Did Qaddafi's End Justify the Means?

How Libya changed the face of humanitarian intervention -- an FP roundtable.

OCTOBER 20, 2011

When international forces struck against Muammar al-Qaddafi's military outside the rebel stronghold of Benghazi in March -- the beginning of the end for the Libyan dictator who was killed on Oct. 20 in his hometown of Sirte -- they were acting on a doctrine called "responsibility to protect," or R2P. The idea, not even a decade old and only embraced by the United Nations in 2005, is that a country's government could be held accountable -- with military force, if necessary -- for failing to ensure the well-being of its citizens. In our November issue, Foreign Policy explores the history of this doctrine -- but what about its future? Was the successful toppling of the Qaddafi regime a new dawn for muscular humanitarianism or a false one? Did the invasion make the world less safe for dictators or for the rest of us? We convened a roundtable of experts to weigh in on what humanitarian intervention in the post-Libya world will look like.

David Bosco: How Libya made humanitarian intervention less likely

Micah Zenko: After Qaddafi, every dictator will want to get his hands on a nuclear weapon

Gareth Evans: Can we stop atrocities without launching an all-out war?

Kyle Matthews: Libya is the beginning of the end for the world's worst villains

 

David Bosco: How Libya made humanitarian intervention less likely

Imagine this alternate reality: In April 1994, thousands of American, British, and French forces seize control of the airport in Kigali, Rwanda, and then fan out across the country to stop what officials describe as an incipient genocide. As they attempt to restore order, the Western troops confront and clash with Hutu extremists. Several American soldiers are killed by snipers and a helicopter crash kills a dozen more. In Washington, Bill Clinton's administration faces outrage over the intervention, which draws immediate comparisons to the failed Somalia mission. Claims by administration officials that they prevented a massive bloodletting are greeted with derision on Capitol Hill, where support for costly humanitarian missions is weak.

All of which is to say that the "responsibility to protect" (R2P), the doctrine that guided this year's international intervention in Libya, has a structural problem, at least insofar as it involves military action to prevent atrocities. Early intervention in Rwanda might have saved as many as 500,000 lives, a stunning achievement. But it's almost certain that such a mission would not have been viewed as a stunning success. The problem is that R2P's successes will always be ambiguous and debatable, dogged by "what if"s. Its costs, meanwhile, will be painfully evident in the form of military expenditures and casualties and in whatever unintended consequences may follow an intervention. For that reason, the doctrine will struggle to build a record of success and cement its place as an international norm.

This dynamic has been apparent in Libya. British, French, and American leaders insist that they averted a massacre in Benghazi, but such claims are impossible to prove and easy to doubt, as many close observers of the situation have. Meanwhile, critics of the operation can without fear of contradiction point to the mission's price tag, the political complexities of post-Qaddafi Libya, and the diplomatic strains that the mission has produced with other U.N. Security Council members and within the NATO alliance. At least in the medium term, Libya has made humanitarian interventions less likely.

Coercive intervention is not the entirety of the R2P doctrine, which is fundamentally an attempt to change conceptions of what national sovereignty means. But a government that is clinging to power by violence can usually only be stopped by force. R2P is well on its way to becoming boilerplate in official reports, resolutions, and speeches. As an operational doctrine, however, it will always have to fight for its life.

David Bosco is an assistant professor at American University's School of International Service and writes the Multilateralist blog for FP.

PATRICK BAZ/AFP/Getty Images

 

TWIGGY11

3:06 AM ET

October 19, 2011

R2P

Responsiblity to Protect( Palestinians). WMD proliferation without signing the NPT! The prime culprit today? ISRAEL. Lets move the UN.

 

KUNINO

11:59 AM ET

October 19, 2011

It will take 30 years to answer some of these questions

It was in many ways a good thing that Mr Gaddafi and a few army pals took over the Libyan national government more than 30 years ago, good in ways reflected in improved living standards for Libyans (i.e., humanitarian ways), not so good for the conduct of some foreign companies with interests in that nation. (Same was true of the Saddam Hussein regime in Iraq -- a time when it was safe to be a Christian there.)

We know that the forces replacing Mr Gaddafi have already bumped off one of their own leaders, apparently to settle some tribal issues. This does not suggest that their years in power will be one more sign of the dawning of the age of Aquarius.

I wish somebody could explain in Foreign Policy how come that insurgents wanted to unseat Mr Gaddafi and this was good reason for the military might of the United States and Europe to be enlisted on their side, while in the same region, insurgents want to unseat Mr Saleh and the US supplies military force to hunt out and kill the insurgents.

