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Extracted Text (OCR)
Article 2.
The Financial Times
Why Libya sceptics were proved badly
wrong
Anne-Marie Slaughter
August 24, 2011 -- Let us do a thought experiment. Imagine the UN
did not vote to authorise the use of force in Libya in March. Nato did
nothing; Colonel Muammer Gaddafi over-ran Benghazi; the US stood
by; the Libyan opposition was reduced to sporadic uprisings, quickly
crushed. The regimes in Yemen and Syria took note, and put down
their own uprisings with greater vigour. The west let brutality and
oppression triumph again in the Middle East.
This is the scenario many wise heads were effectively arguing for
with their strong stands against intervention to stop Col Gaddafi.
Over the months those analysts have reminded us of their views,
calling Libya a quagmire. This week one of the leading proponents of
that position, my friend and colleague Richard Haass, shifted gears —
but only to remind us just how hard the road ahead in Libya 1s likely
to be. I do not know anyone, regardless of the side they took in the
initial debate, who thinks this task will be easy; indeed, the battle
against Col Gaddafi is not yet won. But not so fast. Before we focus
on what must happen next, let us pause for a minute and reflect on
that initial debate and the lessons to be learnt.
The first is that, against the sceptics, it clearly can be in the US and
the west’s strategic interest to help social revolutions fighting for the
values we espouse and proclaim. The strategic interest in helping the
Libyan opposition came from supporting democracy and human
rights, but also being seen to live up to those values by the 60 per
cent majority of Middle Eastern populations who are under 30 and
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| Filename | HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_024599.jpg |
| File Size | 0.0 KB |
| OCR Confidence | 85.0% |
| Has Readable Text | Yes |
| Text Length | 1,714 characters |
| Indexed | 2026-02-04T16:54:47.143206 |