This is the consequence of our intervention in Libya:

timbuktu

Mali's junta brushed off calls to give up power on Tuesday as world powers sounded the alarm and Islamists tightened their grip on the north, ordering women to wear veils in storied Timbuktu.

Feeling the bite of mounting sanctions and pressure from all sides, the soldiers who seized power on March 22 proposed a national meeting on Thursday and dispatched a team to Nigeria for talks on an exit from the growing crisis.

Since the coup, ostensibly over the government's failure to stamp out a northern rebellion, the junta has lost over half the country's territory – an area the size of France – in a matter of days to the rebel juggernaut.

Islamists seized control of the ancient trading hub Timbuktu over the weekend alongside Tuareg rebels and have since chased out their allies and declared to residents and religious leaders that they were imposing sharia law.

This is the direct consequence of NATO's intervention in Libya. This shouldn't an afterthought. This should be the top of the news. 

We did this.

Comments:


Gaby Charing
Joined
Sep '11
Gaby Charing

Maybe so. When you get rid of a dictator like Saddam or Gaddafi, you create massive instability. It's the price you pay. Except that the people who actually pay are the ones who were paying while those monsters were in power.

From what I read this morning, the Tuareg rebels (who have been in rebellion for years) are not Islamists, and are putting up a fight against al-Quaeda (for it is they, and they have been in Algeria all this time, regrouping, without us apparently being terribly bothered).

Yes, it is bad that a democratically elected government is ovetthrown by a military coup. But Mali has a long and troubled history, with slavery openly practised. The country hasn't been at peace. If the Tuareg carve out a territory for themselves, that isn't the end of the world. Having fought all these years, I can't see them just handing it over to al-Quaeda. Let's see what happens.

Claire Berlinski, Ed.

Qaeda using Mali crisis to expand:

PARIS/BAMAKO (Reuters) - France warned on Wednesday the seizure of northern Mali by a Tuareg-led rebellion was playing into the hands of local al Qaeda units, urging neighbors including Algeria to do more to tackle the threat.

For long one of the most stable democracies in West Africa, Mali has plunged into turmoil since a widely condemned March 22 coup that emboldened Tuareg rebels in their quest for a northern homeland.

They have been joined by Islamists bent on imposing Islamic sharia law across the whole of the moderate Muslim state, the latest security worry for a region battling organized crime and home-grown militant groups such as Nigeria's Boko Haram.
"We fear that in this confused situation al Qaeda in the Islamic Maghreb (AQIM) will take advantage of the situation to expand its perimeter of activity and strengthen the terrorist threat," French Foreign Ministry spokesman Bernard Valero said.

We're seeing what happens already.

jhimmi
Joined
Oct '10
jhimmi

Ah, the Arab Spring. By intervening anywhere in this part of the world, apparently we're either propping up totalitarian secular dictators or aiding totalitarian Islamist insurgents. Either way we lose.

John Murdoch
Joined
Sep '11
John Murdoch

Claire,

I will confess that Mali isn't among the countries in Africa to which I pay much attention. 

I don't see how or why this is directly related to NATO's "kinetic intervention" (or whatever they called it) in Libya. Could you connect the dots? 

genferei
Joined
Oct '10
genferei

Claire Berlinski, Ed.: Qaeda using Mali crisis to expand:

PARIS/BAMAKO (Reuters) - ...

For long one of the most stable democracies in West Africa...

This must not be a terribly high bar. The ousted president Toure was only the second 'democratically' elected head of state since a military coup ousted the one-party leader in 1991 and, after a year or so held elections.  The Chairman of the Transitional Committee for the Salvation of the People in '91-'92? Why, Toure, of course.

Claire Berlinski, Ed.

This explains it pretty well. Basically, the Libyan regime's collapse prompted a spike in weapons trafficking, which allowed al-Qaida and the Tuareg rebels to get their hands on sophisticated weapons and ammunition stolen from Libyan army depots. Thanks to Qaddafi the Tuareg had a lot of combat experience. After Qaddafi fell they flooded back to the Sahel and initiated a rebellion in northern Mali, which in turn led to the coup--and this is apt to spread to Mauritania and Niger. It's about the worst imaginable outcome. 