This seems to reek of a roll of the dice, or proof that the Libyan insurgents were able to hire better lobbyists (as was Kuwait, pre-Gulf War).

Western officialdom seems to have been fairly (or unfairly) ignorant of the nature and composition of the Libyan president's domestic foes before deciding to support them. Act in haste, the old saying goes, repent at leisure. Perhaps true in both Libya and Yemen.

 

GARVAGH

12:19 PM ET

October 19, 2011

UNSC resolutions on Libya should have been observed

I continue to think it was a mistake to go beyond the UNSC resolutions on Libya. But, let's hope things work out well in Libya. Stability, economic growth, etc.

 

BRANDONT

11:42 AM ET

November 9, 2011

Yup - that was a mistake I think.

The resolutions shouldn't have been overstepped - but we have to ask if it was the right decision in the end. Let's just hope things workout and we can put this behind us as a race.

Time to turn the page and open a new chapter in that region.

 

MASINI

12:26 PM ET

October 23, 2011

All these decades was based

All these decades was based solely on the influence they had on Europe and the U.S. states of this system. How that tyrant could not be controlled, and the powers needed oil to alleged atrocities that are happening on the Libyan people. Why not have taken steps forward? Because everything was controlled. The tyrant had not killed, had been questioned and may be we have the truth. So everything is lost in time, and poses great powers in the role of heroes. ceara

 

AWYAND

8:41 PM ET

October 23, 2011

Iraq?

"...no government possessing WMD has ever been invaded and overthrown by an outside military force."

While that is technically a true statement, the US and its Coalition partners invaded Iraq under the impression that Iraq did in fact possess WMD. It doesn't matter that the perception did not turn out to be the reality.

I also refuse to believe that a superpower will neglect its national security and foreign policy goals altogether when faced with a nuclear-armed enemy, competitor, or state-sponsor of terrorism. Perhaps it won't be a full-scale invasion, but there is more than one way to skin the proverbial cat.

 

DOMINOES

1:30 AM ET

November 10, 2011

Absolutely Not

Gaddafi was a dictator and did terrible things, but what it took to get him out of power and the way he died was a terrible thing. He was a bad person and a bad leader, but even among all of this he kept the country running and apparently things are much worse now in the state of anarchy that the country is running under. Unfortunately for the innocent people of Libya they have to suffer under this same old violence, which they do not deserve. All in all it seems like Gaddafi might have been good for the country in a sense, as he was no worse than a collection agency and he did run a tight ship, there is no doubt about that. Hopefully for the people, the country can get some order and move out of this terrible state they are currently in.

 

CMW333

1:19 AM ET

November 12, 2011

It is extremely difficult for

It is extremely difficult for anyone to make judgement about Gaddafi as we are already biased about our decision thanks to the world media.
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CHANGS

12:41 PM ET

November 12, 2011

People of region must make final decision

Only the people of each area can make the decision on how they are ruled. While we can provide all people our sympathy, each group must decide who governs them and search for a method to achieve their goals.

If they can not vote with ballots then they can always vote with their feet. Flights of refugees from corrupt regions are sometimes the only way a people can express their dissatisfaction with how they are being ruled.

Only the people of a region can earn the right to decide their fate by their actions. Other nations can not impose the type of rule upon a region is the people of the region do not support that type of rule.

ChangS

 

CMW333

12:19 PM ET

November 15, 2011

I to think it was a mistake

I to think it was a mistake to go beyond the UNSC resolutions on Libya. But, let's hope things work out well in Libya.
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DELLACARR

2:59 PM ET

November 15, 2011

Only the people of each area

Only the people of each area can make the decision on how they are ruled. While we can provide all people our sympathy, each group must decide who governs them and search for a method to achieve their goals.
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DELLACARR

7:01 AM ET

November 17, 2011

Gaddafi was a dictator that

Gaddafi was a dictator that is a fact and did terrible things, even though I still suspect the US had enough of him and wanted to boot him out of powerful. They could have ben more subtle. Whose to say that Libya is in a better position now than it was when he was in power. Siem Reap Accommodation

 

RESZKA

4:15 PM ET

November 17, 2011

Possibly the most urgent test

Possibly the most urgent test after Libya as well as Syria is to alter the attitude that every kind of robust response is like stepping on a shifting staircase by having the initial condemnatory step implying a motivation as well as determination to go all the means to full-scale coercive militant force.

 

SERAFINNUNEZ101

10:44 AM ET

November 18, 2011

Peace for Libya...very possible

The end of the Qaddafi regime meant peace for the people of Libya. How will the next government face it? I hope everything will be OK for Libya.