

Gaddafi has claimed that Sarkozy was clinically insane. Whatever it may be that does not exempt him from responsibility for the war crimes which followed the declarations of hostilities, as well as those that preceded them.

no justice no peace


Arrogance

24.03.2011 12:55

Your arrogance is incredible. Who do you think you are, sitting in the Philippines, to dictate to the people of Libya who they should or should not request help from when trying to overthrow Gaddafi?

Ben Ally