Libya Fails Powell Doctrine
By DICK MORRIS
Published on TheHill.com on
March 22, 2011
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Gen. Colin Powell's enduring contribution to American foreign
policy is the Powell Doctrine, defining when and how American
military power should be used. The doctrine has three main
precepts: Avoid mission creep, clearly define your goals, and
plan an exit strategy before you go in. Obama's Libya
intervention flunks on all three counts.
Avoid mission creep? It's too late. The mission has already
crept. It was sold to us as a no-fly zone, designed to stop
Moammar Gadhafi's air force from pounding rebel positions,
evening the odds in the conflict. Of course, there would be a
need to neutralize Gadhafi's air defenses to protect our planes
as they patrolled the skies. But already it is clear that we are
bombing everything in sight, crippling Gadhafi's armor, forcing
his withdrawal from key cities and crippling his command and
control structure. It is not a no-fly zone. It is full aerial
warfare.
And if Gadhafi does not leave and the regime is unchanged,
are we prepared to go home without his resignation?
These questions are precisely the ones that Powell suggested be
adjudicated before, not after, we have begun to attack. But in
the fuzzy, wooly-headed thinking of this administration, one
wonders if they were ever even asked.
The decision to attack Libya was made because NATO allies
dragged Hillary into action when she toured their capitals last
week. And Hillary -- along with Samantha Power and Susan Rice --
goaded Obama into action during a phone call on Tuesday night.
Obama needed Hillary's approval to go to war. He knows that
since he was elected as a peace candidate, his own party will
find it hard to support his entry into a new war, unless his
erstwhile rival, Hillary, backs him up. In this case, it is not
Secretary of State Hillary Clinton whose support Obama needs, it
is nomination runner-up Hillary he wants by his side.
But, nevertheless, the fuzzy nature of our mission and the lack
of an exit strategy make the possibility of an out-of-control
engagement very real. And such a commitment, especially if it
involves ground troops, will not sit well with Obama's base.
But, having made an investment in Libya, are we really going to
be prepared to sit back and watch civilians get slaughtered by
Gadhafi, in or out of power? Won't the same rationale that
dictated the air offensive lead to ground troops? And won't
Obama look insufferably weak if he fails to send them?
Obama has opened the door to disaster by his impetuosity in not
asking the Powell Doctrine questions.
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