Joined
Apr '11
Viator

The birth of a Tuareg  (Toureg) homeland?

Since 1916 there have been at least five Tuareg rebellions.

AZAWAD

"The area is notorious for banditry and drug smuggling. The area is believed to contain a great deal of potential mineral wealth, including petroleum and uranium."

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Azawad

"(Tuareg) Men also begin wearing a veil at age 25 which conceals their entire face excluding their eyes. This veil is never removed, even in front of family members. Women are not veiled. Tuareg belong to the Maliki sect of Islam, resulting from the teachings of the great prophet, El Maghili, who came among them in the early 16th century."

Are the Tuaregs and Al Qaeda in an alliance of convenience? The Tuaregs don't look much like orthodox Sunnis. 

Further, this is just another example of N. African and Muslim devolution as the various centers fail and cannot hold. Egypt is edging towards breakup, Syria towards sectarian warfare. The Kurds are working on their own homeland. My bet is there will be continued conflict and devolution unless an historic strongman steps forward.

http://www.mnlamov.net/english/93-the-renewal-of-armed-struggle-in-azawad.html

Edited on April 4, 2012 at 4:28pm
Aodhan
Joined
Nov '10
Aodhan

"We did this."

I get the impression "we"--whoever that is (does it include me?)--did not act entirely alone, but that "they"--whoever they are (does it exclude me?)--had something to do with it too.

Claire Berlinski, Ed.

Aodhan:"We did this."

I get the impression "we"--whoever that is (does it include me?)--did not act entirely alone, but that "they"--whoever they are (does it exclude me?)--had something to do with it too. · 15 minutes ago

That will be small comfort when a state the size of France controlled by al Qaeda does what a state controlled by al Qaeda may be expected to do.

John Murdoch
Joined
Sep '11
John Murdoch

Claire,

Qaddafi maintained his rule by using Taureg mercenaries. When he was deposed, the Tauregs went home. Taking their (Qaddafi-supplied) weapons with them. 

Let's consider the alternatives:

No intervention:

  1. Qaddafi is left to crush the nascent Libyan rebellion--using the Tuareg mercenaries. Nobody intervenes.
  2. When the rebellion is crushed, the Tuareg go home--as they have before. With their weapons.

Intervention:

  1. NATO provides support for the Libyan rebels. 
  2. When the rebellion succeeds, the Tuareg go home--as they have before. With their weapons.

I will grant that Al Qaeda in the Maghreb may well have provided funds, food, ammo, and more weapons. But I would think that any conceivable outcome in Libya--good or bad--was going to result in substantially improving the weaponry of the Tuareg. 

The colonial African pseudo-nations are dissolving--the borders, governments, and institutions of their European colonists are disappearing. That has happened in Somalia; it's happening now in western Africa; it has happened to a lesser degree in central Africa. 

This is the devolution of European colonialism. Deeply saddening--but not something for which I feel the need to put on a hair shirt.

Aodhan
Joined
Nov '10
Aodhan

I am no more thrilled by the prospect of Malian Islamification than you are Claire.

What exactly do you mean by "We did this"? Are you distributing responsibility? If so, across whom exactly, and on what basis?

I personally feel I am entirely independent of this intervention--that I neither did it, nor was it done to me.

Do you take a different view?

Claire Berlinski, Ed.

Aodhan:"We did this."

I get the impression "we"--whoever that is (does it include me?)--did not act entirely alone, but that "they"--whoever they are (does it exclude me?)--had something to do with it too. · 15 minutes ago

That will be small comfort when a state the size of France controlled by al Qaeda does what a state controlled by al Qaeda may be expected to do. · 8 minutes ago

Edited on April 4, 2012 at 5:41pm
Claire Berlinski, Ed.

John Murdoch: Claire,

Qaddafi maintained his rule by using Taureg mercenaries. When he was deposed, the Tauregs went home. Taking their (Qaddafi-supplied) weapons with them. 

Let's consider the alternatives ...

Among the alternatives: Recognize that involvement in this situation or any situation like this demands a massive commitment to post-conflict stabilization, in the absence of which complete regional destabilization is likely--a lesson that has been amply demonstrated in the past decade in Iraq and Afghanistan. At the very least, someone should have anticipated--many did anticipate--the problem of controlling Libya's borders and stanching the flow of weapons.

