This pretty much is spot on................
What the anti-war left sowed in Iraq, it is now reaping in Libya
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Jonathan Kay Mar 11, 2011 – 2:52 PM ET
Eight years ago, on Feb. 15, 2003, protestors in as many as 60 countries took to the streets to oppose the then-imminent Iraq War. Total crowd estimates range as high as 30-million. In Rome alone, turnout was 3-million-strong, making it the biggest anti-war rally in history.
Those protestors didn’t stop the Iraq War. But they did help shape the overwhelmingly negative international response to it around the world. Though Iraq now is on the road to peace and democracy, and the American troop presence there is dwindling, leftists still insist that the campaign was a neo-imperialist “war for oil.” Europeans and Canadians, in particular, were appalled at the “unilateral” nature of the American action; and the issue caused a major schism within members of NATO.
It wasn’t until the election of Barack Obama in 2008 that trans-Atlantic relations were truly repaired. In fact, many of the leftists who voted for Mr. Obama did so precisely because they thought America needed a more conciliatory voice, and a more multilateral, less muscular approach, on the world stage.
Fast forward two years from Mr. Obama’s inauguration, and one can draw a straight line from this new “soft power” foreign policy to Washington’s paralysis over what to do in Libya, where the regime in Tripoli is waging scorched-earth warfare on the country’s rebel forces.
At this stage, it seems the only thing that can stop Col. Gaddafi’s rampaging forces is the sort of quick, unilateral military intervention that fell out of fashion after the Iraq War. But, having made a fetish of international law, multilateralism, and the Security Council’s moral authority in 2003, many world leaders — including, apparently, Mr. Obama — are afraid to act in 2011, lest a bloody or prolonged operation invite the familiar chorus of accusations involving oil, imperialism and Islamophobia.
In other words: What the humanitarian, anti-war left sowed in Iraq, it is now reaping in Libya.
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