It's easy to say, "Well, that's not our problem." Except now it is. It's easy to say, "Well, the region would have gone up in flames anyway." Perhaps. But we certainly poured fuel on the fire.


Joined
Feb '11
Hang On

Yes, let us all become extremely worried and spend countless billions when a landmass the size of France with no water falls into the hands of al Qaeda.  In this land, there are several thousand people because the area has no water and can support no people. The people are salt traders, camel and goat herders. By all means, become very, very worried. 

You will only be worried if you think the US is and should be policeman of the world.

Claire Berlinski, Ed.

Aodhan: 

What exactly do you mean by "We did this"? Are you distributing responsibility? If so, across whom exactly, and on what basis?

We all share a responsibility for the things our democratically-elected government does. None of us are individually powerful enough to influence the decision to go to war, but when our country does, and when something like this happens, it should be cause for some serious national introspection. We can't just say "Whoops, seems we may have destabilized half of Africa and brought al Qaeda to power in Mali--and God knows where, next!" and shrug. 

Claire Berlinski, Ed.
Hang On: You will only be worried if you think the US is and should be policeman of the world. · 1 minute ago

Or if you think Al-Qaeda in the Islamic Maghreb has just established a rogue state where Mali used to be, which is about as serious a threat to European security as might be imagined.  Libya's on the verge of disintegration, Niger is threatened, Mauritania, Algeria and Cote d'Ivoire might be affected, and it is very easy to see the US getting drawn in out of necessity this time, rather than on R2P grounds. It's really looking like the worst-case scenario.
 

Yeah...ok.
Joined
Jan '11
Yeah...ok.

Things could always be worse I suppose.

I do not comprehend the full extent of my ignorance regarding foreign policy. Nevertheless I fail to see why a Ron Paul approach to foreign affairs would not be an improvement over existing policies.

Carry a big stick and don't be afraid to use it.

Claire Berlinski, Ed.

Yeah...ok.: Things could always be worse I suppose.

I do not comprehend the full extent of my ignorance regarding foreign policy. Nevertheless I fail to see why a Ron Paul approach to foreign affairs would not be an improvement over existing policies.

I'm leaning more and more that way myself. To hell with them all.

Gaby Charing
Joined
Sep '11
Gaby Charing

Algeria have dealt ruthlessly with Islamists over the years. The al-Quaeda group who have moved into Mali are small in number. The Tuareg rebellion has been going on for ages. The men cover their faces because they ride camels in the desert. The women don't, but are also veiled. It doesn't make them Islamists. It makes no sense at all for the Tuareg to roll over and let al-Quaeda control the territory they have been fighting for for so long.

Like Saddam, Gaddafi had to go.

And I don't take at face value *anything* that the French do or say in or about Africa. 'Perfide' is the word for them.

Aaron Miller
Joined
May '10
Aaron Miller

Would a Republican President have done the same? I wouldn't be surprised.

I was against intervention in Libya. But I don't see how America or NATO can improve the situation now. Even if we bear some responsibility for how this turned out, would it be responsible to intervene now for the goal of stability without reasonable likelihood of success?

John Murdoch
Joined
Sep '11
John Murdoch

Claire Berlinski, Ed.

John Murdoch: 

Let's consider the alternatives ...

Among the alternatives: Recognize that involvement in this situation or any situation like this demands a massive commitment to post-conflict stabilization, in the absence of which complete regional destabilization is likely.... At the very least, someone should have anticipated...the problem of controlling Libya's borders and stanching the flow of weapons.

What borders?

Libya, Algeria, Mali, Niger, and Chad all border the desert. The southern border of Libya makes the U.S. -Mexican border look like the Iron Curtain. 

That territory is populated by the Tuareg. They have been fighting against (largely French) colonial regimes and colonial borders for over a hundred years. 

This is part of the devolution of European colonialism: the arbitrary lines (literally) drawn in the sand by the Europeans are being re-drawn by the people who actually live there. Sending in a "massive commitment to post-conflict stabilization" to re-establish French colonial borders in the name of defeating Al Qaeda seems to be an extremely long stretch.

Might not engagement with the Tuareg, and re-defining some borders to reflect the actual ethnic/tribal areas make more sense?


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